Aerial photograph of Speedway Park (1952) | |
| Location | Jacksonville,Florida, U.S. |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 30°18′05″N81°44′42″W / 30.301316°N 81.745083°W /30.301316; -81.745083 |
| Capacity | ~5,000 |
| Opened | 1947 |
| Closed | 1973 |
| Major events | None(defunct) |
| Dirtoval track | |
| Length | 0.500 mi (0.805 km) |
Speedway Park was a 0.5-mile (0.80 km) dirt, oval, auto racing track, located inJacksonville, Florida.[1]
It was built in 1946 by Eddie Bland on land belonging to the family farm and later came to be known asJacksonville Speedway after it was sold in 1954.[2]
Opened in 1947, the track was located at the intersection of Lenox Avenue and Plymouth Street in southwest Jacksonville.[3]NASCARGrand National Series races were held at the track during the 1951, 1952, 1954, 1955, 1961 and 1964 seasons.[4] The final Grand National Series race at the track was won byWendell Scott, the first African-American to win in NASCAR's top series.[5]
In addition to auto racing, the track hosted the Duval County Exposition.[6] TheNASCAR Grand American Series also competed there.[7] After a final NASCARGrand National East Series race in 1972 won byDavid Pearson,[4] the track was closed in 1973; a housing development now stands at the site.[8]
| Date | Series | Driver | Make | Laps | Avg. Speed |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| November 4, 1951 | NASCAR Grand National Series | Herb Thomas | Hudson | 200 | 53.412 mph (85.958 km/h) |
| March 3, 1952 | NASCAR Grand National Series | Marshall Teague | Hudson | 200 | 55.197 mph (88.831 km/h) |
| March 7, 1954 | NASCAR Grand National Series | Herb Thomas | Hudson | 200 | 56.461 mph (90.865 km/h) |
| February 13, 1955 | NASCAR Grand National Series | Lee Petty | Chrysler | 200 | 69.031 mph (111.095 km/h) |
| November 20, 1960 | NASCAR Grand National Series | Lee Petty | Plymouth | 200 | 64.400 mph (103.642 km/h) |
| December 1, 1963 | NASCAR Grand National Series | Wendell Scott | Chevrolet | 202 | 58.252 mph (93.748 km/h) |
| March 14, 1972 | NASCAR Grand National East Series | David Pearson | Chevrolet | 202 | 54.758 mph (88.124 km/h) |