Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Trenton Speedway

Motorsport venue in Trenton, New Jersey, United States

Trenton Speedway

Summary

Motorsport venue in Trenton, New Jersey, United States

FieldValue
nameTrenton Speedway
logo[[File:Trenton International Speedway logo.svg250px]]
image[[File:Trenton Speedway.svgclass=skin-invert250px]]
image_captionThe "kidney bean" shaped oval (1969–1980)
coordinates
locationHamilton Township, Mercer County, near Trenton, New Jersey
opened
closed
ownerGeorge A. Hamid Jr.
former_namesTrenton International Speedway
eventsCART
Trenton 150 (1946, 1949, 1957–1979)
NASCAR Winston Cup
Northern 300 (1958–1959, 1967–1972)
miles_firstTrue
layoutDog-leg oval "Kidney Bean" (1969–1980)
surfaceAsphalt
length_km2.414
length_mi1.500
turns5
bankingTurns 1–2: 10°
Dogleg: 4°
Turns 3–4: 15°
layout2Mile oval (1946–1968)
surface2Asphalt (1957–1968)
Dirt (1946–1957)
length2_km1.609
length2_mi1.000
layout3Half-mile oval (1900–1941)
surface3Dirt
length3_km0.805
length3_mi0.500

Trenton 150 (1946, 1949, 1957–1979) NASCAR Winston Cup Northern 300 (1958–1959, 1967–1972) Dogleg: 4° Turns 3–4: 15° Dirt (1946–1957)

Trenton Speedway was a racing facility located near Trenton, New Jersey at the New Jersey State Fairgrounds. Races for the United States' premier open-wheel and full-bodied racing series of the times were held at Trenton Speedway.

Racing history

The first race at the Fairgrounds was held on September 24, 1900, but there was no further racing there until 1907. Regular racing began in 1912 and continued until 1941. A new 1.000 mi dirt oval was opened in 1946. In 1957 the track was paved. It operated in that configuration until 1968 when the track was expanded to 1.500 mi and a "kidney bean" shape with a 20° right-hand dogleg on the back stretch and a wider turn 3 & 4 complex than turns 1 & 2. The track closed in 1980 and the Fairgrounds itself closed 3 years later. The former site of the speedway is now occupied by the Grounds for Sculpture, a UPS shipping facility, and the housing development known as "Hamilton Lakes".

Championship cars

Trenton was a long-time stop for the AAA and USAC Championship Car series. Its first recognized Champ Car race was held in 1949 on the dirt mile. The series did not return until 1957 when the track was paved, but when it did, at least one Champ Car race was held every year until 1979. The final Champ Car races held in 1979 at the track were sanctioned by CART. During his career A. J. Foyt won twelve Indy Car races at Trenton Speedway. The May 1976 race was Janet Guthrie's first IndyCar appearance.

Stock cars

Program cover for the 1957 Trenton 500

Trenton hosted many races sanctioned by AAA and USAC Stock Car divisions. In 1957, Mike Klapak won the Trenton 500, intended to become the most prestigious race on the USAC calendar.

Trenton hosted the NASCAR Grand National and Winston Cup series 8 times: once each May in 1958 and 1959, and once each July from 1967 to 1972, a race known as the Northern 300. Richard Petty led all drivers with three Trenton Grand National victories. In July 1973 the Northern 300 ran time trials but rain washed out the race and it was never rescheduled. The Northern 300 was placed on NASCAR's 1974 Winston Cup Grand National schedule (Stock Car Racing magazine listed it on the schedule in its early 1974 season issues) but was dropped early in the year and replaced by Pocono Raceway's Purolator 500.

Major races for NASCAR modifieds

National Championship races

From 1958 to 1971, a NASCAR National Championship race for modified stock car racing was held annually at Trenton Speedway, promoted by Sam Nunis. Through 1962, these were hundred-lap races. In 1963, the race was expanded to 200 laps, making it one of the longest and highest-paying races for Modified and Sportsman racers in the country. Ray Hendrick from Virginia was the leading winner of these races, driving the Jack Tant-owned number 11.

Race of Champions

From 1972 to 1976, Trenton Speedway hosted the Race of Champions modified race. Five different drivers won the five RoC events at Trenton. In 1977, the Race of Champions was moved to Pocono Raceway.

Race results

All winning drivers were American.

AAA/USAC/CART Championship Car

SeasonDateWinning driverChassisEngineTeamAAA Championship Car (Dirt 1 mile oval)USAC Championship Car1 Mile Paved Oval1.5 Mile Kidney Bean OvalCART Champ Car
1949June 19Myron FohrMarcheseOffenhauser
1950–1956: Not held
1957September 29Pat O'ConnorKuzmaOffenhauser
1958March 30Len SuttonKuzmaOffenhauser
September 28Rodger WardLesovskyOffenhauser
1959April 19Tony BettenhausenKuzmaOffenhauser
September 27Eddie SachsMeskowskiOffenhauser
1960April 10Rodger WardWatsonOffenhauser
September 25Eddie SachsKuzmaOffenhauser
1961April 9Eddie SachsEwingOffenhauser
September 24Eddie SachsKuzmaOffenhauser
1962April 8A. J. FoytMeskowskiOffenhauser
July 22Rodger WardWatsonOffenhauser
September 23Don BransonWatsonOffenhauser
1963April 21A. J. FoytMeskowskiOffenhauser
July 28A. J. FoytTrevisOffenhauser
September 22A. J. FoytTrevisOffenhauser
1964April 19A. J. FoytWatsonOffenhauser
July 19A. J. FoytWatsonOffenhauser
September 27Parnelli JonesLotusFord
1965April 25Jim McElreathBrabhamOffenhauser
July 18A. J. FoytLotusFord
September 26A. J. FoytLotusFord
1966April 24Rodger WardLolaOffenhauser
September 25Mario AndrettiBrawnerFord
1967April 23Mario AndrettiBrawnerFord
September 24A. J. FoytCoyoteFord
1968April 21Bobby UnserEagleOffenhauser
September 22Mario AndrettiBrawnerOffenhauserAndretti Racing Enterprises
1969July 19Mario AndrettiBrawnerFord
September 21Mario AndrettiBrawnerFord
1970April 26Lloyd RubyLaycockOffenhauser
October 3Al UnserColtOffenhauser
1971April 25Mike MosleyWatsonFord
October 3Bobby UnserEagleOffenhauser
1972April 23Gary BettenhausenMcLarenOffenhauserPenske Racing
September 24Bobby UnserEagleOffenhauser
1973April 15A. J. FoytCoyoteFoyt
Mario AndrettiParnelliOffenhauser
September 23Gordon JohncockEagleOffenhauser
1974April 7Bobby UnserEagleOffenhauser
September 22A. J. FoytCoyoteFoyt
Bobby UnserEagleOffenhauser
1975April 6A. J. FoytCoyoteFoyt
September 21Gordon JohncockWildcatDGS
1976May 2Johnny RutherfordMcLarenOffenhauserMcLaren Racing
August 15Gordon JohncockWildcatDGS
1977April 30Wally Dallenbach Sr.WildcatDGS
1978April 23Gordon JohncockWildcatDGS
September 23Mario AndrettiPenskeCosworthPenske Racing
1979June 10Bobby UnserPenskeCosworthPenske Racing
Bobby UnserPenskeCosworthPenske Racing
August 19Rick MearsPenskeCosworthPenske Racing

NASCAR Grand National/Winston Cup

SeasonDateWinning driverManufacturer
1958May 30 – 500 milesFireball RobertsChevrolet
1959May 17 – 500 milesTom PistoneFord
1967July 9 – 300 milesRichard PettyPlymouth
1968July 14LeeRoy YarbroughFord
1969July 13David PearsonFord
1970July 12Richard PettyPlymouth
1971July 18Richard PettyPlymouth
1972July 16Bobby AllisonChevrolet

References

References

  1. Galpin, Darren. "Trenton Track Info". The GEL Motorsport Information Page.
  2. "Race Results at Trenton Speedway". Racing-Reference.info.
  3. Jendras Jr., Larry. "Trenton Speedway Sportsman-Modified Results". The Vintage Racer.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Trenton Speedway — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report