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4-17 Southern Speedway: Florida Punta Gorda: 0.375 miles (0.604 km) Oval: Late Models, Modifieds, Sportsman, Street Stocks, Bombers, Trucks, 4-Cylinder FWD, Legends, Bandoleros Angola Motor Speedway: Indiana Angola: 0.375 miles (0.604 km) Oval: Limited Late Models, I-Modifieds, Factory Stocks, Mini Stocks Auto City Speedway: Michigan Clio
Mount Lawn Speedway, also known as The Lawn, is a 0.3-mile (0.48 km) ... Mt Summit, Indiana 2004 William Mefford Knightstown, Indiana 2005 Scott Hinshaw
The Mount Washington Hillclimb Auto Race, also known as the Climb to the Clouds, is a timed hillclimb auto race up the Mount Washington Auto Road to the summit of Mount Washington in New Hampshire. [1] It is one of the oldest auto races in the country, first run on July 11 and 12, 1904, predating the Indianapolis 500 and the Pikes Peak Hill Climb.
State Fairgrounds Speedway: Raleigh: North Carolina: 0.500 miles (0.805 km) black dirt 1955-1970 NASCAR Cup Series (1955, 1969-1970) Smoky Mountain Speedway: Maryville: Tennessee: 0.400 miles (0.644 km) clay 1964 NASCAR Cup Series (1965-1971) Tri-State Speedway: Haubstadt: Indiana: 0.400 miles (0.644 km) clay 1957 World of Outlaws: Volusia ...
Mount Lawn Speedway; P. Prairie Hills Motorsports Club; S. Salem Speedway; T. Terre Haute Action Track; Tri-State Speedway (Indiana) W. Winchester Speedway This ...
The Mt. Washington Road Race has an 11% grade, averaged over 7.6 miles. The Mount Washington Road Race is a 7.6-mile (12.2 km) road running event that follows the auto road going from the base of Mount Washington in New Hampshire nearly to the mountain's summit (located at 6,288 feet (1,917 m) above sea level).
According to a Deschutes National Forest report, many others attempted the 7,795-foot Mount Washington climb including the famed alpinists of Portland’s Mazamas, who stopped 70 feet short of the ...
The track was known as Lucas Oil Raceway from 2011 to 2021. In 1958, 15 Indianapolis-area businessmen and racing professionals led by Tom Binford, Frank Dickie, Rodger Ward, and Howard Fieber invested $5,000 each to fund the development of a 267-acre (108 ha) farm tract into a recreational sporting complex that would focus on auto racing.