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From Half Day to Route 66, from ‘the Greek’ to ‘Wilk,’ an Illinois drag racing primer

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From Half Day to Route 66, from ‘the Greek’ to ‘Wilk,’ an Illinois drag racing primer


Next weekend, the NHRA Camping World Drag Racing Series will take its official return to Route 66 Raceway in Joliet, Ill., to continue the state’s 70-year love affair with drag racing.

According to Mel Bayshore’s encyclopedic Drag Strip List, there have been 40 dragstrips that have hosted race cars since the first, Half Day Speedway, opened in 1952, to today’s fabulous Route 66 Raceway in Joliet, which will host the Gerber Collision & Glass NHRA Route 66 Nationals presented by Peak, and World Wide Technology Raceway in Madison, Ill., home of the annual NHRA Midwest Nationals.

The Prairie State also gave us a long, long list of fighting Illini to battle down these dragstrips, starting with the legend himself, Chris “the Greek” Karamesines and, of course, Don and Tony Schumacher, as well as legendary teams like the Farkonas-Coil-Minick Chi-Town Hustler and the Mr. Norm Funny Cars out of the Chicagoland Grand-Spaulding Dodge dealership, plus early quarter-mile mainstays Bobby Vodnik, Ron Colson, Cliff “the Chicago Kid” Brown Sid Seely, Jim Paoli, Bill Pryor, Ron Correnti, Ron O’Donnell, Ed O’Brien, Ron Pellegrini, John Pott, Fred Mandoline, and Fred Hagen, to name but a few.

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There have been a number of drag racing machines over the years to invoke the name of this great city in their pursuit of quarter-mile notoriety, and the Chi-Town Hustler ranks right at the top, both in terms of longevity and impact, which extended from their trademark long, smoky burnouts of the 1960s through two world championships with Austin Coil and driver Frank Hawley.

Funny Cars of the 1970s might remember the Chicago Patrol Mustang II, which was driven by a host of talented flopper shoes, including Pat Foster, Colson, Dale Pulde, and O’Brien, among others. The car’s unforgettable gimmick was actual rotating blue police-light bubbles on the roof. For a time, it served as a promotional device for the Chicago Police Department.

There were plenty of other Chicago-named cars plying their trade on the quarter-mile. In the mid-1970s, Brown had the Chicago Kid Mustang, Correnti had the Chicago Charger ’71 Dodge, and Vic Cecelia fielded The Chicagoan alky flopper, which later was run by crew chief Pat Cress under the same name and colors. Wyatt Radke drove Terry Joyce’s Chicago Trapper Beretta Funny Car, Mike Faser the Chicago Fire Funny Car and Fuel Altered entries, and jet-car racer Bill Mattio also ran a car named Chicago Fire. The Chicago Rush Mustang II Alcohol Funny Car from the mid-’80s to the early ’90s, alternatively driven by Chuck Scherr and Dan Sullivan until they took the name into the jet dragster ranks, and Don Colosimo had a Top Fueler called the Chicago Missile and Harry Claster a ’68 Barracuda flopper named after himself, Chicago Harry.

Today, the flag is mostly carried by Funny Car stalwarts Tim and Daniel Wilkerson, Dale Creasy Jr., Bob and Bobby Bode, and Justin Schriefer, and Top Fuel’s TJ Zizzo and Jake Opatrny in the Pro classes, and three-time Comp world champ Bruno Massel Jr. leads the Sportsman standouts.

By all accounts, “the Greek” made his first passes down a dragstrip in 1953 on the half-mile-long airport dragstrip in Half Day, Ill., in the A/Street Roadster class and set track records of 12.21 and 122 mph on pump gas. (The city was reportedly named “Half Day” when it was founded in 1863 because it was a half-day ride by carriage from Chicago.)

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According to Bayshore, Half Day, the brainchild of Andy Granatelli and the dragstrip, was set up on an outlying satellite airfield used by nearby Glenview Naval Air Station during World War II and was part of what was known as Maremont Speedway. The Automobile Timing Association of America (ATAA) first conducted drag races there starting on April 6, 1952, but the track was shut down the following year.

According to Bayshore’s Illinois page, here are the 40 tracks that called Illinois home, by year of founding. Only eight of which (denoted with an asterisk) are still running in some fashion today.

Half Day Speedway

1952

Champaign “Drag Strip”

1953

Lawrenceville Municipal Airport

1954

Oswego Drag Raceway

1954

Seneca Dragstrip

1954

Monroe “Drag Strip”

1955

Parks Metropolitan Airport (Maplewood)

1955

Rankin “Drag Strip”

1955

Camp Ellis /Canton)

1956

Cordova Dragway/Quad City Drags *

1956

Illiopolis “Drag Strip”

1956

Effingham “Drag Strip”

1957

Greater Peoria Dragstrip/Boondocks Dragway

1957

Morgan County Fairgrounds

1957

Alton Dragway

1958

Greene County Fairgrounds

1958

Quincy Urban Area Drag Strip

1956

Waverly Dragway

1959

Pleasant Grove Drag Strip/Drag City

1960

Route 88 Dragway Strip

1960

Southern Illinois Dragway

1960

International Amphitheatre

1962

Shifters Dragway

1962

White Hall Drag Strip

1962

Accelaquarter Raceway *

1963

Nashville Dragway

1963

Tri-City Speedway

1963

Rockford Dragway/Byron Dragway *

1964

Speedbowl Park

1964

Riverview Drag Strip

1965

Coles County Dragway *

1966

Fairfield Drag Strip

1966

Beardstown Drag Strip

1967

St. Louis International Raceway/Gateway Motorsports Park/World Wide Raceway *

1967

Meadowdale International Raceway

1968

Midstate Dragway/Central Illinois Dragway *

1969

Motion Raceway

1970

CMW Dragway (Paris)

1971

I-57 Drag Strip/Ellis I-57 Drag Strip *

1972

Route 66 Raceway *

1998

 

On this list, a number of names should jump out, including Alton Dragway, which in April 1960 gave Karamesines a much-debated “first” 200-mph time slip; current NHRA member tracks Coles County Dragway in Charleston and Byron Dragway in Byron, Ill., the latter of which had a long and rich history of Funny Car match racing back in the 1960s and ‘70s; and Cordova Dragway, longtime home of the World Series of Drag Racing event.

The oddball standout on the list is the International Amphitheatre, which for two years (late 1962-64) hosted the first indoor drag races. According to Bayshore’s site, “steel guard rails were installed on each side of the 60-foot-wide racing strip. The slippery concrete slab track was 440 feet long, with a 660-foot-long shut-down area. The track record was a paltry 81.81 mph, understandable based on the conditions.

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According to Midwest drag racing historian Bret Kepner, to the vast majority of fans who are aware of a massive racing complex in Madison, Ill., currently known as World Wide Technology Raceway, the facility’s dragstrip has been in operation since it was opened in 1967 as an eighth-mile track and that, over a period of 55 years, the track has blossomed into a state-of-the-art, multi-purpose masterpiece of land use, which includes a 1.25-mile oval and a two-mile road course. Those fans would be wrong. 

The current World Wide Technology Raceway and that original eighth-mile are not only two completely different dragstrips but are located on two completely different pieces of property. 

Opening Day competition at the new St. Louis International Raceway Park in this June 1967, Ed Harris photo shows Hal Hammer’s ’65 Dodge Dart from St. Louis versus Claude Bradshaw in Joe Sperino’s injected nitro Hemi-powered ’65 Barracuda. Note perfectly fresh asphalt. 

According to Kepner, St. Louis International Raceway Park opened in June 1967, with an AHRA national event and enjoyed continued success with the track as it morphed through names like St. Louis International Raceway and St. Louis International Dragway. In June 1971, the track closed, and the dragstrip was repaved and extended, and it reopened as quarter-mile St. Louis International Raceway. After a series of failed events, the track went into bankruptcy in November 1986 after failures with the new road course, and it reopened in July 1987 under new leadership and briefly joined the NHRA member track family in 1988. In 1989, under yet another new owner, the track was renamed Gateway International Raceway and became an IHRA track until 1992, when it rejoined the NHRA. 

A May 4, 1981, image taken during an All-Pro Series Alcohol Dragster and Alcohol Funny Car meet shows essentially a full house at SLIR watching racers head due south toward Interstate 55-70, which runs directly behind the timing tower of the new WWTR. (Jim Sanders photo)

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Under new owner Chris Pook, the facility was offered an NHRA national event if he could add a championship-caliber dragstrip to the new complex. Pook purchased land beyond the western border of the original property previously untouched by the 30-year history of the original track.

The is a composite satellite image based on a July 4, 2022 shot, which shows in red where the old St. Louis International track was located versus where the new dragstrip is on the property. (bottom of image)

The new dragstrip, running south-to-north in direct opposition to the old track, was located a mere 638 feet west of the still-operating GIR which, in May 1996, and was forced to curtail action to an eighth-mile because of construction of the new dragstrip and ran its final race in August 1996. Four weeks later, the new dragstrip opened for business. All was well until 2010 when the track went up for sale in the face of burgeoning debt but was rescued by Curtis Francois and reopened in March 2012, as Gateway Motorsports Park under NHRA sanction. The facility attracted all NASCAR series and gained an annual event on the Indycar schedule, and, of course, the NHRA national event has been held every year except for 2011 when the track was closed. 
 

Construction of the 250-acre grounds that host Route 66 Raceway was completed in 1998 and included a two-mile,15-turn road course, a temporary one-mile off-road track inside the dirt oval, a 35-acre paved driving pad, and the 1.5-mile tri-oval Chicagoland Speedway. The dragstrip, with its wraparound grandstands, is considered the first “stadium” dragstrip due to that construction (though you might argue that Texas Motorplex has a similar yet smaller layout).

Route 66 Raceway has since been host to a number of historic moments, including John Force’s 86th career win in 2000, which broke his tie with Pro Stock icon Bob Glidden to make him the winningest driver in NHRA national event history, and Erica Enders‘ breakthrough win in 2012, where she became the first female Pro Stock winner in the then-40-year-plus history of the category, It also was the site of Jason Line’s first Pro Stock win in 2004, when he defeated teammate Greg Anderson in the final, much as Enders would do eight years later. It also was the site of Frank Manzo’s milestone 75th career win (2008) and the first 330-mph run by a Funny Car (Gary Scelzi, 2004).

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The track, which from 2001-2005 hosted two national events a year, also was home to the JEGS Allstars for years and this year will host the first Pro Stock Callout event, a semi-throwback to when the track hosted the King Demon Pro Stock specialty event in the early- to mid-2000s.

Jeg Coughlin Jr. owns the most wins at Route 66 Raceway, a half-dozen all in Pro Stock, while Antron Brown and Tony Schumacher each have five wins. Brown has won in two classes, Pro Stock Motorcycle (2000 and 2001) and Top Fuel (2012, ’14, and ’16), and Del Worsham and Gary Scelzi also both won in two classes (Top Fuel and Funny Car) in Chicago, Worsham three times in Funny Car (2001, ’02, and .04) and once in Top Fuel (2011), while Scelzi won in Top Fuel (2000) and Funny Car (2005 and ’07).

We’re all excited to be heading back to Joliet, where we can continue to get our kicks at Route 66.

Phil Burgess can be reached at [email protected]

Hundreds of more articles like this can be found in the DRAGSTER INSIDER COLUMN ARCHIVE

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Early voting sites in Chicago: Expect long lines wait for final day of early voting, board of elections says

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Early voting sites in Chicago: Expect long lines wait for final day of early voting, board of elections says


Monday is officially the last day of early voting in Illinois ahead of the Election Day for 2024 — and in many parts of the region, its the busiest.

“Monday is generally our busiest early voting days,” said Chicago Board of Elections’ Max Bever.

Sunday, long lines wrapped around Chicago’s Voting Supersite at 191 North Clark Street. Similar turnout was expected Monday, Bever said.

According to Bever, approximately 40,000 people typically come out to vote early the day before Election Day, with the CBOE expecting to see “similar numbers this year.”

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Chicago officials noted that two-hour wait times could be expected for early voting sites on the northside and near the lake front Monday, as those locations have easier access to public transit.

Shorter lines were expected on the west side, the CBOE said.

As Election Day — that’s Tuesday, Nov. 5 — approaches, here’s what to know about early voting Monday.

Chicago early voting locations

Early voting will be available on the day before the election at the city’s Voting Supersite at 191 North Clark Street, the Chicago Board of Elections’ Offices at 69 West Washington Street and at early voting locations in all 50 wards.

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All early voting sites are open to voters regardless of where they live in the city.

More information can be found on the board’s website.

Cook County early voting locations

Voters can cast ballots at all of the county’s circuit courthouses, and at the Cook County Clerk’s Office at 69 West Washington Street on the day prior to the election.

More information can be found on the county clerk’s website.

DeKalb County

The Sycamore campus’ Legislative Center at the Gathertorium will host early voting for one final day on Monday, Nov. 4.

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More information can be found here.

DuPage County early voting locations

Early voting continues to be available at locations around the county, and voters can cast ballots at early voting sites on Nov. 4.

You can find more information on the county clerk’s website.

Grundy County early voting locations

Early voting has concluded in Grundy County. You can find your polling place and other information on the county clerk’s website.

Kane County early voting locations

Early voting remains ongoing at sites throughout Kane County, including St. Charles, Aurora, Elgin, Hampshire, Batavia, West Dundee and more, according to officials.

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A full list of hours, can be found on the county clerk’s website.

Kankakee County early voting locations

The Kankakee County Clerk’s Office at 189 East Court Street will offer early voting from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. on the day before the election.

More information can be found on the county clerk’s website.

Kendall County early voting locations

Officials in Kendall County say early voting will be available at the Kendall County Office Building in Yorkville on Monday from 8:30 a.m. to 7 p.m.

More information can be found here.

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Lake County early voting locations

Early voting will be available Monday from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. at the following locations:

Avon Township (Round Lake Park)

Jane Addams Center/Bowen Park (Waukegan)

Ela Area Library (Lake Zurich)

Lake County Courthouse Lobby (Waukegan)

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Highwood Library  

Mundelein High School West District Office

North Chicago City Hall  

You can find more information on hours on the county clerk’s website.

LaSalle County early voting locations

Early voting is available at the LaSalle County Emergency Management Building in Ottawa on Monday, with hours from 8:30 a.m. to 7 p.m.

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You can get more information on the county clerk’s website.

McHenry County early voting locations

Early voting will be available Monday from 8:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. at the following locations:

McHenry County Election Center (Woodstock)

Algonquin Township Office (Crystal Lake)

Crystal Lake Public Library

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McHenry Township Office (Johnsburg)

Lake in the Hills Village Hall

McHenry City Hall

Nunda Township Office (Crystal Lake)   

More information can be found on the county clerk’s website.

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Will County early voting locations

More than two dozen early voting sites will be open through Monday across the county.

A full list of locations can be found on the county clerk’s website.



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Illinois man rescued after bridge collapse causes tractor to trap him in creek

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Illinois man rescued after bridge collapse causes tractor to trap him in creek


First responders in Illinois saved a man’s life on Sunday after he was pinned in a creek underneath a tractor for possibly over 30 minutes.

The Woodstock Fire/Rescue District said 10 units responded to a water rescue in the 3200 block of N. Route 47 at around 3:01 p.m. on Sunday.

It was reported that a man was trapped under a tractor after a bridge collapsed on the property, which was in unincorporated Woodstock.

DRAMATIC RESCUE OF WOMAN FROM A SMALL BASEMENT WINDOW OF A BURNING HOME IN OHIO

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A man in Woodstock, Illinois, was rescued from a creek on Sunday after a bridge collapse caused his tractor to overturn and trap him partially submerged in the water. (Woodstock Fire/Rescue District / Facebook)

The first unit arrived at the scene within four minutes, according to the department. The man was found at the rear of the property partially submerged in the creek, but conscious.

“It is believed that he had been trapped for over 30 minutes before first responders arrived,” Woodstock Fire/Rescue wrote on Facebook.

Man taken to hospital after being stuck under tractor in creek

The man was seriously injured by the collapse and entrapment, and he also had severe hypothermia from the water exposure. (Woodstock Fire/Rescue District / Facebook)

Firefighters were able to lift the tractor off the man, and he was taken to an awaiting ambulance, which took him to a landing zone for a medical helicopter to transport him to Advocate Condell Medical Center in Libertyville. 

The man, who was not identified, was seriously injured by the collapse and entrapment. He also had severe hypothermia from the water exposure, the department said.

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COAST GUARD VIDEO SHOWS HELICOPTER CREW RESCUE MAN FLOATING ON A COOLER 30 MILES OFF FLORIDA COAST AFTER STORM

A minor Hazmat response was also initiated because of fluids from the tractor leaking into the creek.

Tractor in creek after bridge collapses

The incident also caused a minor Hazmat response because of fluids leaking into the creek from the tractor. (Woodstock Fire/Rescue District / Facebook)

Absorbent materials were placed in the creek to prevent fuel and other liquids from spreading into the waterway.

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The tractor was removed from the creek at around 6 p.m., according to the department, and crews completed the cleanup shortly after.

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Here's why most schools in Illinois are closed on Election Day?

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Here's why most schools in Illinois are closed on Election Day?


As voters head to the polls on Election Day, some schools will still be in session. However, most students at Illinois public schools will have the day off.

Election Day is an official state holiday for the 2024 election season, under provisions of an amendment to Illinois’ school code. As a result, children in K-12 public schools will not be required to attend classes.

The law also states that any school that doesn’t have instruction on Election Day can be used by local authorities as a polling place.

In addition to public schools, courthouses and other local and state government facilities, including Secretary of State’s Driver’s Services facilities, will also be closed on Election Day.

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Private schools are not included in the terms of the legislation, meaning that students in those institutions may still have class on Tuesday. Universities are also not included, with students in the University of Illinois system still having classes on Election Day.

Efforts have arisen in the past to make Election Day a federal holiday, but they have not been successful thus far. As a result, many banks, federal facilities including courthouses, and most businesses will be open on Tuesday, according to officials.



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