Hall
inductee Red Byron laid foundation for future NASCAR champions
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[January 11, 2018]
Note: This is the first in a
five-part series of features detailing the careers of each of the
five inductees for the NASCAR Hall of Fame Class of 2018. The
inductees, who will be officially enshrined on Jan. 19 are Red
Byron, Ray Evernham, Ron Hornaday Jr., Ken Squier and Robert Yates.
Robert "Red" Byron was a true NASCAR original -- the sport's first
crowned champion (Modified Series) and first Strictly Stock Series
(the current-day Monster Energy Cup Series) title winner -- and now
he will join the NASCAR Hall of Fame, a nod to his historic
achievements and the exciting foundation he helped establish for the
sport.
Byron's racing career will be formally honored as he is inducted
into the NASCAR Hall of Fame during its Jan. 19 ceremony in
Charlotte, N.C., joining a fittingly accomplished class that also
includes the late engine builder/team owner Robert Yates, Camping
World Truck Series champion Ron Hornaday Jr., championship crew
chief Ray Evernham and pioneering broadcaster Ken Squier.
Byron, who passed away in 1960 at the age of 45, was the sport's
first champion, and bona fide head-turner. He answered his 1948
Modified Series title in 1948 with that historical Strictly Stock
crown a year later winning two of the eight Strictly Stock races
that season en route to that championship in a car owned by another
NASCAR Hall of Famer, Raymond Parks.
Like many others of his era, Byron's story and his contributions to
the sport are even more incredible considering his service to his
country long before he thought about a checkered flag.
He served in the United States Army Air Corps in the Pacific during
World War II. Assigned to Alaska's Aleutian Islands, Byron suffered
a severe injury to his left leg while flying in a combat mission
during the war and later had to wear a specially created steel leg
brace while racing. A version of the brace, which had to be attached
to the clutch pedal of his race cars, is mounted in one of his cars
displayed in the NASCAR Hall of Fame.
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It hardly slowed Byron down. The Virginia native-turned Anniston,
Ala. resident had nine top-10 finishes in 15 starts, winning a pair
of races and a pair of pole positions in three years of Strictly
Stock competition.
He won on the Daytona Beach, Fla., road course in 1948 -- earning
one of the most iconic checkered flags in NASCAR history -- and he
answered the victory at another of the sport's most storied
facilities, Martinsville (Va.) Speedway months later.
He was recognized in 1998 as one of NASCAR's all-time Top 50 drivers
for his historic efforts.
"In so many ways he was the perfect first champion," the late NASCAR
chairman Bill France Jr. once said of Byron. "A guy who loved racing
so much, he refused to give it up. And he loved his country so much
he gave it all he had."
Following his stock car career, the former flight engineer turned
his focus to developing a sports car to race in the famed 24 Hours
of LeMans in France, but Byron died of a heart attack while
finalizing details for the effort.
--Field Level Media, special from NASCAR Wire Service
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