Herman Beam (December 11, 1929 – August 27, 1980) was a NASCAR Grand National Series driver and team owner from Johnson City, Tennessee who was active as a driver from 1957 until 1963. He is famous for holding the longest streak of races without a DNF, with 84, from 1961 until 1963. He had 57 Top 10 finishes in 194 races.[1]
Herman Beam | |||||||
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Born | Johnson City, Tennessee | December 11, 1929||||||
Died | August 27, 1980 Johnson City, Tennessee | (aged 50)||||||
Cause of death | Pancreatic Cancer | ||||||
NASCAR Cup Series career | |||||||
194 races run over 7 years | |||||||
Best finish | 4th (1959) | ||||||
First race | 1957 Race 53 (Hillsboro) | ||||||
Last race | 1963 Race 32 (Moyock) | ||||||
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NASCAR Convertible Division career | |||||||
2 races run over 1 year | |||||||
Best finish | 70th (1959) | ||||||
First race | 1959 Rebel 300 (Darlington) | ||||||
Last race | 1959 Race 10 (Asheville-Weaverville) | ||||||
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Driving career
editBeam made his Grand National debut in 1957, finishing 20th in a self-owned Chevy. In 1958, he ran 20 races, with a single top 10 finish. 1959 was his best season, where he started 30 of 44 events, had 12 top 10 finishes including his first career top 5, and finished 4th in points. He made 2 starts in the NASCAR Convertible Division that year. In 1961, Beam suffered an engine failure at Richmond International Raceway. It was the last DNF for 84 races, starting the streak of finishing races that he is most famous for, which ended at Atlanta Motor Speedway in 1963. Beam retired from racing that year, but continued to field cars for other drivers, including Ned Jarrett and Cale Yarborough.
Beam's nickname was "Turtle", reflecting his cautious driving style, which was to finish each race without retiring. His most famous moment was at the 1962 Richmond 250 race at the Atlantic Rural Fairgrounds at Richmond, Virginia. Due to heavy rain, qualifying was cancelled, and the drivers drew for grid positions by lot. Beam drew pole position, but pulled off the track on the pace lap to let the entire field go past. He eventually finished 12th.[2] After the race Beam said that he did not feel comfortable starting in front of faster cars.[3]
Beam's 84-race streak took place over the span of 22 months 10 days, and was being threatened by Clint Bowyer, who if he finished the first ten races of the 2009 season could have tied the record. However, he crashed at the 2009 Southern 500 at Darlington to end his streak at 83 finished races. Bowyer's teammate Kevin Harvick fell three short when his engine failed in the 2009 Auto Club 500 ending his streak at 81 races without a DNF. After the 2014 FedEx 400, his 84-race streak was broken by Greg Biffle, who finished the race despite being 108 laps down in 38th.
Another outstanding mark of Beam's was running the same number throughout his career. In all 194 of his starts, Beam drove only the number 19 in NASCAR Grand National races, the former record for officially retired drivers that has since been surpassed by Jeff Gordon, with 797 consecutive starts in the #24.
Career as an owner
editAfter retiring from driving in the middle of the 1963 season, he remained a team owner in NASCAR. He hired Cale Yarborough to drive for him the rest of the season. In 1964, Larry Thomas and Yarborough split the ride for most of the season, with H.B. Bailey, Larry Frank, and Tiny Lund each driving one race for Beam. Yarborough left Beam's team after one race, and JT Putney was hired to drive the car. His team shut down after running only 2 races in 1966.
References
edit- ^ "Driver's statistics". Racing Reference. Retrieved 2008-09-02.
- ^ "1962 Richmond 250". www.racing-reference.info. Retrieved 16 November 2012.
- ^ Clements, Michael L (2011). The Crew Chief's Son: A Trackside Memoir of Early NASCAR. United States: McFarland Publishing. p. 297. ISBN 978-0-7864-4954-5.
External links
edit- Herman Beam driver statistics at Racing-Reference
- Herman Beam owner statistics at Racing-Reference