By Peter M. DeLorenzo
Detroit. The sport of motor racing is filled with memorable races marked by both triumph and tragedy. It's the nature of the sport that these two extremes have left such an indelible impression that they live on for decades, leaving a legacy that is part and parcel of our collective memories. The many heroic individuals - and individual efforts - that have carved out their place in motorsport history are too often luridly offset by gut-wrenching tragedies that have torn us apart along the way. It is an unfortunate consequence of a sport that consumes everything and everyone in its path, a fevered, relentless pursuit marked by unbridled elation and devastating, soul-crushing disappointment. In this series I will try to avoid dwelling on the tragic stories, because as enthusiasts of this sport we are all too familiar with them. If, in the course of talking about a particular race mentioning a tragic event is unavoidable that will have to be, but this series will mainly focus on those memorable moments from those glory days that rivet us to this day. This week, I am taking you back to the Nassau Speed Weeks, which for a time was
the place to be at the end of the racing season.
The man behind the idea of having races in the Bahamas at the end of the racing season was Sherman "Red" Crise, an entrepreneur from Florida who saw the abandoned Windsor airfield as an opportunity to pitch staging races to Nassau officials as a way of bringing more tourism dollars in. Keen to see more money flow in, the officials agreed and the Bahamas Speed Week kicked off in 1954 as a casual racing event that mixed gentlemen racers and partying with equal measure. Let me correct that, because the partying became an even bigger attraction! It didn't take long for the racing to get more serious, however, as the manufacturers were lured by the season-ending vacation venue into participating with factory-supported efforts, so the actual racing was moved to the Oakes Course - an airfield closer to Nassau - but the partying remained a key component, and in fact it intensified! In short order, the Nassau Speed Week (Bahamas Speed Week was the official name, but no one called it that) became the biggest thing at the end of the racing season, and international road racing stars flocked there in droves. Drivers like Mark Donohue, Ken Miles, Bob Bondurant, A.J. Foyt, Dan Gurney, Bruce McLaren and Sir Stirling Moss participated at one time or another. And, of course, Roger Penske, Carroll Shelby and John Mecom entered cars as well. Needless to say, even though the Oakes Course was a mess - even rougher than Sebring, if you can imagine - the racing was fast and furious. And the partying? Well, it was too.

(GM)
A very interesting picture. This is one of the famous Chevrolet Corvette Grand Sports photographed at GM's Milford Proving Ground on November 22, 1963. Tired of seeing his Corvettes getting their asses kicked by Carroll Shelby's compact and lightweight Ford-powered Cobras, Chevrolet's Zora Arkus-Duntov devised a plan to counteract Shelby with some secret sauce of his own. Operating totally under cover because of GM's official anti-racing policy at the time, Duntov and his best and brightest engineers totally revamped three special Corvettes (a total of five - or possibly six - would eventually be built) with bigger brakes, wider wheels and tires, big horsepower all-aluminum 377-cu.in. V8s and most important, weighing-in almost 1,000 lbs. lighter than the typical racing Sting Ray at the time. The top-secret Corvettes would officially be called "Grand Sport" and the plan was to ship them to Nassau unannounced, so they could be entered in the races by "friend of the factory" John Mecom, Jr., from Houston, Texas. Mecom had deep ties to Zora and Chevrolet, and he assembled an all-star roster of drivers for Zora's secret mission. That a cadre of Chevrolet engineers just so happened to be on "vacation" together at Nassau that week was merely a coincidence, at least that was the story given.

(Dave Friedman photo)
Starting grid for the Nassau TT, December 1, 1963. Roger Penske and John Mecom (white sweater) are talking to Dick Thompson (No. 80 Mecom Racing Chevrolet Corvette Grand Sport). Jim Hall is in the No. 65 Mecom Racing Chevrolet Corvette Grand Sport behind them. Penske didn't start the race because he had engine problems in his No. 50 Mecom Racing Chevrolet Corvette Grand Sport. Augie Pabst (No. 00 Mecom Racing Lola Mk.6 GT Chevrolet) would win the race easily. Both Grand Sports DNF because of overheating differentials. The cars would sprout differential oil coolers mounted on the top of the back slope of their rear decks for the rest of the week. But when they were running, the Grand Sports' speed was devastating; they lapped the pot-holed airfield circuit a full ten seconds per lap faster than the Shelby American Cobras. The Nassau Trophy, which was run on December 8, was the biggest race of the week, and it was won by A.J. Foyt, in yet another Mecom Racing entry - the No. 77 Scarab Mk IV Chevrolet. Pedro Rodriguez (No. 10 North American Racing Team Ferrari 250 P) was second, followed by Tim Mayer (No. 74 Lotus 23B Ford). Dick Thompson (No. 50 Mecom Racing Chevrolet Corvette Grand Sport) finished fourth. Jim Hall had entered Chaparral 2A Chevrolets for himself and Hap Sharp, but the brutal track surface was not kind to them. Things would be different for 1964, on several fronts.
(Dave Friedman photo)
For the 1965 Nassau Speed Week, the main racing action revolved around the sports racing cars, as factory support for the GT machines in the Tourist Trophy went away. But the action on track for the sports racing machines was fast and furious. Here, Jim Hall (No. 66 Chaparral 2C Chevrolet), Hap Sharp (No. 65 Chaparral 2A Chevrolet with 2C mods) and Bruce McLaren (No. 47 McLaren Elva Mark II Oldsmobile) head the field for the Nassau Trophy feature race. Hap Sharp would go on to win, John Cannon (No. 62 Genie Mk.10B Oldsmobile) was second and Peter Revson (No. 52 Brabham BT8 Climax) finished third. Bob Bondurant (No. 111 Lola T70Chevrolet) can be seen directly behind Hall in this photo; he finished eighth.