Bill Vukovich

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Template:Short description Template:Infobox racing driver

William Vukovich (born Vaso Vukovich, December 13, 1918 – May 30, 1955) was an American racing driver. He won the 1953 and 1954 Indianapolis 500s, plus two more American Automobile Association National Championship races, and died while leading the 1955 Indianapolis 500.

Several drivers of his generation have referred to Vukovich as the greatest ever in American motorsport.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He is generally considered one of the best racing drivers of his generation, and is the only driver to lead the most laps in three consecutive Indianapolis 500s.

Early life

Childhood

William Vukovich was born in Alameda, near Oakland, California.Template:Sfn He was the fifth of eight children and the youngest of three sons born to John Vucurovich, a carpenter and police officer, and Mildred (née Syerković).Template:Sfn Vukovich's parents emigrated from Serbia,Template:Sfn and Anglicized their surname from "Vucurović" to Vucurovich to aid its pronunciation.Template:Sfn Later, upon suggestion of the judge presiding over their naturalization, the couple adopted the spelling Vukovich, using it for their children.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Vukovich was christened with the given name Vaso, not adopting the English variant William until entering public school.Template:Sfn

Not long after Vukovich's birth, his family relocated to a 40-acre farm in Kerman, near Fresno, where his father worked as a sharecropper.Template:Sfn The family earned a modest living, and on one occasion Vukovich was hired out as a cotton picker to supplement the family income.Template:Sfn Later, his family moved to Sanger, where they made a down-payment on a 20-acre muscat grape vineyard.Template:Sfn The move took place against the wishes of Vukovich's mother, who was concerned about the age of the vines.Template:Sfn In December 1932, after a poor harvest and struggling to complete the final payments for their property, they were issued a foreclosure notice.Template:Sfn Unable to deal with the situation, John Vacurovich committed suicide,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn dying December 11, 1932,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> two days before Vukovich's 14th birthday.

Family provider

The death of Vukovich's father increased the family's financial difficulties, and they were forced to leave the property a few days after the funeral.Template:Sfn A neighbor helped them locate a house to rent, the owner of which allowed the family to keep any profits they made from harvesting peach trees which grew on the rental's property.Template:Sfn Vukovich's three eldest siblings had already grown up and left for independent lives, leaving Vukovich and his elder brother, Eli, as the new providers for the family.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The two brothers worked various jobs harvesting and tilling crops, and driving trucks,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn sometimes joined by their older brother, Mike.Template:Sfn

Vukovich enjoyed attending school, doing well in industrial arts courses.Template:Sfn A sophomore at the time of his father's death, Vukovich attempted to balance his education with his increased familial responsibilities,Template:Sfn but was soon forced to drop out.Template:Sfn Vukovich was known as a taciturn child.Template:Sfn After the death of his father, however, he became even more withdrawn.Template:Sfn By the time Vukovich reached age 15, Eli had moved out,Template:Sfn after which Vukovich assumed a paternal role in the lives of his two younger sisters, Ann and Florence.Template:Sfn

Vukovich continued in this role after the early beginnings of his racing career.Template:Sfn By the late 1930s, Vukovich's mother was often ill, suffering from painful swelling which required frequent visits for medical care.Template:Sfn While his earnings from racing helped augment the family's financial situation, his mother's difficulties with English required significant assistance from Vukovich in completing the paperwork required for free care.Template:Sfn Eventually, his mother's illness required around the clock care at the hospital. Vukovich's schedule saw him work on farms during the day, travel to the hospital - often spending evenings conversing with his mother in Serbian until visiting hours were up - then spend his late night hours working on his race car.Template:Sfn Mildred Vukovich died aged 51, on March 26, 1939,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> by which time Ann and Florence had moved out.Template:Sfn

Early interests in racing

Vukovich displayed an interest in speed from an early age. He and his brothers were known to frequently arrive at school with their four-wheeled, horse-drawn cart on two wheels, leading to their father building a two-wheeled cart.Template:Sfn The family owned a Ford Model T, and on Sundays when their parents left to go into town the brothers would race it around the yard, using a rake to clear their tracks.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn They eventually rolled the automobile, badly damaging the collapsible top, which the brothers concealed for a time by forcing it down and covering the automobile with hay from the barn in which it was stored.Template:Sfn The activity was ended when Vukovich suffered a sprained wrist after reaching out in an attempt to prevent another roll-over.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Around the age of sevenTemplate:Sfn Vukovich and his brothers began attending Championship car races at Fresno Speedway,Template:Sfn a board track located more than 20 miles from their home in Kerman.Template:Sfn Riding bicycles, the trio occasionally arrived days in advance to search for opportunities to watch the races for free.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Located on the Fresno County Fairgrounds, the speedway was torn down in 1927, and a previously existing dirt track restored. While the new oval no longer held major events, the brothers continued sneaking into the track through the early 1930s.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

All three brothers were interested in mechanics, and when Mike and Eli purchased junk cars to turn into hot rods, Vukovich assisted them.Template:Sfn When a family friend working for Fresno County clearing roadside ditches discovered a derelict Model T, he notified Vukovich.Template:Sfn Vukovich had the car hauled home, and with the help of his brothers and younger sister, Ann, eventually got it running again.Template:Sfn In 1934, Mike decided to begin racing in earnest, and Bill and Eli helped him convert a 1926 model Chevrolet into a track roadster.Template:Sfn

Driving career

Early career

Vukovich assisted Mike for more than a year. During this time he also began working as a "stooge" - assisting various teams by retrieving parts and tools - offering Vukovich exposure to situations and information which proved useful once he began his own driving career.Template:Sfn He eventually began asking people for chances to drive, but was turned away repeatedly.Template:Sfn In 1936, at age 17, Vukovich was allowed to drive a Chevrolet-powered track roadster owned by future Indianapolis car builder Fred Gerhardt.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The opportunity was granted after Vukovich appeared at Gerhardt's shop over several days, repeatedly asking to drive the latter's car.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

During Vukovich's first event he made it into the "B" main, a race held for those not quick enough to qualify for the feature, or "main," event. He finished second.Template:Sfn The next race weekend he was again in the "B" main, and won, qualifying him for the feature, from which he dropped out with a mechanical issue, after what biographer Bob Gates considered a strong run.Template:Sfn The week after Vukovich again made the feature, finishing third,Template:Sfn and on his fourth week, Vukovich won the main event.Template:Sfn

Vukovich won regularly after his initial victory, competing at tracks in Newton, Chowchilla, and Goshen.Template:Sfn During one event at Goshen, Vukovich was involved in a battle with Duane Carter, when his steering wheel collapsed, sending Vukovich into an accident where the jagged metal of the wheel deeply gashed his chest, requiring stitches and several days of rest.Template:Sfn Vukovich's brothers hid the extent of the injuries from their mother, explaining that Bill was staying to be closer to some upcoming races.Template:Sfn During the 1936 season, Gerhardt, despite a tight financial situation, allowed Vukovich to keep his prize earnings.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

The United States' entry into the Second World War saw a suspension of racing.<ref>Angelopolous 2024, p. 16.</ref> During the war Vukovich relocated to Riverside, California, and found work maintaining Jeeps and other vehicles for the U.S. Army.<ref name=":5">Angelopolous 2024, p. 20.</ref>

Post-war midget car career

Before he began Indy car racing, Vukovich drove midget cars for the Edelbrock dirt track racing team. He raced on the West Coast of the United States in the United Racing Association (URA), and won the series' 1945 and 1946 midget car championships. Vukovich won the 1948 Turkey Night Grand Prix at Gilmore Stadium, and six of the last eight races at the stadium track before it was closed for good.<ref name=NMARHoF>Biography Template:Webarchive at the National Midget Auto Racing Hall of Fame, Retrieved January 4, 2007</ref> He also won the 1950 AAA National Midget championship.

Vukovich was known for racing midgets powered by Drake engines. The Drake was a Harley-Davidson V-twin engine with specially built Drake water cooled heads. His last Drake powered midget was a Kurtis Kraft that was built by Ed and Zeke Justice, the Justice Brothers, in their shop in Glendale from a Kurtis kit. Previous to this car, Vukovich drove a "Frame Rail" midget that was also powered by a Drake engine.

Indianapolis 500

File:Indy500winningcar1953-1954.JPG
Vukovich's winning car from the 1953 and 1954 Indianapolis 500s

In 1952, his second year in the Indianapolis Motor Speedway's 500-Mile Race, he quickly moved up from his starting position in the middle of the third row to take the lead, and led 150 laps in dominant fashion before suffering steering failure on the 192nd of the 200 laps. He returned to win the race in consecutive years, 1953 and 1954. He led an astounding 71.7% of laps that he drove in competition at the track, and remains the only driver ever to lead the most laps in the race three consecutive years.<ref name=NMARHoF />

World Drivers' Championship career

The AAA/USAC-sanctioned Indianapolis 500 was included in the FIA World Drivers' Championship from 1950 through 1960. Drivers competing at Indianapolis during those years were credited with World Drivers' Championship points and participation in addition to those which they received towards the AAA/USAC National Championship.

Vukovich participated in five World Drivers' Championship races at Indianapolis. He started on the pole once, won twice, recorded three fastest laps, and accumulated 19 World Drivers' Championship points.

Death

Vukovich was killed in a chain-reaction crash while holding a 17-second lead on the 57th lap of the 1955 Indianapolis 500. He was exiting the second turn, trailing three slower cars – driven by Rodger Ward, Al Keller, and Johnny Boyd – when Ward's car hit the backstretch outer wall and flipped, resting in the middle of the track as a result of a broken axle. Keller, swerving into the infield to avoid Ward, lost control and slid back onto the track, striking Boyd's car and pushing it into Vukovich's path. After Vukovich's car went over the outside wall and become airborne, it cartwheeled through the air multiple times landing on top of a group of parked cars before coming to rest upside down and bursting into flames. Boyd's car also flipped over and landed upside down as well. As Vukovich's car burned, Ed Elisian stopped his undamaged car and raced towards the stricken machine in an attempt to save the other driver. It did not matter; Vukovich had perished instantly. Two spectators were also injured when Vukovich's car landed on their Jeep.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Vukovich was the second defending Indianapolis 500 winner to die during the race, following Floyd Roberts in 1939, and the only former winner to have been killed while leading. Roberts' car was also thrown over the backstretch fence after exiting the second turn in his fatal accident. Since the 1955 race was counted as part of the Formula One World Championship, Vukovich is also the first driver to be killed during a World Championship race.<ref name="ESPN">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Bill Vukovich is buried at Belmont Memorial Park, Fresno, California. The Fresno Junior Chamber of Commerce established the "Billy Vukovich Memorial Scholarship Fund" to honor the two-time winner of the Indy 500 with a living memorial. The fund was directed to the Fresno State College and was open to young men interested in preparing themselves to teach automotive mechanics in high schools.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Family and personal life

Vukovich married Esther Schmidt, the two meeting during a blind date several months previously.<ref name=":4">Angelopolous 2024, p. 19.</ref> Vukovich was shy, and the couple's early courtship saw him use Esther's younger sister as a go-between when setting up dates.<ref name=":4" /> The couple had two children: a daughter, Marlene, born in 1941; and a son, William John, born in 1944.<ref name=":5" /> Vukovich's son, known as Bill Vukovich II; and his grandson, Bill Vukovich III, also became racing drivers. Both competed in the Indianapolis 500, with Vukovich II finishing second in 1973, and Vukovich III being named the Rookie of the Year in 1988. Vukovich III died on November 25, 1990, in a crash during practice for a CRA race at Mesa Marin Raceway,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> in Bakersfield, California.

Awards and honors

Vukovich has been inducted into the following halls of fame:

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Motorsports career results

AAA Championship Car results

Year 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Pos Points
1950 INDY
DNQ
MIL LAN SPR MIL PIK SYR DET SPR SAC
Template:Small
PHX BAY DAR - 0
1951 INDY
29
MIL
Template:Small
LAN
Template:Small
DAR
Template:Small
SPR
Template:Small
MIL
Template:Small
DUQ
7
DUQ
DNQ
PIK SYR
3
DET
7
DNC
11
SJS
18
PHX BAY
Template:Small
23rd 291.8
1952 INDY
17
MIL
DNQ
RAL
24
SPR
DNQ
MIL DET
1
DUQ
3
PIK SYR
14
DNC
1
SJS
14
PHX
8
12th 590
1953 INDY
1
MIL SPR DET SPR MIL DUQ PIK SYR ISF SAC
DNQ
PHX 3rd 1,000
1954 INDY
1
MIL
22
LAN DAR SPR MIL DUQ PIK SYR ISF SAC PHX LVG 4th 1,000
1955 INDY
25
MIL LAN SPR MIL DUQ PIK SYR ISF SAC PHX - 0

Indianapolis 500 results

Year<ref name=race>Bill Vukovich Indy 500 Race Stats Template:Webarchive</ref> Car Start Qual Rank Finish Laps Led Retired
1950 10 Did not qualify
1951 81 20 133.725 16 29 29 Oil tank
1952 26 8 138.212 2 17 191 150 Steering
1953 14 1 138.392 1 1st 200 195 Running
1954 14 19 138.478 15 1st 200 90 Running
1955 4 5 141.071 3 25 56 50 Fatal accident
Totals 676 485
Starts 5
Poles 1
Front Row 1
Wins 2
Top 5 2
Top 10 2
Retired 3

FIA World Drivers' Championship results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap)

Year Entrant Chassis Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Template:Tooltip Pts
1950 Indianapolis Race Cars Maserati 8CTF Maserati 3.0 L8s GBR MON 500
Template:Small
SUI BEL FRA ITA NC 0
1951 Central Excavating Trevis Offenhauser 4.5 L4 SUI 500
Template:Small
BEL FRA GBR GER ITA ESP NC 0
1952 Fuel Injection Kurtis Kraft KK500A Offenhauser 4.5 L4 SUI 500
Template:Small
BEL FRA GBR GER NED ITA 22nd 1
1953 Fuel Injection Kurtis Kraft KK500A Offenhauser 4.5 L4 ARG 500
Template:Small
NED BEL FRA GBR GER SUI ITA 7th 9
1954 Fuel Injection Kurtis Kraft KK500A Offenhauser 4.5 L4 ARG 500
Template:Small
BEL FRA GBR GER SUI ITA ESP 6th 8
1955 Hopkins Kurtis Kraft KK500C Offenhauser 4.5 L4 ARG MON 500
Template:Small
BEL NED GBR ITA 25th 1
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Notes

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References

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