1954 Watkins Glen

The 7th running of the fall races at Watkins Glen, N.Y., was held at the Interim Course, a 4.6-mile, 9-turn circuit on public roads, up the hill from the village, in Dix Townshipโ€”the second year for that course. People would later call it โ€œthe course on the hill.โ€ It was a beautiful course, but not nearly as popular with the drivers as the 6.6-mile circuit that went through town. As described at the time, it had โ€œa 6,000-foot straight which is slightly downhill and punctuated with mounds and โ€˜thank-you-maโ€™ams.โ€™โ€ Course control was handled efficiently by Fred Germanโ€™s Race Communications Association. The Elmira Star Gazette estimated an attendance of 35,000. According to driver Gordon MacKenzie, the race had been preceded by a gala Mark Twain Festival in nearby Elmira, N.Y., which hardly anyone knows is the place where the famed writer is buried.

Longtime enthusiast Chuck Hazle remembers the interim course: โ€œI went up there with my dad after we took my sister to Cornell,โ€ he says. โ€œIt was outside of town, in the farm country. We paid a farmer to park the car and walked up the hill past the barns and silos and fields. It was a curvy road with sweeps left and right. After an acute right around a big tree, it went over to another road and up the hill. The straightaway went over the crest of a hill and many of the cars were airborne there.โ€

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