Ed Rahal (1925 – 2009)

Edmund Rahal, who though mainly unknown was the first of the racing Rahals, passed away last December 16 at the age of 84. Ed and Michael (the better-known father of Bobby) Rahalโ€™s grandfathers were brothers, so Michael (a racer himself) and Bobby are distantly related to Ed. In VRโ€™s January 2008 issue, Willem Oosthoek wrote โ€œThe First Racing Rahal,โ€ that provided a detailed and comprehensive look at Rahalโ€™s racing career.

Ed Rahal first raced in 1952 in an MG-TD; then competed in a succession of racers, including AC-Bristol, Arnolt-Bristol and Chevy V-8, Cobra, Jaguar XKs, Lancia Aurelia, and Maserati 200SI. He raced extensively in the south, taking in SCCA races in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, and South Carolina. He raced an AC-Bristol at the 1959 Sebring 12 Hours, and a Cobra 289 roadster in the 1964 Daytona Continental.

He earned the majority of his wins in his Jaguar D-type (XKD 553), which he first raced on May 17, 1958. One of his best-known wins came at a nondescript SCCA Regional at the Daytona International Speedway on January 31, 1960. CBS was there to televise the 12-lap race for its โ€œSpeed Spectacularโ€ program, and itโ€™s said to be the first time road racing was featured on television. Rahalโ€™s D-Type wasnโ€™t just any D-Type, however. It was first owned by Jack Ensley, who raced it with Indy driver Pat Oโ€™Connor to a DNF at the 1957 Sebring 12 Hours. The carโ€”featuring a fin, quick-change brakes, larger calipers, and torsion barsโ€”was brought to Sebring by the factory for testing prior to turning it over to Ensley. The photo to the left shows Rahalโ€™s D-Type (#100) and Art Huttingerโ€™s Bocar XP-5-Chevy (#45) at the start of the rainy three-lap qualifier at the first SCCA amateur sports car race held at the Daytona International Speedway on September 5, 1959. Rahal won three races that weekend with his venerable D-Type. He ended his successful 14-year racing career by winning his final race on June 19, 1966, in his beloved D-Type at the Montgomery (Alabama) Industrial Terminal.

After reading about Ed in Oosthoekโ€™s article, I called and chatted with Ed to tell him how much I enjoyed seeing him race. Iโ€™d seen him in his Arnolt-Chevy V-8 and D-Type at the Cocoa-Titusville Airport and Daytona as a star-struck 18-year-old wandering around Florida with a camera. He was still enthusiastic talking about racing some 40 years later, and sounded like he was ready to jump back into a racecar and have a go!

Itโ€™s also important to recognize Ed Rahal for his unselfish service to our country as he served as a Marine during WWII and in Korea. Edmund E. Rahal, Sr. is one of the reasons youโ€™re reading Vintage Racecar, being one of the many amateur racers who formed the backbone of the motor racing culture and heritage we celebrate today.

by Jeff Allison