By
Danny White
Lew Arrington was
one of the early funny car
stars. Lew raced the infamous
"Brutus" GTO out of the
Northern California based
Goodies Speed Shop. A real big
block Pontiac powered the
converted stock GTO at first,
but the Pontiac could not
stand the excessive amounts of
nitro. A 392 Chrysler with
Pontiac stamped on the valve
covers replaced the pure
Poncho motor. "Brutus" also
was the first ride that made
"Jungle Jim" Liberman famous,
along with the "Samson,"
"Hercules," and "Hairy Canary"
funny cars. The GTO ran eight
second times. Arrington built
a new Firebird in ‘67, while
Don Williamson of "Hairy
Canary" fame ended up with the
much-modified GTO. Future fuel
altered driver Don Trillo
crashed the GTO bad enough to
end its racing career. (Photo
provided by Drag Racing
Memories; info from
www.draglist.com files)
Arnie Beswick
might not have been the
biggest winner of the sixties,
but he did put on a hell of a
show. Beswick was a loyal
Pontiac racer, though there
was a short stint with a Comet
A/FX. The "Tameless Tiger" GTO
was home built and a little
scary to say the least.
Beswick stepped up to blown
nitro after beginning with gas
at the urging of future funny
car star Frank Oglesby. This
gave the greater Chicago area
three blown nitro funny cars
in 1964, including Gary Dyer
in the Mr. Norm’s Dodge, Ron
Pellegrini’s Super Mustang,
and Beswick.
This car was
Beswick's second funny car,
replacing a newer GTO that he
raced during 1964. Arnie was
credited the first nine-second
funny car run. The "Tameless
Tiger" was rebuilt to be much
lighter than when it first
raced in super stock. Beswick
later went 8.30s with the car!
Arnie Behling later tuned the
car before it was parked for
good. (Photo provided by Drag
Racing Memories; info from
www.draglist.com files)
Hubert Platt was
known as the "Georgia Shaker"
even though he was from the
Carolinas. Platt was a
moonshine runner before taking
on racing. By 1964, Platt was
a full time racer with the
Dickie Walter sponsored "Iowa
Shaker" ‘65 Falcon. Platt
later won the 1967 NHRA
Winternationals A/XS title
running 8.49 at 147.52 and won
the NASCAR Funny Car Class at
Summer Championships held at
Dragway 42. Platt was well
known for his Fords and his
open door burnouts. Hubert’s
brother Huston also raced
early funny cars, but Huston
ran Chevys. Platt quit funny
cars to go back to Super Stock
and later raced Pro Stock.
Hubert retired from racing in
1977. (Photo courtesy of David
Dilbeck and Hubert Platt; info
from www.draglist.com files)
Dick Loehr was one
of many funny car drivers
based out of Michigan. An
engineer by trade, Dick used
his job connections to get
sponsorship and assistance for
his racing operations. In
1967, Loehr had a new Mustang
funny car built. The Max
Curtis Ford "Stampede" was
much lower than most of its
competition. The car debuted
with a 427 SOHC engine, which
later was replaced by a
reliable 392 Chrysler Hemi.
Loehr ran a best of 7.86 at
189.70 with the car at Orange
County. The car was replaced a
by new, lighter Mustang in
1969. Dick Loehr eventually
left funny cars for Pro
Stockers. (Photo provided by
Drag Racing Memories; info
provided by www.draglist.com)
Pete Gates was an
unknown when he began his
funny car career by buying
Dyno Don Nicholson`s 1965
Comet. Dyno actually drove his
"old car" in the first couple
races while Pete got used to
the car. Putting an Art Carr
automatic transmission in the
"old ‘65 Comet," and entering
the 1966 Super Stock
Nationals, Pete blew away all
the big names in funny car
racing like Dyno, Fast Eddie
Schartman, Beswick, and others
to win in his first time out.
In 1967, Pete got a new car
that consisted of a left over
1966 Comet fiberglass body on
a brand new Logghe chassis.
The Gate Job was born.
Pete won a few
match races with the Gate Job,
including the Memorial Day
Olympics of Drag Racing at
Great Lakes Dragway. In mid
year, Pete received a new 1967
Comet body. It was all red
with two white stripes down
the top unlike the blended,
saucy paint job of the
original Gate Job. For 1968,
Gates got a 1968 Cougar with a
new Logghe chassis. Pete ran
the Gate Job Cougar into 1969,
then hung up his driving
gloves. (Photo and text
provided by Daryl Huffman)
Fred Goeske came
to fame as the second owner of
the B&M Plymouth Dealers
Barracuda in late 1966. Goeske
raced the heavy stock rear
engine car until the end of
1967. In 1968, Fred ordered a
new funny car to be built by
Ron Scrima and Pat Foster at
Exhibition Engineering. The
‘68 Barracuda was more
traditional than the one it
replaced. Still sponsored by
the Plymouth Dealers
Association of Southern
California, Goeske called it
the Hemi-Cuda II. The car
debuted with a win at Lions
Drag Strip and Goeske was the
hottest funny car in Southern
California for the next couple
of months. Fred ran a best of
7.78 at 191.88 with the car
according to Draglist files.
(Photo courtesy of Drag Racing
Memories; info from
www.draglist.com files)
Bill Lawton was
Rhode Island’s most successful
funny car driver in the
sixties. Teamed with Tasca
Ford and tuner John Healey,
Lawton won many races in the
Super Stock, Factory
Experimental, and Funny Car
classes. Lawton’s biggest win
came at the 1965 NHRA
Winternationals where he won
Factory Experimental. The win
came in the "Mystery 8," so
dubbed for the goal of running
an eight-second time. Bill
continued to race with Tasca
until the "Mystery 7." Tasca
left drag racing at the same
time the Ford Motor Company
did. Lawton continued to race
funny cars on his own. Tasca
recently returned to drag
racing with an associate
sponsorship for John Force.
Tasca also raced a TA/FC with
his son, dubbed the "Mystery
5." (Photo courtesy of Drag
Racing Memories; info courtesy
of www.draglist.com)
There has been
some question as to who became
the first female funny driver,
but we consider Paula Murphy
was the first. Paula had
previous racing experiences
with Indy Cars, NASCAR stock
cars, and other forms of
racing. In 1966, "Fat Jack"
Bynum and Murphy teamed up to
build a ‘66 Mustang funny car
called "Miss STP." The
homebuilt chassis was crude at
best, but it had a Dave
Zueschel-built 392 Chrysler
tuned by Bynum. The uniqueness
of a female funny car driver
worked for Murphy. Paula was
able to get enough bookings to
support her as a full time
professional drag racer. The
car ran into the eights in the
1967 season. (Photo provided
by Mike Ditty; info from
www.draglist.com files)
Hayden Proffitt
was one the great racers of
the 1960s. Proffitt won may
races in Super Stock with a
Chevrolet 409, then jumped to
a Ford when they gave him a
Comet A/FX. Proffitt built a
Corvair funny car in 1966. The
car began with a top, but it
was cut off after the car
wanted to lift at speeds.
Proffitt got the car to run
8.49. In 1967, Hayden took
over the Grant Industries
Rebel SST funny car program.
Proffitt hired famed Amos
Saterlee to tune the large 439
C.I. AMC engine. The problems
that original bunch had with
the Rebel continued with
Proffitt. The red car ran 8.11
at 180.85 before being retired
at the end of 1967.
In 1968, Hayden
put the AMC Rebel body on an
unused Logghe Stage II chassis
he had. By the end of 1968,
AMC dropped out of funny car
racing and Proffitt retired
from racing for a few years.
Hayden returned to racing with
a rocket dragster driven by
his son Brad. Proffitt later
drove the "Hot Streak" jet
dragster. (Photo provided by
Mike Ditty; info provided by
www.draglist.com files)
Ronnie Sox only
ran funny cars from 1964 to
1966, but he was one of the
premier early funny car stars.
Sox & Martin began their
funny car career with an A/FX
Comet. They were one of the
American teams that visited
England in 1964. In 1965, Sox
& Martin got backing from
Chrysler and a new altered
wheelbase Plymouth. It was in
this car that Sox & Martin
started running nitro in the
tank. In 1966, the evolution
of the funny car was happening
at such a pace that the cars
built in ’64 and ‘65 were too
old. Sox & Martin sold the
old car to Buckeye &
Vernon, a team that bought
many old Sox & Martin
cars.