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A NASCAR legend,
Hershel McGriff,
began racing stock
cars in 1945 at the
age of 17. He is
NASCAR Winston
West’s oldest and
winningest active
competitor, with 35
victories. He won
the Winston West
championship in 1986
and has finished in
the top ten in
points thirteen
times since 1971. On
September 16, 1945
McGriff raced in his
first race at
Portland Speedway.
He finished “12th or
13th” in a
250-lapper,
cautiously
navigating a muddy
5/8-mile track in
his minister
father’s 1940
Hudson.
Hershel won the
1940 Mexican Road
Race, out-driving
NASCAR founder Bill
France and 131 other
cars. He raced in
the inaugural
Southern 500 at
Darlington
International
Raceway in South
Carolina, and drove
his racecar to the
track all the way
from his home in
Portland, finished
ninth in the race,
then drove his car
home again. Although
he did compete in
the SCCA Trans Am
2.5 Challenge and
finished 19th in the
1982 Endurance Le
Mans race, most of
his time has been
spent behind the
wheel of a NASCAR
stock car. During
the 1970’s, Hershel
drove for Petty
Enterprises,
swapping positions
with the likes of
Richard Petty, Cale
Yarborough, A.J.
Foyt and Johnny
Rutherford.
Career highlights
for McGriff include:
Helped form, and
then race in, the
NASCAR Winston West
series with friend
Bill France, Sr.;
has raced and won in
six different
decades, starting in
1945; most wins (14)
at the old
Riverside, Calf.,
International
Raceway; was
presented with
NASCAR�������s prestigious
award of Excellence
in 1994; and was
voted one of
NASCAR’s “50
Greatest Drivers”.
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