For me it was Sebring 1963.
Previous to Sebring my racing experience was the 1962 Daytona 500. More than the race, what I remember most about that event was that I rode from Miami to Daytona and back in a red MGA with wire wheels. Other than that, I had experienced some drag racing at Masters Field in Opa Locka. Big Daddy did ¼ mile burnouts in one of the early Swamp Rats while we sat on the hoods of cars parked on the same runway with no guardrails between us and Big Daddy. It was real.
Sebring ’63 was a lot more life changing experience. My older brother was home from the Navy and he had heard about Sebring and planned for the big event with all sorts of camping equipment and provisions. He was leaving on Thursday to get in line, hoping for a good camp space by the fence entering the hairpin. In those days no vehicles were allowed on the inside of the “Hairpin” in the Green Park. Brother wanted to take me with him. My parents were adamant that I not miss any school. I was heartbroken. Then my mother had an idea. After school on Friday she would put me on a Graydog bus and send me to Sebring.
There was no bus station in Sebring. Heck, there wasn’t much to Sebring at all. But, there was a new Publix grocery store out on U.S. 27. So the driver was told to let me off in front of the Publix. What I remember about the bus trip was sitting on a left side window seat riding up U.S. 98 out of Palm Beach in the dark and being passed by strings of little sports cars. Later, word was that one of them was Stirling Moss returning from the Breakers.
I stepped into a deserted parking lot and wandered around the front of the store. Eventually my brother arrived and off we went into the night down a small dark road through the orange groves. Even after midnight the gate was manned. On the other side were shadows of hundreds of vehicles created by as many campfires. In those days you could build your own scaffolding viewing stands, and some were pretty elaborate, and scary high. At 13, I had never seen anything like it. In the dark many of us were like moths drawn to the light. We would migrate to the lights coming out of big hanger doors and look into those old WWII hangers and see race teams still working.
The next morning I shelled out my life’s savings to buy a program and a felt banner. (still hangs in the shop) I poured over the program, and figured out the schedule, entries, and track layout. But, basically I just hung at the fence and listened to the PA speaker, hanging onto every word. Seemed like forever before the race would start, with all sorts of parades of big wigs and fancy cars circling the track. Then for 12 hours I don’t think I got more than 3 feet from the chainlink fence. I walked anywhere I could see the track. Alas, my general admission ticket wouldn’t let me anywhere on the pit straight, and it took expensive (to me) tickets to go over the bridge to the pits.
Then it got dark. It was surreal watching dim oil covered tail lights disappear out of the hairpin down towards the Webster turns. In those days the track was 5.3 miles long with crazy long straights down the runways. At night you could watch the lights of the prototypes just flashing by the little basically stock British sports cars on the long North-South runway.
When the race ended, like all great spectators we clamored over the fences to rush the ceremonies on pit lane. It was nothing like I had ever experienced. Lots of foreigners with hard to pronounce names, and… beautiful cars covered in oil, dirt, and tire rubber.
Speaking of nothing ever experienced before. To try to distract me from intently watching the race were rental box trucks full of kegs with naked girls dancing on the roof. And, law enforcement officiers marching arm-in-arm through the crowd with axes to split the kegs. Then, the ensuing mud party in the beer mud. Toto, we weren’t in Kansas anymore. In later years coverage of the race in the Sunday editions of the Tampa Tribune focused mainly on the infield orgy.
Oh, and the infield restrooms… enough said. My brother, having been a Boy Scout (be prepared) had bought a separate tent with its own portable potty.
We stayed in camp Saturday night after the race. The infield looking like a Mad Max set. Climbing out of the tent Sunday morning was a heck of a scene of havoc. Abandoned furniture, tents, blankets, clothes, and thousands of beer cans. Occasionally a passed out body in the debri.
As we were driving out in my brother’s VW beetle he noticed all the gates to the track were open, so onto the track we went. We didn’t make a full lap courtesy of the Highlands County Sherriffs Office. We did get far enough to learn the inherent limitations of a VW swing axle suspension. It got real dicey in the esses. Near the MG bridge we had a meeting of minds with the Sheriff’s Deputy. After a discussion that included my brother’s patriotic service in the U.S. Navy, we were escorted out the gate and released on our own cognizance.
Needless to say it became a family tradition to return to Sebring for many years afterward. Ignoring formality, even the honeymoon with my practice wife was at the 1970 edition. My daughter as a toddler attended. My mother, then in her late 50s was an expert and getting through all sorts of security.
Years later I crewed for many teams that were racing in the 12 Hour. I have many great stories from those days. From the pit box one doesn’t have a clue of what is going on out in the infield. Except one time during night practice. One of our driver’s wives was an avid photographer, and stunningly beautiful. She wanted to take night pictures and catch the headlights, glowing brake rotors, infield scenery, etc. Being an “older gentleman", I was assigned bodyguard duty to escort her around the track. I was amused to discover that even decades after my first visit the infield was living up to legend.
Finally, it wasn’t until The Winter Nationals in 2007 that I actually got to drive a race car on the famed track. It was seriously on my bucket list. The first few laps were kind of emotional I must admit. Not my favorite track, but the history embodied in that track is huge.
In March of 1963 I became a complete road race fan. Did serious autocross in the 70s. Started road racing Formula Continentals in 1998 with enough success to stay addicted.