 |
Madison, Ind., is steeped in a competitive tradition
that dates back to the 1800s when steamboats raced each other on the legendary
Ohio River. Perhaps because of this, boat racing is very deeply engrained
in the public consciousness.
According to folklore, one of the earliest boat races to occur in the
vicinity of Madison was a keelboat competition that supposedly matched
Mike Fink, the flamboyant King of the River, with Davy Crockett,
King of the Wild Frontier. Crockett emerged the winner (by
barely a boat length) in the apocryphal race that began in Maysville,
Ky., and ended in New Orleans.
The earliest documented power boat regatta at Madison took place in 1911.
The steamship Princess from Coney Island tied up in the middle of the
river. Power launches ran an oval track roughly around the boat. This
was also one of the earliest examples of competition as it is currently
characterized around a closed course.
The first boats to be specifically built for racing appeared in 1919.
Among these was the famous Dayton Kid, a step hydroplane, owned by Pat
Parrish.
 |
|
Photo
provided
Bill
Muncey became the first
three-time consecutive winner of
the Indiana Governors cup in
1960-62 with Miss Thriftway.
|
The first major regatta to be run in Madison occurred in 1929 under the
auspices of the Ohio Valley Motorboat Racing Association of Cincinnati.
L.J. Montifers Catherine III emerged as the champion that Labor
Day weekend. Equipped with a 1914 vintage Hispano-Suiza (Hisso)
aircraft engine, the craft won $400 for its victories in the 725 Cubic
Inch Class race and the Hydroplane Free-For-All around the approximate
2 1/2-mile course.
The winningest driver at Madison during the years between the World Wars
was popular Wild Bill Cantrell of Louisville, Ky. Cantrell,
who would become a racing legend in the post-war Unlimited Class, won
the 725 Class title three times in 1934 and 1935 with
Big Shot and in 1936 with Why Worry.
The disastrous Ohio River flood of 1937 brought down the curtain on organized
boat racing in Madison. Competition did not resume until 1949 when a local
group, which later became Madison Regatta Inc., staged an unsanctioned
wildcat affair for limited inboard and outboard racing craft.
The largest class to participate in 1949 was the 225 Cubic Inch hydroplanes.
The winner of the 225 Class race was the Hornet, driven by Marion Cooper
of Louisville who in 1961 would achieve fame as the original driver for
the community owned Miss Madison Unlimited hydroplane.
The Madison Regatta entered the modern era in 1950, which was the first
year that an American Power Boat Association sanction was in effect. It
was also the first Madison race to be attended by a modern Unlimited hydroplane,
the My Darling, which posted a winning average speed of 76 mph with owner
Andy Marcy from Springfield, Ill., at the wheel.
The inaugural running of the Indiana Governors Cup was the highlight
of the 1951 Madison Regatta. Coopers Hornet claimed this first in
a long line of Governors Cup races at a speed of 65.886 mph. Also
participating in 1951 were the Unlimited Class Gale II, driven by Lee
Schoenith, and the 725 Class Its a Wonder, handled by George Davis.
All of the Unlimited races run at Madison between 1950 and 1953 were multi-class
events that consisted of a single heat and didnt count for APBA
National High Points. The first race to count for National Points was
the 1954 Indiana Governors Cup, won by Bill Cantrell driving Joe
Schoeniths Allison-powered Gale IV from Detroit.
From 1954 onward, the Madison Unlimited race has always been scheduled
for two or more heats with National High Points at stake. The tiny Ohio
River town of 13,000 was now in the major league of water sports.
 |
|
Photo
provided
Above
is a scene of the past, with
(from top) Atlas Van Lines, Griffon
Budweiser, Squire Shop, American
Speedy Printing and Miss Renault
in Seattle in 1983.
|
The first heat at more than 100 mph in Madison history occurred in 1955.
Danny Foster, the Governors Cup winner that year with bandleader
Guy Lombardos Tempo VII, averaged 102.079 with an Allison engine.
Bill Muncey became the first three-time consecutive winner of the Indiana
Governors Cup in 1960-62 with Miss Thriftway (also known as Miss
Century 21). This occurred on the same race course where Muncey almost
lost his life in a spectacular crash while driving an earlier Miss Thriftway
in the 1957 Madison Regatta.
Another three-time consecutive winner was Bill Harrahs Tahoe Miss,
which won the 1964 and 1965 races with Chuck Thompson as driver and the
1966 race with Mira Slovak.
Bernie Little, the sports most successful participant, first raced
at Madison in 1963 with a remodeled former pleasure boat named Tempo.
Littles first in a long line of Miss Budweiser hydroplanes appeared
in 1964, although his first Madison victory didnt occur until 1970.
That was the year Dean Chenoweth did the honors after a head-to-head battle
in the Final Heat with Leif Borgersen in Notre Dame.
The all-time high water mark of Unlimited racing at Madison is obviously
the fabulous 1971 regatta, which was won by the community-owned Miss Madison
before the hometown crowd. Driver Jim McCormick won all of the marbles
in a combination APBA Gold Cup and Indiana Governors Cup event and
defeated the likes of Terry Sterett in Atlas Van Lines II, Chenoweth in
Miss Budweiser, Billy Schumacher in Pride of Pay 'n Pak, and Fred Alter
in Towne Club in the Final Heat.
Years later, in 1999, a Hollywood motion picture re-created the 1971 Gold
Cup and was filmed on location in southern Indiana. The movie, which is
titled, "Madison," stars actor Jim Caviezel in the role of McCormick.
The first turbine-powered hydroplane to win a Madison race was Fran Munceys
Atlas Van Lines in 1984. With Chip Hanauer driving, the Atlas was the
first truly competitive turbine boat in the APBA Unlimited Class. Following
and as a result of the 1984 Madison Regatta, the large-scale transition
from Allison or Rolls-Royce piston power to Lycoming turbine power was
inevitable.
The Madison Regatta has elevated the picturesque Ohio River town into
the national sports arena and shows what can be accomplished when public-spirited
citizens from all walks of life band together to stage an exciting production
that gains nationwide favorable publicity for an area.
|