One Hundred Years of the Indy 500
A century ago, the first Indianapolis 500 race started in high excitement and ended in a muddle
- By Charles Leerhsen
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2011, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
“I was perfectly conscious when we whirled through the air,” Greiner said. “Dick[son]—poor boy—I guess he never realized what happened.” Then alluding to pre-race complications with the 44, he said, “I’m convinced now that it really does have a hoodoo.”
Around the 250-mile mark, Patschke pulled into the pits and hopped out of the Wasp, and Harroun grabbed a hot-water bottle and hopped back in. If the Wasp truly had the lead, then it was Patschke who had put it there.
All sources had Harroun ahead at 300 miles, but now Mulford was making his move. The Lozier hovered 35 seconds behind the Wasp from mile 300 to 350 and onward, according to Horseless Age. For what it’s worth, the Revised Results have Mulford in front at 350 miles—though the Star spoke for most journalists when it said “Harroun was never headed from the 250th mile to the finish of the race.”
At about 400 miles, the drivers positioned themselves for the final push. DePalma bore down so furiously that he was forced to come in for tires three times over a mere 18 laps. Mulford’s Lozier also had tire trouble: late in the race, he pitted for a replacement that took less than a minute, then came in again a few laps later for several minutes. The crowd, said Motor Age, “realized that it really was a race. They forgot their morbid curiosity in accidents and studied the scoreboards.”
But what exactly did they see there? After 450 miles, the Lozier team would insist that its car was listed first on at least one of the scoreboards and that officials had assured team manager Charles Emise that was one of the rare scoreboard postings people could trust. As a result, Emise would say, he signaled Mulford to ease off in the last 10 or 20 miles so he wouldn’t have to pit and jeopardize his lead. Several members of the Lozier camp would later swear that Mulford saw the green, one-lap-to-go flag first, at which point he was running comfortably ahead of Bruce-Brown, with Harroun third. A mile or so later, Bruce-Brown’s Fiat dropped back behind Harroun.
Mulford, in this version of events, crossed the wire first, and, as was the custom among drivers of that day, ran an “insurance lap” after getting the checkered flag, to be sure that he had covered the required distance. When Mulford went to the winner’s circle to claim his trophy, he found Harroun already there, surrounded by cheering multitudes. Harroun, the official winner, didn’t have much to say beyond, “I’m tired—may I have some water, and perhaps a sandwich, please?” Or something to that effect. Whether he ever wondered if he really crossed the wire first, we will never know. As a driver who came up in the era before windshields were invented, he had learned to keep his mouth shut.
Adapted from Blood and Smoke: A True Tale of Mystery, Mayhem and the Birth of the Indy 500, by Charles Leerhsen. Copyright © 2011 by Charles Leerhsen. Reprinted by permission from Simon & Schuster. All rights reserved.
Charles Leerhsen’s previous book was Crazy Good, a portrait of the harness-racing champion horse Dan Patch.
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Related topics: Death Games and Competition Early 20th Century
Additional Sources
Fastest of the First: A Complete History of the Inaugural 1911 Indianapolis 500 by Belcher Foundation, Inc. 2008









Comments (5)
its funny and sad when men compete with machines....but we have a new sport!
Posted by Auto Repair Shop on July 16,2011 | 04:24 AM
I live within walking distance of the IMS. I didn't go to the race this year but my son and I walked there and people watched and got to see and hear some of the festivities. We had much fun and watching the stealth fly right above our heads was awesome!
Posted by Lee on June 8,2011 | 03:26 PM
Thanks so much for this article. Fred Belcher was my grandfather and all I have been able to research on this particular race you seem to have really been able to expand on and verify exactly what we might expect it was. Must have been a lot of fun!
Posted by Kirk on May 28,2011 | 09:52 PM
I read with interest your article about the Incy500. My father worked for the Marmon company then and often rode as the mechanic. Thanks.
Posted by Mary Moses on May 25,2011 | 12:25 AM
Good job Charles Leersen.
Posted by Tony Gray on May 23,2011 | 01:53 PM