- From Rainout to Sledgehammer Showdown: The Wild 1961 Virginia 500 Doubleheader
In the early days of NASCAR’s Grand National Series, weather was also an unpredictable wildcard. Short tracks like Martinsville Speedway — the tight, 0.526-mile paved oval nestled in Virginia’s Blue Ridge foothills — tested drivers’ skill, car setup, and sheer grit more than raw horsepower.… Read more: From Rainout to Sledgehammer Showdown: The Wild 1961 Virginia 500 Doubleheader - Roaring Twenties Racing Royalty in the 1926 Spalding Champions Set
The 1926 Spalding Champions set (also known as the Sports Company of America issue) remains one of the most ambitious and visually captivating multi-sport card releases from the pre-war era. Produced by the San Francisco-based Sports Company of America—with connections to the A.G. Spalding &… Read more: Roaring Twenties Racing Royalty in the 1926 Spalding Champions Set - STP Red, Petty Blue, and Rare: The 1972 STP Cards That Started It All
The 1972 STP NASCAR card set is widely recognized as the first standard 2½″ × 3½″ trading card issue devoted entirely to NASCAR drivers. Distributed as a promotional giveaway by STP during the 1972 season — most notably during Daytona Speedweeks — the set represents… Read more: STP Red, Petty Blue, and Rare: The 1972 STP Cards That Started It All - From Cigarette Packs to the Race Track: The Racing Heart of the 1910 T37 Turkey Red Set
The T37 Automobile Series was issued around 1910–1911 by the American Tobacco Company with Turkey Red Turkish Cigarettes. The set stands as one of the earliest and most iconic dedicated automobile trading card sets, capturing the automobile’s rapid rise from novelty to cultural phenomenon. With… Read more: From Cigarette Packs to the Race Track: The Racing Heart of the 1910 T37 Turkey Red Set - The 1915 Sheepshead Bay Astor Cup
On an October afternoon in 1915, the roar of racing engines echoed across Brooklyn as automobiles surged past 100 miles per hour on a track built entirely of wood. What spectators ultimately witnessed was not just a race, but the unveiling of one of the… Read more: The 1915 Sheepshead Bay Astor Cup - Saved at the Last Minute: How the 1961 Festival 250 Became a NASCAR Race
The 1961 Festival 250 at Atlanta International Raceway exists largely because of a sudden and controversial withdrawal by the United States Auto Club (USAC) just days before the event was scheduled to run. Originally planned as a USAC-sanctioned race, the event unraveled approximately 36 hours… Read more: Saved at the Last Minute: How the 1961 Festival 250 Became a NASCAR Race
