- Harry Hartz
Harry Hartz (
December 24 1896 –September 26 1974 ) was an Americanauto mechanic and race car driver.Career
Harry Hartz was born in
Pomona, California , and grew up in the Los Angeles area. At age eighteen, he began to drive in support events for the car races of the time. He was a mechanic, but sought to be a race car driver and signed on with theDuesenberg brothers afterWorld War I . Hartz made his debut at the 1921Indianapolis 500 race asEddie Hearne 's riding mechanic.The following year, Hartz was behind the wheel of the Duesenberg and finished in second place. In 1932, he finished in second place again in a Cliff Durant Special, and placed in fourth position next year. In 1925, he brought his own auto CID|121|1 Miller and finished fourth, and returned the next year with his auto CID|90|1 Miller Special to capture second place. His car had a mechanical failure in 1927. He is the only driver to come in second in the Indianapolis 500 three times, but never to win the race in his six attempts.
Hartz was successful in
board track racing . He finished in the top five positions 46 times out of the 69 major events he started, and won seven championship events.Hartz was badly burned and injured in a crash in 1927 at the Rockingham Speedway in
Salem, New Hampshire , requiring him to spend the next two years in hospitals. The stock market crash of 1929 also inflicted heavy financial loses for him. He retired from racing to become a team owner and chief mechanic. Hartz bought a used 1927 Miller 91 front-drive race car, and built the car for the junk-formula by widening the chassis and installing a bored-out Miller 122 (151 cu in). [http://www.milleroffy.com/Miller%20Club%202003.htm The Harry A. Miller Club Vintage Indy Car Exhibition, 2003 (with images of the car), undated page] , retrieved on August 10, 2008.] Together withBilly Arnold as driver, the combination was successful, and they won the 1930 Indy 500 race and also took the national championship for the year.Hartz appeared in the racing sequences for the 1932 movie "
The Crowd Roars ". [ [http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0367343/ "Harry Hartz", IMDb, undated page] , retrieved on August 10, 2008.]Hartz worked for
Studebaker for many years.Chrysler began using auto racing as a promotional tool to sell its cars. In 1933, DeSoto recruited Hartz for a publicity stunt by driving a car backwards across the country. [http://www.allpar.com/history/desoto.html Duricy, Dave. "A Full History of DeSoto" undated document] , retrieved on August 10, 2008.] During mid-August 1934, he set 72 new AAA stock car records at theBonneville Salt Flats course in Utah in aChrysler Imperial Airflow coupe.cite book
last = Hyde
first = Charles K.
title = Riding the Roller Coaster
publisher = Wayne State University Press
date = 2003
pages = 96–97
url = http://books.google.com/books?id=aQhTq18vi7AC&pg=PA96&lpg=PA96&dq=Harry+Hartz&source=web&ots=B954wQR5bT&sig=mZBXeFhaSD5SdvW2m_5aDKMt2gg&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=19&ct=result#PPA97,M1
isbn = 9780814330913 ] At the end of the month, Hartz drove the same car from Los Angeles to New York City and set an economy record of convert|18.1|mpgus|L/100 km mpgimp|abbr=off, and without having to add water at any time during all of these performance runs. Another source credits him with driving the newly introduced DeSoto Airflow convert|3114|mi|0|adj=off from New York to San Francisco, and averaging convert|21.4|mpgus|L/100 km mpgimp|abbr=on, with total fuel bill of US$33.06 for the run.After having much success, he retired in 1940. Later, Hartz had a serious automobile accident from which he never fully recovered. He died in
Indianapolis, Indiana at age 78.Award
*He was inducted in the National Sprint Car Hall of Fame in 1998. [ [http://sprintcarhof.com/Inductees.aspx 1998 — Ninth National Sprint Car Hall of Fame Inductions] , retrieved on August 10, 2008.]
Indy 500 results
References
;Inline;General
* [ [http://sprintcarhof.com/Inductees.aspx Harry Hartz biobraphy, Ninth National Sprint Car Hall of Fame, undated downloadable document] , retrieved on August 10, 2008.
* [http://www.indy500.com/stats/driver/Harry_Hartz Harry Hartz Career Stats, Official site of the Indianapolis 500, undated page] , retrieved on August 10, 2008.
* [http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?_r=1&res=9C03E1DA1F30EE3ABC4E53DFB5668389639EDE&oref=slogin Tommy Milton Wins Automobile Title" The New York Times, March 6, 1922, Sports page 16] , retrieved on August 10, 2008.
* [http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=950DE7DC1F3EEE3ABC4C53DFB4678389639EDE "Murphy is First in 259-mile Race" The New York Times, December 4, 1922, Sports page 24] , retrieved on August 10, 2008.
* [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,789336,00.html "Cars by Miller", Time magazine, June 6, 1932] , retrieved on August 10, 2008.
* [http://digitum.washingtonhistory.org/cdm4/item_viewer.php?CISOROOT=/boland&CISOPTR=35&CISOBOX=1&REC=20 Picture of "Harry Hartz and #14 racecar", By: Marvin D. Boland, Date: June 19, 1919, Washington State Historical Society] , retrieved on August 10, 2008.
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