By all accounts, Jimmy Murphy was the kind of guy 
you wanted to smash in the face on the race track, but buy him a beer 
afterwards. A helluva competitor, and a heckuva nice guy. He was also 
one of the evolutionary links between the eras of spectacle events and 
the dawning of the Golden Age of motor racing. 
His is the story of 
racing itself...
|  | 
| Jimmy Murphy, at the peak of his powers, and soon to be dead. This was taken the year before he died in his Miller Special. | 
    
It is said that some men are destined for greatness in
 their field; Jimmy was the embodiment of that. A natural talent behind 
the wheel, he began full-time racing in 1919; in 1920 he finished 4th in
 the Indianapolis 500.
   The Duesenberg
 Brothers had been early advocates of Jimmy's. After a matter of months,
 he had been paid to be team-driver, and then promoted to number one 
when Duesenberg decided to take on the great Europeans. They entered 
three cars in the French Grand Prix, and Jimmy was to be the point man.
Then disaster struck. 
As
 Murphy was running a practice lap with Louis Inghibert, he crashed the 
car, flipping end over end into a ditch. He was confined to a hospital 
bed with internal injuries until two-hours before race-time. But that 
was just a minor obstacle. After being helped into the cockpit, the 
Thundering Irishman smashed the speed record, and won the race, 
finishing with a flat tire and a destroyed radiator.
|  | 
| Great ad from 1923 featuring Jimmy Murphy. 
 In
 1922, Murphy bucked the Dusenbergs, and ran a Miller engine in his 
Indianapolis 500 car. Calling it the "Murphy Special", he dominated in 
winning the event. He was the National Racing Champion for the year, and
 finished second in 1923 despite missing several European races.
 
 1924
 was supposed to be his year. His racing points were piling up, and he 
was on his way to another crown when, with 12 miles left in the AAA 
Championship 150 mile race in New York, he was attempting to pass 
competitor Phil Shafer.
 
 Jimmy
 Murphy had raced on the wooden board circuit for years, without serious
 injury, and the Syracuse dirt-track was considered one of the safest. 
This time, however, the Irish hero went into a skid at tremendous speed,
 the brakes locked, and he crashed through a wooden fence lining the 
track. He was killed instantly, a chunk of timber tearing through his 
chest. He was 30.
 
 
 Because
 he had accumulated so many race points up to that point, his total was 
enough for him to be awarded the annual Champion Driver title 
posthumously.
 
 
 
 In
 five years, he had accumulated 18 major victories (a pace hard to 
imagine now), and absolutely cemented his status as one of the greatest,
 if not the greatest driver of all time.
 
 
 | 
|  | 
| Jimmy Murphy's grave in Calvary Cemetary, East Los Angeles. 
 
 | 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment