A TRIBUTE TO GRAHAM
HEATH: THE ORIGINAL CREW CHIEF OF MISS MADISON (1961-1965)
By Fred Farley - APBA Unlimited Historian
Graham Heath of Madison, Indiana, has
been a motor racing enthusiast all his life. From an early age,
fast boats and fast cars have had a special place in his heart.
As a youngster, growing up on a farm about twelve miles north of
Madison, Graham was fascinated by the exploits of such premier
car racers as Gus Schrader, Emory Collins, and Wilbur Shaw.
As a young man, Heath became involved
in Model T Ford competition. He spent a lot of time hanging around
local race tracks, where he met his lifelong friend, the late Bill
Cantrell, who was making quite a name for himself at that time
as driver for the SOUTHERN STAR racing team.
After returning from military service
in World War II, Graham gravitated to the boats. He worked on and
drove Neal Cahall's GERONIMO on the Mid-West Limited inboard circuit.
During this time, Heath became acquainted with racing great Ron
Musson.
"He and I were great buddies," Graham
recalls. When Musson started driving Unlimited hydroplanes in the
late 1950s, Heath joined him as a crew member. At the 1959 Madison
Regatta, Graham and Ron scored a victory in the Indiana Governor's
Cup with Joe Mascari's HAWAII KAI III.
In 1960, Musson drove for the Samuel
F. DuPont team, which campaigned a pair of fast boats, the NITROGEN
and the NITROGEN TOO. Heath helped out on NITROGEN TOO, which won
the Silver Cup at Detroit with Ron driving. By now, Graham was
thoroughly enchanted by the mighty Unlimiteds, the Thunderboats
of the racing world.
The bug bit him.
More than anything else, he wanted to work on an Unlimited full
time. And in 1961,
he got his wish. DuPont had retired from the sport but had a special
fondness for Madison. He decided to make an outright gift of his
older boat, NITROGEN, to the city. And a racing legend was
born.
NITROGEN became
the first MISS MADISON. Marion Cooper was the driver, and Graham
Heath was the crew chief.
The MISS MADISON organization in those days included the likes
of Cahall, Dick Cox, and Phil Cole, Jr. Assisting on the day-to-day
operation of the boat, Graham recalls, were "Bobby Humphrey,
my right-hand man; Ben Schnabel, who did the hull work; Don Smith,
Bob Neal, and Don Tuite."
Heath and company took a fifth-place
in their first race with MISS MADISON at the 1961 Detroit Memorial
Regatta. Then, they headed west to participate in the World's Championship
Seafair Regatta, where they won the second-division Seattle Trophy
Race on Lake Washington. Graham remembers that race vividly.
"All we
had was one stock Allison engine, an old tool box, an old junk
blower, one gasket, one fuel
pump, and some odds and ends. I had maybe forty dollars in my pocket.
As I look back on it, we had to have been fools.
"We had all kinds of troubles that
day," he continued. "The exhaust pipe broke off, the
fire was going down into the deck of the boat, and a bolt broke
in the propeller strut. It seemed like everything was happening.
But Bill Cantrell and the GALE V crew, whose boat was out of the
race, pitched in and helped and we won the first-place trophy.
It was great."
Unbelievably, the MISS MADISON made
it through the entire 1961 campaign with a single Allison engine
and an all-volunteer crew. Like the rest of his co-workers, Graham
had to work a regular job to make a living and raise a family.
But he still achieved competitive results out on the race course--even
without an equipment van full of extra engines and an acre of spart
parts.
The first MISS
MADISON came to a sorry conclusion in trials for the Gold Cup at
Detroit in 1963. The boat
was completely destroyed and new pilot Morlan Visel was seriously
injured. In Heath's words, "All hell broke loose" as
the MISS MADISON approached the Whittier Hotel on the front straightaway
of the 3- mile course. "I don't think that I've ever seen
water go so high."
Graham's good
friends George McKernan and George Davis helped him recover the
demolished craft from the
watery depths of the Detroit River. The next day, while sifting
through the wreckage, Heath discovered the cause of the accident. "A
four- by-four with a bunch of pennants nailed to it had gone through
that boat. I found it lodged in the left side. That was the end
of the first MISS MADISON."
Not to worry, the City of Madison was
not about to lose its floating Chamber of Commerce for very long.
The Ohio River townspeople had another hull, the NITROGEN TOO,
which had likewise been acquired from Sam DuPont. Losing the first
boat and seeing Visel injured took an emotional toll on Graham.
"Ordinary people would have given
up," he admits. "But not racing people. Racing people
have got determination, adrenaline, and the drive. They come back.
I don't know how to describe it."
So, Heath set
his sorrow aside and plunged into preparing the second MISS MADISON
for competition. The nationally
ranked 7-Litre pilot, George "Buddy" Byers, occupied
the driver's seat from 1963 to 1965.
Graham had the
highest respect for Buddy's cockpit prowess and considered him
one of the all-time greats. "He
drove and he drove hard. You could never tell what he was
going to do. And he loved to psych the other drivers. The
first time in the boat, he handled it like a veteran."
Byers and MISS MADISON finished second
to Musson and MISS BARDAHL in the 1964 National High Point standings
on the strength of being both fast and consistent. MISS MADISON
captured the 1965 Dixie Cup at Guntersville, Alabama, her first
major victory. And Heath was honored by the Unlimited Racing Commission
as the original winner of the Crew Chief of the Year award for
1965.
The 1960s were
pinnacle years for Thunderboat racing. Even the necessary introduction
of big-money sponsorship
did not interfere with good old-fashioned sporting comradeship. "We
had a good time in those days. Everybody helped everybody. They
were good people, fun people. The work was hard. It wasn't easy
work. But the people made it worth while."
Two of Graham's favorite people of that
period were Jim and Yvonne Ranger of Detroit. At the 1965 season
finale in San Diego, Heath was thrashing repairs to an engine the
night before the race. While the MISS MADISON team burned the midnight
oil, the Rangers' limousine pulled into the pit area and provided
coffee and sandwiches for an appreciative Graham and his bedraggled
crew.
On race day, MISS MADISON finished an
overall second in the San Diego Cup with victories in two preliminary
heats. And Heath had a couple of friends for life in Jim and Yvonne.
For 1966, the Rangers hired Graham to start a new team from the
ground up. The boat was the MY GYPSY, one of the most popular Unlimited
hydroplanes of her day. Heath, eager for a new challenge, jumped
at the opportunity and made the most of it with the help of people
like Bob Espland, Leo Macutza, and Hap Dexter.
The MY GYPSY years, between 1966 and
1968, were happy years for Graham. Under his direction, the team
entered 28 races and placed in the top three at 13 of them. MY
GYPSY also took second, fourth, and second in National High Points.
But there were
down days. And the downest of days was June 19, 1966, at the President's
Cup Regatta in Washington,
D.C. The race that came to be known as "Black Sunday" claimed
the lives of three top drivers in two separate accidents: Rex Manchester
of NOTRE DAME, Don Wilson of MISS BUDWEISER, and Heath's good friend
Musson of MISS BARDAHL.
"I've been in racing where bad
things occurred," Graham acknowledged. "But that was
the worst blow to me that's ever happened." Afterwards, he
did a lot of soul searching. "I thought to myself, 'We've
got to be crazy. Sane people don't do this!' But there's just something
about racing. It's in your blood."
That evening,
Heath went to owner/driver Jim Ranger and asked, "Boss, do you still want to race?" Ranger
said yes. And so they did.
At the next stop on the 1966 tour, in
Detroit, Ranger, a rookie, drove like a champion and outran the
veteran Fred Alter and MISS DIXI COLA in one heat of the Gold Cup.
And later in the season, MY GYPSY won the Seafair Trophy in Seattle.
Graham recalls that day with particular pride.
"That morning,
Jim was nervous. He wasn't laughing or being his usual self. I
told him to go out
and talk to people and get his mind off things. But Jim was a racer
that day. I was sure that he was going to blow the Allison engine.
But he didn't. Then, at the trophy presentation, he started laughing.
That was the first time that Jim had laughed all day."
Heading into
the 1968 campaign, Heath received a phone call from Boss Ranger,
who said, "I've got
a boy out here (in California) who would like to drive the boat.
He's a drag racer and his name is Tommy Fults." This was the
start of what amounted to a father-and-son relationship between
Graham Heath and the colorful Tommy "Tucker" Fults, one
of the gutsiest--and most personable--men ever to jockey an Unlimited
hydroplane.
Fults was lacking
in experience around a closed course. So, Graham arranged for "Wild Bill" Cantrell
to give Tommy some driving lessons on the Detroit River. "The
first day, Bill more or less led him around. It was the same the
next day with Cantrell showing him the ropes. Then, on the third
day, Tommy got the hang of it real fast and was outrunning Bill.
He was doing some serious racing with Cantrell. Bill was a veteran
and knew all the angles. And he taught those angles to Tommy."
Fults was a speedster
and loved to go fast. But it sometimes took a stern taskmaster
to keep Tommy in
line. At the 1968 Madison Regatta, Heath gave Fults a monumental
bawling-out after Tommy had fractured a rib during a misadventure
with a motorcycle. Graham told Fults, "These people have spent
a lot of money to get you where you're at. If you ever get on another
motorcycle, your driving days for the GYPSY are over."
Tommy got the
message, loud and clear, and toed the mark from then on. He went
on to claim Rookie of the
Year honors in the Unlimited Class with a victory in the San Diego
Cup as his highlight. In that race, Heath counseled Fults to "not
go out and chase Billy Schumacher and the MISS BARDAHL in the Final
Heat," this being in the days when races were scored by total
points.
"Just stay where you can see him.
Don't let him lap you, but don't run with him." Tommy followed
Graham's advice to the letter and won the cup.
After the retirement
of Jim and Yvonne Ranger from racing, Heath moved home to Madison
from Detroit. In
the years that followed, Graham helped a number of Unlimited teams,
including the MISS OWENSBORO and the MISTER FABRICATOR, and even
sponsored Brian Keogh's boat as the C&H MACHINE SPECIAL, named
after the shop that Heath and Cantrell had co-founded.
Between 1979
and 1983, Graham and Bill brought the former MY GYPSY out a few
times to fill out the field. "We
were just going to have some fun with her. We didn't see ourselves
as being competitive with the modern boats. But we ended up doing
rather well. That's because we kept finishing and finishing."
Although obsolete,
the old GYPSY was still one of the most reliable Unlimiteds of
all time. Unfortunately,
all good things must come to an end. For 1983, Heath and Cantrell
built up some extra-powerful aux-stage Allison engines for their
aging juggernaut. "We thought we had better get it pickleforked
after what happened to Chuck Thompson at Detroit in 1966, when
his boat flew to pieces. That was a big mistake. When Jon Staudacher
put it together, it was nothing but styrofoam and wasn't fastened
to anything. At 70 miles an hour, it came apart."
The end of the trail came at Detroit
when the forward section of the hull disintegrated. Driver Jon
Peddie fortunately suffered only minor injuries. But the last of
the old-style Mid-West river boats was history.
Graham returned the shattered MY GYPSY
remains to Madison and then retired from racing. Heath recognized
that turbine engines were the future of the sport. To change over
to the new turbine technology would require an enormous outlay
of cash. So, Graham decided to call it a career.
But Heath isn't
ready for the old-folks' home yet. "I started out in cars," he said with a gleam
in his eye. "So, I went back to cars. I bought a midget, and
I've been running it ever since...and having a good time."
And while his days of active boat racing
are a memory, Graham still keeps his hand in things Unlimited.
He still offers his expertise to the COOPER'S EXPRESS team of Ed
Cooper, Sr., and Ed Cooper, Jr., from Madison and Evansville, Indiana.
When the Cooper boat won the Columbia Cup at the Tri-Cities, Washington,
in 1989, Ed, Jr., was the first to pay credit where credit was
due. At the awards' banquet, Cooper reserved his highest praise
for his two mentors, Bill Cantrell and Graham Heath:
"They taught me everything that
I know. I couldn't have done it without them." After a long
and successful career, it is safe to say that, as long as there
are race boats, a part of Graham Heath will always be out there--RACING!
Copyright © Fred
Farley
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