*The Fabulous Flock Brothers *
They were bootleggers. Actually their uncle, Peachtree Williams, was the bootlegger and the two older Flock boys - Bob and Fonty - were his drivers. They came from their home in Ft. Payne, Ala., to make moonshine runs in rural Georgia during the prohibition era. They moved to Atlanta in 1925 after the death of their father. When Carl Lee Flock passed away, his youngest child Tim was only one year old. His widow, Maudie worked in a hosiery mill to support her family. To supplement their mother's meager income the older boys relocated to Atlanta to work in the family moonshine business. On the back roads between Atlanta and Dawsonville, GA the Flock brothers proved to have natural talent for building and driving vehicles that could outrun anything the police had on the road.
When they were not making runs they talked with other drivers about which car was the fastest. And that talk led to NASCAR.According to legend, the drivers would find a pasture and drive around in circles - about a half-mile circle - until they had worn out a path in the grass. Then they would race.
The Flocks were among the instigators of this racing. And the racing grew by word of mouth as a small crowd got a little larger and larger until some entrepreneurial people started building racetracks. It is from those tracks that NASCAR grew.
The Flock family as a whole was a very interesting family. Every one of them were colorful, to say the least.
Carl, the oldest boy, was a speedboat racer. Reo, one of the girls, was a wing-walking daredevil. She also was a stunt parachutist. Another sister, Ethel, was a racecar driver with more than 100 races. She had two Grand National starts one at the Daytona Beach Road Course on July 10, 1949. The event was the first to feature a brother and a sister, and the only NASCAR event to feature four siblings. Ethel beat Fonty and Bob by finishing eleventh (her career high), and Tim finished second.
The Flocks are indisputably the "First Family" of NASCAR. The brothers (Bob, Fonty, and Tim) were all in the top ten of the first Grand National Championship (first Winston Cup, now Sprint Cup) standings. Bob, Fonty and Tim finished third, fifth and eighth respectively. There is also, no other NASCAR family with three brothers in the Hall of Fame.
Robert "Bob" Newman Flock was born April 16, 1918 in Fort Payne, Alabama. He died May 16, 1964. Bob was the oldest of the three Grand National drivers. He also had the shortest racing career. He began in 1949 and retired in 1956. He started 36 races and won 4.
The federal agents once discovered that Bob Flock would be running a race in Atlanta, and they staked out the place to make an arrest. A gate opened as the race was beginning, and he drove on the track to take the green flag. The police vehicles quickly appeared on the track. They chased Flock for a lap or two before he drove through the fence. The police followed him until he ran out of gas later. Reminiscing years later, Bob said, "I would have won that race if the cops had stayed out of it"
Bob Flock retired from driving when he broke his back in an on track accident. Bob Flock became a track promoter in Atlanta. He hired three women (Sara Christian, and Mildred Williams, and his sister Ethel Mobley) to race at his new track.
He was a well established driver before NASCAR was formed. He took over NASCAR founder Bill France's ride in 1946. He won both events at the Daytona Beach Road Course in 1947.He sat on the pole for NASCAR's first race at Charlotte Speedway on June 19, 1949. He had two wins that season, and finished third in the points behind Lee Petty and champion Red Byron. He won two 100 lap ARCA races at Lakewood Speedway in 1954. He had over 200 modified wins in his career.
Truman Fontell "Fonty" Flock was born March 21, 1920 in Fort Payne, Alabama, and died July 15, 1972. Fonty had a pretty good NASCAR career. He started 154 races and had 19 wins and 33 poles during a career that lasted from 1949 through 1957
He won a 100 mile race Lakewood Park in Atlanta, Georgia in 1940. He raced on dirt tracks in Georgia. He qualified in the pole position for the July 27, 1941 race at the Daytona Beach Road Course beside Roy Hall. Flock took the early lead, before Flock and Hall got together in the south turn. Flock rolled and landed upside down in bushes. The seatbelt broke during the rolling, and Flock was tossed around. He was rushed by ambulance to the hospital. Fonty suffered a crushed chest, broken pelvis, head and back injuries, and severe shock. He was in the United States Army Air Corps for four years during World War II. He sat out the 1945 and 1946 seasons because of his injuries.
His brother Bob, convinced car owner Ed Schenck to put Flock in his car at the first race at the North Wilkesboro Speedway on May 5, 1947. Flock won the pole and his heat race. He won the 30 lap feature after not racing in 4 1/2 years. He took over his brother, Bob's ride later in the season after Bob broke his back. He won seven of 47 races that season, and beat Ed Samples and Red Byron to win the National Championship Stock Car Circuit championship. He won eleven features and won the NASCAR National Modified championship in 1949. He raced in 6 of 8 Strictly Stock, and finished fifth in the points.
He raced his first full-time season in the Grand National series in 1951. He had 8 wins, 22 Top-10s, and 13 poles to finish second in the points. He had two wins, 17 Top-10s, and 7 poles in 1952. He finished fourth in the points. He opened an insurance agency in 1954, and he raced part-time after that. He raced 31 of 45 events in 1955. He had 3 wins, 14 Top-10s, and 6 poles. He finished eleventh in the points. He had his final win in 1956 at the Charlotte Speedway (not Lowe's Motor Speedway).
In 1957 he raced at the Daytona Beach Road Course. Herb Thomas was injured while practicing for the Southern 500 at the Darlington Raceway, so Flock got his ride. The car was in bad shape, and a tire blew on the sixth lap. Flock walked away unhurt, but he decided to walk away for good.
But the star of the family was Tim, the baby. He was one of the most colorful NASCAR drivers ever.
Julius Timothy "Tim" Flock was born May 11, 1924 in Fort Payne, Alabama and died March 31, 1998. He was the 1952 and 1955 Grand National Champion.
During his career he:
Raced with a monkey in his car
Lost a race because of an in-car fight with the monkey
Raced in a car with the number 300 painted on it
Won a Grand National (Cup Series) title driving a Hudson Hornet
Won NASCAR's only sports-car race driving a Mercedes-Benz 300 SL Gullwing
Quit NASCAR racing altogether over a race ruling and opened a gasoline station only to be talked back into racing while watching time trials as a spectator and then going on to win that race
Was banned from racing for life
And on top of it all he was quite a driver winning 40 races (in 187 starts) and two Grand National titles in a career that started in 1949 and lasted until he was banned in 1961.
Had Tim's older brothers had their way he may not have been a racecar driver. They wanted him to stay away from racing and go to school. It did not work out that way. He tagged along with his older brothers to the racetracks and in 1948 he ran into a man, Bruce Thompson from Monroe, N.C., who had a car but no driver. He asked Tim to drive and before the year was out he was outrunning his older brothers.
The following year NASCAR started a 'strictly stock' circuit which eventually led to Grand National and Cup Series. Tim competed on it and by 1952 had won his first championship in a Hudson Hornet, giving Hudson its only championship. The way he won the title was actually rather interesting since going into the last race of the season all he needed to do was to start to beat Herb Thomas, who he had waged a season-long battle with. He did more than start but on the 64th lap he rolled his car over. He later jokingly said "I bet I am the only guy who ever won a championship while on his head."
He had an affinity for laughing and for clowning around. Those two things led to his brief - nine races - stint with a rhesus monkey as his co-driver. For the first eight races Jocko Flocko, as the monkey was called, was fine as a co-driver. The ninth race was a different story. With Tim leading the race Jocko Flocko somehow broke out of his cage and went berserk in the racecar at one time grabbing Tim by the neck. Tim subdued the monkey with one hand while driving with the other before pulling into the pits to get Jocko Flocko out of the car. His pit stop cost him the race he was leading before Jocko Flocko broke loose as he finished third.
He ended his career abruptly in 1954 after being disqualified in a race for an illegal part in his car. He went home to Atlanta and opened a gas station figuring he was through with racing. He was talked into going to Daytona by some friends of his in 1955 and that is where he saw them testing the new Chrysler 300. The one thing that Flock found wrong with the Chrysler 300 was that it had an automatic shift. He did not think it would keep up with other cars going uphill on the beach at Daytona because of that. It did not and he finished second to Glenn 'Fireball' Roberts in that race. Ironically, Roberts was disqualified the next day and Flock was declared the winner.
That was the start of an awesome season as he teamed with car owner Carl Keikhaefer to have one of the greatest seasons in NASCAR history. Driving the No. 300 Chrysler 300 he won the championship by winning 18 races and 19 poles.
It was at this time, however, that many NASCAR drivers started talking about unionizing going so far as to approach Jimmy Hoffa and the Teamsters about representing them. The union idea fell apart and many of the drivers left the group, leaving only Flock and Curtis Turner, a former NASCAR driver who was his boss at Charlotte Motor Speedway, with that idea. NASCAR banned both for life. The lifetime ban was repealed in 1965 but Flock did not return to racing. He was a pioneer. He was colorful. But, most of all, he was a very good racer. He was the most colorful of The Fabulous Flock Brothers, but they all need to be recognized as NASCAR pioneers.
Carl Lee and Maudie Flock's children, Ethel, Bob, Fonty and Tim with a combined total of 379 NASCAR starts finished in the top-ten 230 times. For their priceless contribution to our sport the Flock siblings' total winnings was less than $200,000. What a bargain!
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