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Drag racing pioneer and innovator
Chester “Chet” Herbert died on April 23, 2009. Herbert, born on
March 4, 1928, overcame huge personal challenges and went on to
develop some of auto racing’s most significant speed components.
Growing up in Southern California’s
early hot rod scene, the teenaged Herbert had a reputation for
building and racing fast cars and motorcycles. When he was 20 years
old, though, he was stricken with polio and lived the rest of his
life in a wheelchair, paralyzed from the chest down.
“My grandmother told me he was so
wild about racing, that if he didn’t have polio to slow him down, he
probably would have died,” said son Doug Herbert, 41, who followed
his father into professional drag racing. “When my dad was 12, my
grandma bought him a trumpet and hoped he’d learn to play. But he
traded the trumpet for a Cushman motorscooter and it was life in the
fast lane ever since.”
Lying in a hospital iron-lung for six
months in 1948, Herbert developed ideas for manufacturing racing
parts in his head. When he was released, he developed the first
roller camshafts for race cars and was among the first to try
nitromethene fuel in a dragster after reading how the German army
had used it to power torpedoes during World War II.
Although he never personally raced
again, Herbert fielded scores of dragsters, drag motorcycles and
land speed-record streamliners for other drivers. His racing
Harley-Davidson, nicknamed “The Beast,” was the fastest quarter-mile
dragster in its day, having achieved a then record-shattering 129
mph, faster than any car in 1950.
Herbert also developed the zoomie-type
exhaust header, which blew the smoke away from a dragster’s rear
tires in order to achieve better traction, helping them break the
200 mph record.
Herbert was one of the first to
establish a successful speed shop and parts mail- order business.
According to hot rod historian Greg Sharp of the Wally Parks NHRA
Motorsports Museum, Herbert was probably the first racing parts
retailer to utilize advertising in national magazines to reach
consumers. His chopped 1932 Ford sedan was a rolling billboard for
his business. He built it with a Hydromatic transmission so he
could drive it using hand controls. It was featured in the March,
1952, issue of Hot Rod Magazine and in 2007, was voted one of the
most significant 1932 Ford hot rods in history.
Herbert was inducted into the
International Drag Racing Hall of Fame in 1993.
Herbert is survived by his wife,
Leanne; three children: Doug; daughter Heather Herbert-Binetti and
daughter Tracey Drage; and his sister Doris, who as editor of Drag
News, was also inducted into the Drag Racing Hall of Fame in 1993.
Herbert was preceded in death by his sister, Fay Trout, and by
grandsons, Jon and James Herbert.
To overcome the sorrow of his
grandsons’ death in 2008, Herbert and son Doug were in the process
of building a Bonneville streamliner with which they hoped to
achieve 500 MPH, breaking the world speed record for piston-powered,
wheel-driven cars. Son Doug is still determined to accomplish that
dream.
STATEMENT FROM DOUG
HERBERT:
“My dad was my hero. He taught me so much about how to be a
strong and determined person. Despite the fact that he had polio
and was in a wheelchair for much of his life, he never let that stop
him from doing anything. He proved to everyone that he could
accomplish whatever he set his mind to; which taught me that, no
matter how tough something may seem, if you fight hard enough, you
can overcome it. I always looked up to him. I’m glad I had the
opportunity to follow in his footsteps and be involved in a sport
that he helped to invent. Some of my best memories with my dad were
made over the past year. We had grown much closer since my boys,
Jon and James, died in a car accident in early 2008. I will miss my
dad very much. I am lucky to have many wonderful memories of him
that I will always cherish.”
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