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Ralph Earnhardt

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Cause of death
  
Heart attack

Died
  
September 26, 1973

Role
  
Car racer


Name
  
Ralph Earnhardt

Best finish
  
17th (1961)

Spouse
  
Martha Coleman

Ralph Earnhardt wwwmotorsportshalloffamecommediaAF9D5323DE26

Born
  
Ralph Lee Earnhardt February 23, 1928 Kannapolis, North Carolina, U.S. (
1928-02-23
)

Achievements
  
1956 Sportsman Division Champion

Awards
  
Named one of NASCAR's 50 Greatest Drivers (1998) National Motorsports Press Association's Hall of Fame (1989) International Motorsports Hall of Fame (1997) Oceanside Rotary Club of Daytona Beach Stock Car Racing Hall of Fame (2004) National Dirt Late Model Hall of Fame (2007)

First race
  
1956 Buddy Shuman 250 (Hickory)

Last race
  
1964 Race No. 29 (Concord)

Children
  
Dale Earnhardt, Cathy Earnhardt, Randy Earnhardt, Kaye Earnhardt, Danny Earnhardt

Grandchildren
  
Dale Earnhardt, Jr., Kerry Earnhardt, Kelley Earnhardt Miller, Taylor Nicole Earnhardt

Great grandchildren
  
Jeffrey Earnhardt, Bobby Earnhardt, Kayla Earnhardt

Similar People
  
Dale Earnhardt, Dale Earnhardt - Jr, Kerry Earnhardt, Teresa Earnhardt, Jeffrey Earnhardt

Ralph earnhardt


Ralph Lee Earnhardt (February 23, 1928 – September 26, 1973) was an American stock car racer. He was the father of Dale Earnhardt, Sr.; the grandfather of Dale Earnhardt Jr., Kelley Earnhardt Miller, Taylor Putnam, and Kerry Earnhardt, and great grandfather of Jeffrey Earnhardt and Bobby Dale Earnhardt. Earnhardt helped give Bobby Isaac his start in racing.

Contents

Ralph Earnhardt IMCDborg 1955 Chevrolet OneFifty 1502 in quot3 The Dale

Background

Ralph Earnhardt Ralph Earnhardt Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Earnhardt had German ancestry. He was born in Kannapolis, North Carolina as the son of Effie Mae Barbee (August 30, 1895 – September 1979) and John Henderson Earnhardt (Mar 23, 1879 – Nov 5, 1953). John Henderson Earnhardt's first wife was Florence Phillips (Oct 7, 1877 – Nov 18, 1922). He and Florence had four daughters — Mary, Eula, Margie, and Octa Vayne.

Ralph Earnhardt Ralph Earnhardt

He spent many years working in a cotton mill in North Carolina. One of the only ways out of this poor living was racing. Ralph started his racing career on dirt tracks where he was famous for keeping his car in top condition throughout each race.

Racing career

Ralph Earnhardt Ralph Earnhardt

Earnhardt began racing in 1949, and in 1953 it became his full-time occupation.

In 1956, he won the NASCAR Sportsman Championship, and was runner-up in 1955 and third in 1957.

In 1967, he was the reigning South Carolina state champion, and track champion at Columbia Speedway and Greenville-Pickens Speedway.

He won the pole and finished second in his first Grand National Series race in 1956 at Hickory Speedway. In 1961, Earnhardt had his highest finish by finishing 17th in the Grand National point standings. 1961 also saw Earnhardt fill in as a relief driver for Cotton Owens in the Daytona 500, running more than 300 miles and finishing 5th.

Earnhardt was the first car builder/driver to understand and use tire stagger.

Death

Earnhardt died from a heart attack on September 26, 1973 at the age of 45.

In media

In the film 3: The Dale Earnhardt Story, Ralph Earnhardt was portrayed by J. K. Simmons. The film portrayed Earnhardt's death as the urban legend dictated, where Dale (Barry Pepper) found him dead of a heart attack in the garage.

References

Ralph Earnhardt Wikipedia