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Ray Keech

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Nationality
  
American

Years active
  
1926-1929


Name
  
Ray Keech

Role
  
Auto racer

Ray Keech httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
1 May 1900Coatesville, Pennsylvania (
1900-05-01
)

Died
  
June 15, 1929, Tipton, Antis Township, Pennsylvania, United States

First Race at Michigan State Fair Speedway


Charles Raymond Keech (born May 1, 1900 in Coatesville, Pennsylvania - June 15, 1929) was a board track and brick track racer in the 1920s. He is best remembered for winning the 1929 Indianapolis 500, and for setting a land speed record.

Contents

Ray Keech Race Car Driver Ray Keech Photograph by Underwood Archives

Indianapolis Speedway classic 1929


Land speed record

Ray Keech Ray Keech Faces of the Indy 500 Pinterest Indy cars and Cars

Keech set the land speed record of 207.55 mph (334.02 km/h) on April 22, 1928. He set the record at the Daytona Beach Road Course in the 81-liter triple-engined internal combustion White Triplex 'Spirit of Elkdom'.

Ray Keech wwwbluebirdelectricnetbluebirdimagesraykeec

His record was broken by Henry Segrave on March 11, 1929. In 1929 Keech was asked by Triplex owner J. M. White to attempt to break the new record in the Triplex. Keech wisely declined. White hired Lee Bible, who rolled the car and died in his second attempt to set the record.

Automobile racing

He won the first race at the Michigan State Fairgrounds Speedway in 1928. He finished in second place in the season points in the AAA National Championship.

He qualified sixth for the 1929 Indianapolis 500. Louis Meyer was leading the race, until he lost oil pressure on lap 157. Keech passed for the lead as Meyer's engine refused to fire after he went to the pits to get more oil. Keech led the rest of the race.

Death

Keech died sixteen days after his victory at Indianapolis in a racing accident at the Altoona 200-Mile Race in Tipton, Pennsylvania on June 15, 1929.

He was buried at the Hephzibah cemetery in Modena, Pennsylvania in Chester County.

References

Ray Keech Wikipedia