Sports

Junior Johnson, NASCAR hall-of-fame driver, team owner, dies at 88


(Reuters) – Junior Johnson, the former moonshiner turned hard-charging race car driver who won 50 NASCAR races in the 1950s and ‘60s before becoming a team owner, has died at the age of 88, NASCAR said on Friday.

FILE PHOTO: NASCAR Hall of Fame inductee Junior Johnson smiles while speaking during the grand opening of the NASCAR Hall of Fame in Charlotte, North Carolina May 11, 2010. REUTERS/Chris Keane

Johnson, who rose from humble beginnings as the son of a North Carolina bootlegger to become one of the country’s best known drivers, mentioned even in a Bruce Springsteen song, had been in declining health, NASCAR said.

“The Last American Hero. What a Legend. Rest easy Junior,” two-time Daytona 500 winner Dale Earnhardt Jr., son of the late hall of famer Dale Earnhardt, said on Twitter.

Roy Cooper, governor of North Carolina, offered condolences and said he had been in touch with the family.

“North Carolina has lost a giant with the death of NASCAR legend Junior Johnson,” Cooper wrote on Twitter.

Born Robert Glenn Johnson, Jr. in 1931, the fourth of seven children, he famously honed his driving skills while hauling illegal liquor through the back roads of the Carolinas, one step ahead of the authorities.

Johnson put those skills to work as a professional stock-car driver beginning in the mid-1950s, winning his first race at the Hickory Motor Speedway in North Carolina on May 7, 1955, according to NASCAR.

He was convicted of moonshining in 1956 but U.S. President Ronald Reagan would pardon him in 1986, a few years after Springsteen recalled him “runnin’ through the woods of Carolina” in his song “Cadillac Ranch.”

He would go on to win 50 races before retiring as a driver a decade later at the age of 35, hailed by Tom Wolfe as the “Last American Hero” in a Esquire magazine that was later used as the basis for a feature film starring Jeff Bridges.

But Johnson remained close to the track as a team owner, his cars ultimately winning more than 130 races.

“We have lost one of NASCAR’s true pioneers, innovators, competitors and an incredible mechanical and business mind. And personally, I have lost one of my dearest friends,” Winston Kelley, the NASCAR Hall of Fame’s executive director, said in a written statement.

“While we will miss Junior mightily, his legacy and memory will forever be remembered, preserved, celebrated and cherished at the NASCAR Hall of Fame and in the hearts and minds of race fans around the world,” Kelley said.

Reporting by Dan Whitcomb in Culver City and Amy Tennery in New York; Editing by Sandra Maler and Sonya Hepinstall



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