The golden age of NASCAR

Stock car racing now rivals football and baseball as the country’s most popular spectator sport. What’s the appeal?

How did NASCAR start?

Stock car racing grew out of moonshine running in the Appalachian and Great Smoky mountains in the 1930s. Bootleggers would soup up their cars so they could outrun the feds. Racing those souped-up cars proved so much fun that organized races began to crop up all over the South. In those early races, many of the tracks were uneven and unsafe, and each one had its own rules. Race promoter Bill France Sr. thought the sport would be more attractive to fans if it were better organized. So he set rules that governed a distinct racing season, with a single champion being crowned each year. In 1948, France founded the National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing in Daytona Beach, Fla. The Daytona 500, NASCAR’s most famous race, still kicks off the season each year.

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