“Great Race” Antique Car Rally Comes to Fairfield County.

Lunch stop in Grass Valley, CA.

May 24, 2024
From Visit Fairfield County

Lancaster will host a lunch stop on the 2024 Hemmings Motor News Great Race presented by Coker Tire on Sunday, June 23, race organizers have announced.

The Great Race, the world’s premiere old car rally, will bring 120 of the world’s finest antique automobiles to town for the $160,000 event, with the first car rolling on to South Broad Street starting at 12:30 p.m. The start of the event will be in Owensboro, KY, on June 22, and the finish will be in Gardiner, Maine, on June 30.

“We are excited to bring this unique event to Lancaster for the second time ever,” race director Jeff Stumb said. The first time was a lunch stop back in 1998.

The nine-day, 2,300-mile adventure will travel to 19 cities in Kentucky, Indiana, Ohio, West Virginia, Maryland, Virginia, Pennsylvania, New York, Rhode Island, New Hampshire and Maine.

Teams and cars from Japan, England, Australia, Germany, Canada and every corner of the United States will converge at the start with vintage automobiles dating back as far as 1912. “There are more than 500 people just in our entourage from all around the world,” Stumb said.

The Great Race, which began 41 years ago, is not a speed race, but a time/speed/distance rally. The vehicles, each with a driver and navigator, are given precise instructions each day that detail every move down to the second. They are scored at secret check points along the way and are penalized one second for each second either early or late. As in golf, the lowest score wins.

1909 Buick arrives in Eureka, CA.

Cars start – and hopefully finish – one minute apart if all goes according to plan. The biggest part of the challenge other than staying on time and following the instructions is getting an old car to the finish line each day, organizers say.

Each stop on the Great Race is free to the public and spectators will be able to visit with the participants and to look at the cars for several hours. It is common for kids to climb in the cars for a first-hand look.

Cars built in 1974 and earlier are eligible, with most entries having been manufactured before World War II. In the 2023 Great Race a 1916 Hudson Hillclimber won the event from St. Augustine, Fla., to Colorado Springs, Colo. The 2024 winners will again receive $50,000 of the $160,000 total purse.

A 1912 Haynes, a 1913 Chevrolet and a 1916 Hudson are the oldest cars scheduled to be in the 2024 Great Race.

  

 

Over the decades, the Great Race has stopped in hundreds of cities big and small, from tiny Austin, Nev., to New York City.

“When the Great Race pulls into a city it becomes an instant festival,” Stumb said. “Last year we had several overnight stops with more than 10,000 spectators on our way to having 250,000 people see the Great Race during the event.”

The event was started in 1983 by Tom McRae and it takes its name from the 1965 movie, The Great Race, which starred Tony Curtis, Jack Lemmon, Natalie Wood and Peter Falk. The movie is a comedy based on the real-life 1908 automobile race from New York to Paris. In 2004, Tony Curtis was the guest of the Great Race and rode in his car from the movie, the Leslie Special.

The Great Race gained a huge following from late-night showings on ESPN when the network was just starting out in the early 1980s. The first entrant, Curtis Graf of Irving, Texas, is still a participant today.

   

The event’s main sponsors are Hemmings Motor News, Coker Tire, McCollister’s Auto Transport, Rogo Fasteners, Southern Star Distillery, Sam Smith Old Brewery and Hagerty Driver’s Club.