Contrary to popular belief, the founder of the American Hot Rod Association
was Walt Mentzer, not Jim Tice Sr., the man usually associated with
this feat. The 65-year-old Mentzer says he has the paper work to not
only prove it but actually revive the organization again. He currently
is a family counselor in Deland, Florida, but told this reporter that
if things worked favorably, the original AHRA could become an entity
in drag racing. Not only is AHRA not dead, but there are actually two
AHRAs extant!
Mentzers career dates back to 1952 when he was a member of the
Pittsburgh (Pa.) Pacers car club, of which he soon became the president.
His star ascended to the point where he was elected president of the
Pennsylvania Timing Association in 1955, an umbrella organization that
encompassed the Pacers.
The PTA was really doing well and I told the guys in the Association
that we had enough money in our treasury to form our own hot rod association
if we desired to do it, Mentzer remembered. I had been with
NHRA as a regional advisor for the northeastern part of the country,
everything from Maryland north. I considered then and now that Wally
(Parks) is a good friend, but I thought the organization's focus was
wrong, so I left NHRA in 1955.
I firmly felt that the drag racers needed an organization that
spoke for them as opposed to one that spoke for the drag strips. I could
understand the position of the track owners and promoters, but my attitude
was that they did not deserve the majority of the say. The promoters
did, but I didnt.
Mentzer went to the Pennsylvania county office that handled such things
and incorporated the name of the American Hot Rod Association with himself
at the helm. At the end of 1955, Hot Rod magazine did a story
on the fledgling Pennsylvania non-profit organization and it attracted
a lot of attention.
I wanted the racers to actually have a voice in how this organization
was run, Mentzer said. Every member registered with the
home office in Pittsburgh and after a year, they had a vote in how it
was run.
According to Mentzer, AHRA got its first break after NHRA ran its inaugural
National Drag Racing Championships at Great Bend, Kansas a year earlier.
NHRAs initial national event was run for a couple days, but rain
washed out Mondays Labor Day eliminations. Instead of returning
to Kansas for the final runoffs, NHRA elected to go to Perryville, Ariz.,
and finish the event there in conjunction with the Arizona State Championships.
This ticked off the Great Bend city fathers and when they found out
about AHRA, they flew Mentzer and a couple of association officers to
the Sunflower State to discuss an AHRA national championship drag race
there in 1956.
We leaped at the chance, Mentzer said. The Great
Bend people really wanted us and we wanted the race. We decided that
a weekend prior to the first AHRA National Drag Racing Championships,
we would hold a convention and set up elections.
Wally had told me that he had liked the Great Bend race course
and the fact that it was centrally located, but the problem was that
there was no populace there. The Arizona site was close to Phoenix and
could draw from there and even Los Angeles.
On our end, we spent a lot of time building for our national
event and spreading the word about our organization.
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