Wake County Speedway
Location | 2109 Simpkins Rd. Raleigh, NC 27603 |
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Capacity | 2,200 |
Owner | Charlie Hansen |
Opened | 1962 |
Website | wcspeedway |
Oval | |
Surface | Asphalt |
Length | .250 miles (0.402 km) |
Banking | 7° – Corners |
Wake County Speedway "America's Favorite Bullring" is a quarter-mile NASCAR Sanctioned asphalt race track located in Raleigh, NC. The track holds stock car races on alternating Friday nights from April to September. As of the 2024 racing season, Wake County Speedway has seven main classes of race cars which include Late Model Stocks, Chargers, Legends, Mini Stocks, Bandoleros, Bombers and Champ Karts. The track also has special appearances from USAC, East Coast Flathead Fords, and the CARS Tour.
History
Wake County Speedway was established in 1962 by Glenn, Talmadge and Marvin Simpkins. It was leased out to Donald Macon until 1987. The Simpkins family operated the speedway from 1987 until 2013. It was leased by Adam Resinick for 2 seasons. Mike Stodder operated the track from 2015 to 2017. Charlie Hansen signed a long-term lease in 2018 and is currently operating the Speedway.
At its conception, the track was a 1/4 mile clay race track. Many former NASCAR drivers have made appearances during the tracks history. The drivers include J.D. McDuffie, Benny Parsons, Ken Schrader, Loy Allen, Jr., Dennis Setzer and Randy Renfrow. In 1987, the track was resurfaced with asphalt and remains that way today.[1] In 2023, the track received funds from North Carolina's Motorsports Relief Fund to improve the infrastructure and repave the speedway.[2]
References
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- Boshamer Stadium (Chapel Hill)
- Cameron Indoor Stadium (Durham)
- Carter–Finley Stadium (Raleigh)
- Dean Smith Center (Chapel Hill)
- Doak Field (Raleigh)
- Dorton Arena (Raleigh)
- Durham Athletic Park (Durham)
- Durham Bulls Athletic Park (Durham)
- Durham County Stadium (Durham)
- Eddie Smith Field House (Chapel Hill)
- Dorrance Field (Chapel Hill)
- Five County Stadium (Zebulon)
- Henry Stadium (Chapel Hill)
- Jack Coombs Field (Durham)
- J. W. Isenhour Tennis Center (Raleigh)
- Kenan Memorial Stadium (Chapel Hill)
- Koskinen Stadium (Durham)
- Lenovo Center (Raleigh)
- McDougald–McLendon Arena (Durham)
- O'Kelly–Riddick Stadium (Durham)
- Orange County Speedway (Little River Township)
- Reynolds Coliseum (Raleigh)
- Wake County Speedway (Garner)
- WakeMed Soccer Park (Cary)
- Wallace Wade Stadium (Durham)
- WRAL Soccer Center (Raleigh)
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- Bynum Gymnasium (Converted, Chapel Hill)
- Fetzer Field (Chapel Hill)
- Occoneechee Speedway (In preservation, Hillsborough)
- Raleigh Speedway (Demolished, Raleigh)
- Riddick Stadium (Demolished, Raleigh)
- State Fairgrounds Speedway (Converted, Raleigh)
- Thompson Gym (Converted, Raleigh)
- Tin Can (Demolished, Chapel Hill)
35°42′04″N 78°40′30″W / 35.701°N 78.675°W / 35.701; -78.675
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