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REVIEWED: “Bonneville: The Fastest Place on Earth”
Written by: Gregg Leary   
Charlotte, North Carolina
 
“Landspeed” Louise Ann Noeth writes with such a reverence and respect for Bonneville that I almost expected her book to begin with Genesis 1:1, “In the beginning…” In a way, I guess it does! » More Photos

“Bonneville: The Fastest Place on Earth”
By: “Landspeed” Louise Ann Noeth

To a true racing fan a single word or two can speak volumes…Indianapolis, Le Mans, Daytona…Bonneville. The names alone evoke not only the place, but also the many events that have occurred there… the sights, sounds, smells, tastes…even the visceral vibration of the internal organs as the marvelous machines howl past. “Landspeed” Louise Ann Noeth writes with such a reverence and respect for Bonneville that I almost expected her book to begin with Genesis 1:1, “In the beginning…” In a way, I guess it does!

Chapter 1:” From the Ice Age to the Train Age” gives a brief history of the formation of the famed Bonneville Salt Flats and tantalizing tidbits of history. Like America, Bonneville was named for someone who never set foot there…Captain Bonneville. He WAS a larger than life character. Thomas Paine may have been his father. Bonneville fled France during the French Revolution, was befriended by Lafayette, went to West Point, and served in the Mexican and Civil War…but he never visited his namesake.

One of the surprises about “The World’s Largest Racetrack” is its 4,214’ elevation. I imagine it to be a tuner’s nightmare. It was once Lake Bonneville (actually an inland sea) 135 by 325 miles…the size of Lake Michigan and 1000’ deep. The salt was left behind when the water evaporated. The salt is hard as concrete…you can’t pound a nail into it…you must use a drill. It is always cool and moist to the touch so it cools the tires of the land speed machines.Winter rains can bring 6,000 acres of standing water that doesn’t evaporate until early summer. That’s how the salt replenishes and “heals itself.”

When the doomed Donner party crossed the salt in 1846…taking the infamous “Hasting’s Cutoff”… they lost valuable time and many oxen and were forced to abandon many personal articles. The delay caused them to meet their grim
fate in the High Sierras above Reno that winter. The “Enola Gay’s” B-29 flight crew that dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima trained at nearby Wendover, Utah.

Sir Malcolm Campbell was the first to go 300 MPH on the salt, September 3, 1935…something he was unable to do at Daytona. “The Utah salt flats are the speed laboratory of the future,” Campbell said. Sir Malcolm’s milestone put Bonneville on the land speed record map and Daytona had to find another form of racing…stock cars.

Andy Green, who broke the sound barrier at 763 MPH at Black Rock, Nevada (300 miles due west of Wendover) said, “You can do great things with a race car anywhere in the world, but what you do at Bonneville makes a record special. I don’t want to be known as the only World Landspeed Record holder who hasn’t driven Bonneville.”

In September 1960 Mickey Thompson was the first American to go 400 MPH in a one-way run (no World Record) aboard Challenger I. with 4 V-8 Pontiac engines. The driveshaft broke on the return run. Mickey used to walk the entire 12 miles of the course at night with his wife following in a car…the lights of the car and moonlight would illuminate imperfections in the salt.

In the movie, “The World’s Fastest Indian,” Anthony Hopkins, playing Burt Munro is asked if he’s afraid of being killed in a crash of his motorcycle. His reply…

“No…You live more in five minutes on a bike like this going flat out than some people live in a lifetime.” (His motorcycle in pictured on page 96.)

Louise Noeth waxes poetic in “Bonneville.” She writes of the landspeed racers as “a family bound together by speed-a powerful force that erases ethnic, economic, political, and religious barriers. They are time and distance groupies… speed freaks who will tell you speed is better than sex…it is just you, the machine and the Almighty.”

Buy the Book

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