Location | 9200 Powder Mill Road Laurel, Maryland 20708 |
---|---|
Coordinates | 39°02′N 76°50′W / 39.04°N 76.84°W |
Capacity | ~7,000 |
Broke ground | 1964 |
Opened | 1965 |
Closed | 1978 |
Major events | None (defunct) |
Pavement oval track | |
Length | 0.500 miles (0.805 km) |
The Beltsville Speedway, formerly the Baltimore-Washington Speedway was an asphalt oval track in Prince George's County, Maryland; it spanned 0.500 miles (0.805 km).
Near Beltsville, it was on land now occupied by Capitol Technology University, [1] in the South Laurel census-designated place. [2] [3]
The track was specially designed with banked turns for stock car racing. Originally known as the "Baltimore-Washington Speedway", the track received its final name in its 19th month of operation. [4] The track hosted modified stock car racing vehicles alongside the other NASCAR series. [4] Wednesday nights were the original night for racing but the schedule eventually added Friday night racing. [4] Ten Grand National races were raced there including the popular Beltsville 300 series of races. [5] Strict noise restrictions were given out in its final year of operation and the county started monitoring the events. [4] Eventually, a sound wall was built surrounding the speedways. Cars had to begin running mufflers in order to stifle the noise from the increasing RPMs from the vehicles themselves. [4] The track was eventually shut down, demolished, and replaced with a local university. [4]
Famous race car drivers like Richard Petty, Tiny Lund, and David Pearson participated in legendary races there. [5] The 1968 Beltsville 300 was an example of some of the classic NASCAR Grand National races that were run on the track. [5]
Date | Winner |
---|---|
August 25, 1965 | Ned Jarrett |
June 15, 1966 | Tiny Lund |
August 24, 1966 | Bobby Allison |
May 19, 1967 | Jim Paschal |
September 15, 1967 | Richard Petty |
May 17, 1968 | David Pearson |
September 13, 1968 | Bobby Isaac |
May 16, 1969 | Bobby Isaac |
July 15, 1969 | Richard Petty |
May 15, 1970 | Bobby Isaac |
Reference: [6]
Location | 9200 Powder Mill Road Laurel, Maryland 20708 |
---|---|
Coordinates | 39°02′N 76°50′W / 39.04°N 76.84°W |
Capacity | ~7,000 |
Broke ground | 1964 |
Opened | 1965 |
Closed | 1978 |
Major events | None (defunct) |
Pavement oval track | |
Length | 0.500 miles (0.805 km) |
The Beltsville Speedway, formerly the Baltimore-Washington Speedway was an asphalt oval track in Prince George's County, Maryland; it spanned 0.500 miles (0.805 km).
Near Beltsville, it was on land now occupied by Capitol Technology University, [1] in the South Laurel census-designated place. [2] [3]
The track was specially designed with banked turns for stock car racing. Originally known as the "Baltimore-Washington Speedway", the track received its final name in its 19th month of operation. [4] The track hosted modified stock car racing vehicles alongside the other NASCAR series. [4] Wednesday nights were the original night for racing but the schedule eventually added Friday night racing. [4] Ten Grand National races were raced there including the popular Beltsville 300 series of races. [5] Strict noise restrictions were given out in its final year of operation and the county started monitoring the events. [4] Eventually, a sound wall was built surrounding the speedways. Cars had to begin running mufflers in order to stifle the noise from the increasing RPMs from the vehicles themselves. [4] The track was eventually shut down, demolished, and replaced with a local university. [4]
Famous race car drivers like Richard Petty, Tiny Lund, and David Pearson participated in legendary races there. [5] The 1968 Beltsville 300 was an example of some of the classic NASCAR Grand National races that were run on the track. [5]
Date | Winner |
---|---|
August 25, 1965 | Ned Jarrett |
June 15, 1966 | Tiny Lund |
August 24, 1966 | Bobby Allison |
May 19, 1967 | Jim Paschal |
September 15, 1967 | Richard Petty |
May 17, 1968 | David Pearson |
September 13, 1968 | Bobby Isaac |
May 16, 1969 | Bobby Isaac |
July 15, 1969 | Richard Petty |
May 15, 1970 | Bobby Isaac |
Reference: [6]