DESCRIPTION:
In 1940, the American Bantam Car Company delivered the first Command Reconnaissance Vehicle to the US Army. More than 600,000 units were built during the war years, which led to a surplus sale in 1946, when veterans with firsthand knowledge of their capability bought them. When off-road racing began, Jeep was there, and when the first sanctioned race was run in 1967 down the Baja peninsula, Jeep was in the winner’s circle.
Jeep vehicles dominated the off-road-racing scene and captured coveted titles in the Mint 400, Baja 500, and desert racing’s crowning achievement: the Mexican 1000/Baja 1000. As the first-generation CJ gave way to the second-generation machine, racing Jeeps found success in competition and continue to do so to this day.
Not only will you read about Jeeps greatest achievements in off-road racing but you also will hear the tales of their wranglers, including Brain Chuchua, Larry Minor, Roger Mears, Rod Hall, Sherman Balch, J. M. Bragg, Ray Russell, the Randall family, David Bryan, and more. The famous Jeeps that are covered include the Budweiser Jeep Honcho, celebrity CJ-7s, Holy Toledo, Don Adams’s CJ-7, and more.
Written by off-road racing historian John Elkin, this book is the most comprehensive collection of content that has ever been produced on this subject. Learn why Jeep is the most successful off-road racing brand with Jeep Racing: America’s Toughest 4x4 in Off-Road Competition 1965–1989!
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
- Dedication
- Acknowledgments
- Foreword by Roger Mears
- Chapter 1: Birth of the Jeep
- Chapter 2: Jeep Clubs Lead to Competition
- Chapter 3: The 1960s
- Chapter 4: The 1970s
- Chapter 5: The 1980s
- Epilogue: Goodbye 1980s
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