1. Based On A True Story
Movies like Cannonball Run and The Gumball Rally were based on a real event: The Cannonball Baker Sea-to-Shining-Sea Memorial Trophy Dash.
2. Two Men Had An Idea
The idea first came from Brock Yates, an auto racer and writer for Car and Driver, and the magazine's editor Steve Smith.
3. They Named It After A Legend
The race was named after Erwin "Cannonball Baker," a famous turn-of-the-century auto racer who set many of the world's first long-distance driving records
4. They Rode In Moon Trash II
The first Cannonball Run wasn't a race—more of a proof of concept. Yates and Steve Smith, along with Yates's son Brock Jr. and their friend Jim Williams, ran the race alone in a custom Dodge Sportsman they called "Moon Trash II".
5. The Interstate System Was The Perfect Course
Yates and Smith wanted the run to promote the Interstate Highway System and to protest America's increasingly strict traffic laws.
6. They Went And Did It
Moon Trash II began the inaugural Cannonball Baker Sea-to-Shining-Sea Memorial Trophy Dash on May 3, 1971, crossing the finish line at the Portofino Inn in Redondo Beach, California in 40 hours and 51 minutes.
7. They Wanted A Real Race
After the Moon Trash's voyage, Yates and Smith wanted to do a real race. By November 15, 1971, a motley crew of six vehicles gathered at the Red Ball Garage in Manhattan.
8. The Poles Had The Pole Position
The first to leave, just after midnight, was a heavily modified Chevrolet Sportvan driven by members of the Polish Racing Drivers of America: Oscar Koveleski, Tony Adamowicz, and Brad Niemcek.
The PRDA laid obvious claim to the race's pole position.
9. We Don't Stop!
The crew of the Sportvan had a plan: By decking out their van with enormous gas tanks and a complex system of hoses—bringing their total carrying capacity up to 298 gallons—they would not need to stop, easily getting them the fastest time.
10. It Wasn't Exactly Safe
The Poles were confident, but Cannonball Baker veteran Steve Smith had his doubts they'd make it that far with the fuel they had—plus he pointed out that flying across the country non-stop with 298 gallons of gasoline maybe isn't the best idea.
11. Some Boys In A Cadillac
Next to go were Larry Opert, Nate Pritzker, Ron Herisko of Cambridge, Massachusetts. The near-new 1971 Cadillac deVille sedan they drove stood out among the other vehicles—but it was their only option.
12. They Answered An Ad
The boys from Cambridge wanted in on the Cannoball Run, but they didn't have wheels—so they just answered a newspaper at from a New York businessman who needed his new car driven out to LA.
13. They Had Specific Rules
The Cadillac owner's rules were simple: don't drive before 8am, don't drive after 9 pm, and don't exceed 75 mph. Opert, Pritzker, and Herisko crossed their fingers, nodded their heads, grabbed the keys, and screamed off to the Red Ball Garage.
14. They Had To Change Plans
A 1970 MGB/GT followed the Cadillac, driven by Bob Perlow and Wes Dawn. The duo originally planned to drive a Volvo P1800, but someone stole it not long before the race.
15. Quick Turnaround
Undeterred, Perlow bought a used MGB/GT and picked it up just a few days before driving it non-stop from the New York to California.
16. The Vans Had Good Names
Next up was another van, this time a brand-new 1971 Dodge, custom-fitted with 190-gallon gas tanks. Tom Marbut, Randy Waters, and Becky Poston called themselves the Little Rock Tankers, and they called their van "Snoopy II".
17. The Clear Favorite
Steve Smith sat out the second Cannonball Baker, but Brock Yates took part—and he'd upgraded both his wheels and his team.
He was driving a blue 1971 Ferrari 365GTB/4 Daytona coupe alongside American racing legend Dan Gurney, who won the 1967 24 hours of Le Mans.
18. Moon Trash Still Kickin'
The Ferrari looked extra sleek next to the next competitor: the original Cannonball pioneer, Moon Trash II, which joined the caravan by the skin of its teeth. A crash just a few weeks earlier had required serious, last-minute repairs.
By the time the race started, Moon Trash II rolled, but neither the headlights nor the heater worked.
19. The Biggest Of The Bunch
After Moon Trash II was a 1996 Union 76 Travco Motor Home, driven by Bill Broderick, Phil Pash, Bob Carey, Joe Frasson, and Pal Parker.
They rented the beast in Cincinnati the day before, drove it to New York, got some sleep, then headed straight out on the Cannonball Run at 5:56 am.
20. There And Back Again
The last car, a 1969 AMC driven by brothers Ed and Rom Bruerton left a little late, rolling out of the Red Ball at nearly 3:00 in the afternoon, but they had a good excuse: They'd just arrived in New York at midnight...after doing a full, 44-hour reverse Cannonball Run from Redondo beach for reconnaissance.
21. A Bunch Of Lunatics
All in all, 23 individuals ran the first Cannonball Baker Sea-to-Shining-Sea Memorial Trophy Dash. Brock Yates' Car and Driver article detailing the event affectionally called them all "lunatics".
22. They Were Fools And They Did It
The first line of Yates' article says it all: "Those damn fools, they went and did it".
23. There Was Only One Rule
Auto racing tends to be a discipline bogged down by rules and regulations. The Cannonball Baker had one:
“All competitors will drive any vehicle of their choosing, over any route, at any speed they judge practical, between the starting point and destination. The competitor finishing with the lowest elapsed time is the winner".
24. The True Friends of Hernando de Soto
Unlike most auto races, the Cannonball Baker had no organizing body beyond a "shadowy" group dubbed "The True Friends of Hernando de Soto".
25. For The Glory
Most important of all: There would be no prize money for Cannonball Baker Sea-to-Shining-Sea Memorial Trophy Dash. Just pride.
Oh, and one other thing.
26. To The Victor Go The Nutmaster
The winner of the Cannonball Baker was to be awarded the S-K “Nutmaster” trophy, a sculpture made of various tools, created and donated by the S-K Tool company.
27. Timing Is Everything
The Cannonball Baker started at midnight for a reason: The competitors could get out of New York before rush hour, and if everything went well, they would be cruising down Los Angeles's freeways in the middle of the day.
28. The Checkered Flag
It shouldn't come as a surprise that the Ferrari driven by a Le Mans champion took home the checkered flag. Yates and Gurney finished in 35 hours and 54 minutes, travelling 2,963 miles at an average of 80 mph.
29. The Longest Was The Fastest
Funnily enough, the Ferrari was actually the only car to take a different route, but it was actually 35 miles longer than what the other teams drove.
30. Put The Pedal To The Metal
The Ferrari wasn't the fastest car either: That title went to the overeager boys in the Cadillac, who clearly ignored the owner's requests to never exceed 75 mph.
31. Twinsies
Funnily enough, the Moon Trash II ended up having the same average speed as the Ferrari.
32. Don't Stop For Gas, Don't Get Caught Speeding
The Ferrari won for two simple reasons: It got the best gas mileage, was better designed, and they only had to stop for one speeding ticket.
33. Big Surprise
For contrast, the Cadillac was busted for speeding five times during the cross-country trip, which cost it heavily.
34. The Tortoise And The Hare
The Ferrari may have won, but both the PRDA tortoise wasn't far behind: The Chevy Sportvan only needed to stop for gas a single time while maintaining a steady speed in the 90-100 mph range, which helped the PDRA lay claim to second place.
35. A Close Race
For such a chaotic, unsanctioned event, the first five competitors finished the near 3,000 mile journey all finished the Cannonball Baker within two hours of each other.
36. Five Times Club
The Cannonball Baker Sea-to-Shining-Sea Memorial Trophy Dash ran three more times, in 1972, 1975, and 1979.
37. The Record
The official record time for the race is 32 hours 51 minutes, set by Dave Heinz and Dave Yarborough in a Jaguar XJ-S in the final run.
38. Nothing Lasts Forever
Though the outlaw spirit of the Cannonball Baker was part of its charm, as traffic enforcement grew more strict and the race gained more notoriety, it could not continue.
39. Unsanctioned Unsanctioned Races
Successor races inspired by the Cannonball Baker have popped up all over the world over the years, frequently using the Cannonball name without Yates's approval.
40. Sounds Like A Good Movie
The madcap Cannonball Baker sounds like a perfect idea for a movie and Yates knew it. He started a screenplay—but he was too late.
41. He Was Too Slow
By 1976, two unofficial films inspired by the Cannonball Baker, Cannonball and The Gumball Rally, had hit theatres, beating Yates to the punch.
42. Cannonball!
Yates's official film, The Cannonball Run starring Burt Reynolds, finally came out in 1981. It was a huge hit, spawning two sequels and, many years later, a television spinoff.