Bill Snowden

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Bill Snowden
Born May 6, 1910
St. Augustine, Florida
Died 2/2 1959
Cause of death Heart Attack
Awards 1992 inductee in the Jacksonville Stock Car Racing Hall of Fame[1]
NASCAR Cup Series career
24 races run over 4 years
Best finish 9th - 1951 Grand National season
First race 1949 Race No. 1 (Charlotte)
Last race 1952 Central City Speedway (Macon, Georgia)
Wins Top tens Poles
0 15 0

Bill Snowden (born May 6, 1910–1959) was a NASCAR driver from St. Augustine, Florida, USA. He was one of the racers whose career was interrupted by World War II. He was nicknamed "Wild Bill" and the "Florida Hurricane".[2]

Snowden competed on various circuits before NASCAR was organize, and he had second-place finishes at the Daytona Beach Road Course in 1941 and 1948.[3] He competed in NASCAR's Strictly Stock/Grand National Series (now Sprint Cup Series) races between the series' inception in 1949 and 1952.[4] He had 15 Top 10 and 5 Top 5 finishes in those 24 races.[4]

NASCAR career

In the series' first year in 1949, he competed in four of the eight events, with three Top 10s and a season-best fifth-place finish at Occoneechee Speedway at Hillsboro, North Carolina. Snowden finished 11th in the season points.[4]

Snowden competed in four events in the next season, finishing 40th in season points with 2 Top 10s. His season-best fifth-place finish happened at Charlotte Speedway.[4]

Snowden had a career-best ninth place season points finish in 1951. In 21 starts, he had 9 Top 10 finishes with two career-best fourth-place finishes at Martinsville Speedway and Speedway Park in Jacksonville.[4]

1952 was Snowden's final season in Grand National. He competed in four events, with one Top 10 with his sixth-place finish at Hayloft Speedway in Augusta, Georgia.[4] Fireball Roberts raced one event in Snowden's car that season, and Banjo Matthews used Snowden's car in three events with one fifth-place finish at Darlington Raceway.[5]

Snowden died in February 2nd, 1959. In 1992, he was inducted in the Jacksonville Stock Car Racing Hall of Fame.[1]

References

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