A.J. Watson

WATSON-2
Attendance 200

Unveiled August 27th, 2016

Reception followed sponsored by the Speedway Chamber of Commerce with presentation by IMS Historian Donald Davidson. Display of A.J. Watson designed cars.

"As we remember it now, the Fifties were a golden age at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Sleek front-engine cars called roadsters dominated the Indy 500, and some 90 percent of them were built by five men who worked within a few miles of each other in Los Angeles. A.J. Watson was the most successful of all, an intuitive, gifted craftsman in the American tradition.

Watson first came to Los Angeles during World War II as a navigator in the Eighth Army Air Force and returned to California after the war. He went to Glendale college on the G.I. Bill and worked on the assembly line at Lockheed aircraft, but after seeing his first race at Bonelli Stadium in nearby Saugus in 1947, his life changed forever. First he built a track roadster, a hot rod set up for oval-track racing. Then he arrived at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in 1948 as a mechanic. Two years later, 26-year-old Watson had built his own car for the 1950 Indy 500. Unfortunately the cost of campaigning the car for fellow hot-rodder Dick Rathmann drove Watson back to the assembly line at Lockheed at the end of 1950, but when it came time for the 1951 500, he laid down his tools one day and walked away without even punching the time clock on his way out.

Watson got his big break at the end of the 1954 season when he became chief mechanic for the team run by John Zink, Jr., the son of a magnate in industrial heating from Oklahoma. He modified a Frank Kurtis-built roadster for the 1955 Indy 500, and with it Bob Sweikert won the race.

For the 1956 Indy 500, Watson built a roadster of his own design, offsetting the engine and driveline some 12 inches to the left to improve weight distribution for faster cornering speeds. Pat Flaherty set a new one-lap speed mark to sit on the pole at a record 145.596 mph in the first Watson-designed roadster, and then went on to win the race. Watson roadsters monopolized the front row for the 1958 Indy 500, and Watson went to work for Bob Wilke's Leader Card team (named for the envelope company owned by Wilke's father)

Watson built a dirt car, a roadster and two Offy engines for Wilke, enticing his old friends from Lockheed to moonlight at cut-rate prices with plenty of beer in the refrigerator at 421 West Palmer Avenue in Glendale. Watson, Wilke and driver Rodger Ward quickly became the dominant combination at Indy and on the USAC championship trail. In the end, Watson built some 23 roadsters, including the cars that won the 500 in 1959-60, 1962 and 1963. When A.J. Foyt, Jr., recorded the last 500 victory for a front-engine car in 1964, he, too, was driving a Watson roadster." Motorsports Hall of Fame of America

Donate

IRMA is a 501c3 organization, and we depend on public and private donations to sustain our mission of memorializing the history of motorsports in Indiana, and throughout the nation. Your help is greatly appreciated. 

About

Born: May 8, 1924, Mansfield, Ohio

Died: May 12, 2014, Indianapolis, Indiana 

Car builder and chief mechanic from 1949 through 1984 in the Indianapolis 500, winning the race six times as a car builder. Rodger Ward won 18 races driving Watson cars.

IMS HAll of Fame

A.J. WATSON was the preeminent constructor of Indianapolis 500 cars in the late 1950s and 1960s as well as the winning crew chief four times. An extraordinarily modest man, Watson strived for simplicity with the cars he built, reasoning there would be fewer things that could go wrong. In addition to building cars for the teams for which he was chief mechanic, he also sold cars to independent customers. During the winter of 1962-63, he built eight Watson “roadsters” in a tiny shop in Glendale, California, the most completed during a single year. Watson-built cars won the Indianapolis 500 with Pat Flaherty (1956), Rodger Ward (1959 and 1962), Jim Rathmann (1960), Parnelli Jones (1963), and A.J. Foyt (1964). He was the winning crew chief in 1955 with Bob Sweikert in a John Zink-owned Kurtis-Kraft, in 1956 with Flaherty for Zink, and in 1959 and 1962 with Ward for Leader Cards, Inc. Watson won 29 National Championship races as a crew chief, plus numerous American Automobile Association and United States Auto Club sprint car feature races. His car won the 1960 Midwest championship with A.J. Foyt driving.

Motorsports Hall of Fame

A. J. Watson, At Large, Class of 1996

As we remember it now, the Fifties were a golden age at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Sleek front-engine cars called roadsters dominated the Indy 500, and some 90 percent of them were built by five men who worked within a few miles of each other in Los Angeles. A.J. Watson was the most successful of all, an intuitive, gifted craftsman in the American tradition.

Watson first came to Los Angeles during World War II as a navigator in the Eighth Army Air Force and returned to California after the war. He went to Glendale college on the G.I. Bill and worked on the assembly line at Lockheed aircraft, but after seeing his first race at Bonelli Stadium in nearby Saugus in 1947, his life changed forever. First he built a track roadster, a hot rod set up for oval-track racing. Then he arrived at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in 1948 as a mechanic. Two years later, 26-year-old Watson had built his own car for the 1950 Indy 500. Unfortunately the cost of campaigning the car for fellow hot-rodder Dick Rathmann drove Watson back to the assembly line at Lockheed at the end of 1950, but when it came time for the 1951 500, he laid down his tools one day and walked away without even punching the time clock on his way out.

Watson got his big break at the end of the 1954 season when he became chief mechanic for the team run by John Zink, Jr., the son of a magnate in industrial heating from Oklahoma. He modified a Frank Kurtis-built roadster for the 1955 Indy 500, and with it Bob Sweikert won the race.

For the 1956 Indy 500, Watson built a roadster of his own design, offsetting the engine and driveline some 12 inches to the left to improve weight distribution for faster cornering speeds. Pat Flaherty set a new one-lap speed mark to sit on the pole at a record 145.596 mph in the first Watson-designed roadster, and then went on to win the race. Watson roadsters monopolized the front row for the 1958 Indy 500, and Watson went to work for Bob Wilke's Leader Card team (named for the envelope company owned by Wilke's father)

Watson built a dirt car, a roadster and two Offy engines for Wilke, enticing his old friends from Lockheed to moonlight at cut-rate prices with plenty of beer in the refrigerator at 421 West Palmer Avenue in Glendale. Watson, Wilke and driver Rodger Ward quickly became the dominant combination at Indy and on the USAC championship trail. In the end, Watson built some 23 roadsters, including the cars that won the 500 in 1959-60, 1962 and 1963. When A.J. Foyt, Jr., recorded the last 500 victory for a front-engine car in 1964, he, too, was driving a Watson roadster.

National Sprint Car Hall of Fame & Museum

To be added soon

[upg-list perrow="3" perpage="6" album="ajwatson"]