National Dirt Late Model Hall of Fame

National Dirt Late Model Hall of Fame Where the Stars of the Past Meet the Stars of today. Where we honor the past and inspire the future of Late Model Dirt Racing.
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Thanks to Jeff Alsip for getting our beautiful stone accents done on our David Poole Annex Building. This project is nea...
04/25/2026

Thanks to Jeff Alsip for getting our beautiful stone accents done on our David Poole Annex Building.

This project is nearing completion. We cannot wait to show off our new digs and officially dedicate the new building.

It is our most sorrowful duty to announce the passing of one of the greatest drivers to ever sit behind the wheel. NDLMH...
04/23/2026

It is our most sorrowful duty to announce the passing of one of the greatest drivers to ever sit behind the wheel. NDLMHoF’er The Wizard Larry Moore aka LMo has won his final race. Larry passed away shortly after midnight Thursday morning after an extended illness. Details and arrangements are still pending. Godspeed LMo. Thank you for all that you were to so many.

One year ago today we lost a man who was so important to us and to our mission. David Poole was our Treasurer but he was...
03/25/2026

One year ago today we lost a man who was so important to us and to our mission. David Poole was our Treasurer but he was also spearheading our expansion project and most importantly, he was our beloved friend. This was his vision and his plan. And when we lost him so unexpectedly it left us all defeated and sad. Our board renewed our mission to get this expansion done in the name of David Poole. And here we are on the verge of completing this project, his project. So it’s only fitting that the expansion will be known as the David Poole Annex.

We miss you David. Continue to rest in peace knowing your building is coming along very well.

Coming to the Spring 50 at Florence Speedway this Saturday? Stop by and visit the National Dirt Late Model Hall of Fame ...
03/17/2026

Coming to the Spring 50 at Florence Speedway this Saturday? Stop by and visit the National Dirt Late Model Hall of Fame before the races!

Our main building will be open from 1pm until 6 pm for visitors! Admission is always FREE! Donations always welcome.

Construction update on the new addition to the NDLMHoF. Concrete flooring, rough plumbing and framing of bathroom walls ...
03/13/2026

Construction update on the new addition to the NDLMHoF.

Concrete flooring, rough plumbing and framing of bathroom walls was completed this week along with door installations.

Thanks to Jeff Alsip, Darrell Lanigan and everyone who has been a part of this project.

For many years the NDLMHOF Board has worked very hard to be able to expand our building. Over the last several days work...
02/18/2026

For many years the NDLMHOF Board has worked very hard to be able to expand our building. Over the last several days work has been ongoing to complete aite work and the building has now been erected! Finish work including plumbing and concrete will happen over the next couple of weeks. Then electrical, HVAC and interior fit/finish.

We are all so ecstatic to open the new David E Poole Wing of the NDLMHOF early this Summer.

Thanks to everyone who has had a part in making this a reality.

Winning 50/50 ticket at Gateway Dirt worth $135,652!Go to the NDLMHOF table behind section 127 in the Dome.
12/07/2025

Winning 50/50 ticket at Gateway Dirt worth $135,652!

Go to the NDLMHOF table behind section 127 in the Dome.

Come find us at the Gateway Dirt Nationals behind Section 127 to buy your 50/50 tickets!Or you can flag down one of our ...
11/26/2025

Come find us at the Gateway Dirt Nationals behind Section 127 to buy your 50/50 tickets!

Or you can flag down one of our sellers who will be carrying a sign like the one pictured.

Or you can go to www.dome5050.com if you are in the state of Missouri and purchase them online!

The raffle is already active online - so if you are in or around St Louis go and buy some now!

We will once again be selling 50/50 tickets at The Gateway Dirt Nationals which is only a couple of weeks away!The raffl...
11/19/2025

We will once again be selling 50/50 tickets at The Gateway Dirt Nationals which is only a couple of weeks away!

The raffle is now active. If you are in the state of Missouri you can use this QR code or go to http://www.rafflebox.ca/raffle/dome5050 to purchase tickets NOW! Remember that you don’t have to be present to win!

So get yours early and often to increase your odds of winning!

Ticket Prices

500 for $100
99 for $40
20 for $20
2 for $10

We are excited to share that phase one of our HoF Building expansion had been successfully completed. That included mult...
10/20/2025

We are excited to share that phase one of our HoF Building expansion had been successfully completed. That included multiple truck loads of top soil, concrete slab cutting and removal and septic system instillation.

We now await inspection and permitting for the next phase which will be a new concrete pad floor pour and the building.

We cannot fully express how grateful we are to Jeff Alsip who has stepped in to handle the overseeing of this project. Thanks to Darrell Lanigan for his contributions as well.

Thank you to everyone who has contributed to our cause over the years. We still have a long road ahead of us but we are excited for the future of the National Dirt Late Model Hall of Fame.

2026 NDLMHOF Class AnnouncedEarl Pearson Jr. of Jacksonville, Fla., and Shannon Babb of Moweaqua, Ill., plus Gary Crawfo...
10/19/2025

2026 NDLMHOF Class Announced

Earl Pearson Jr. of Jacksonville, Fla., and Shannon Babb of Moweaqua, Ill., plus Gary Crawford of Independence, Iowa, the late Jimmy Edwards Jr. of Hope Mills, N.C., and Crossville, Tenn., racer-turned-analyst Randy Weaver were revealed Saturday as inductees along with three contributors at Eldora Speedway during the 45th annual Tire Dirt Track World Championship presented by ARP.

Contributors set to be enshrined are late Oklahoma engine builder Russell Baker and two directors of Late Model tours, DIRTcar’s Sam Driggers of the Summer Nationals and Rick Schwallie, the current director of the Lucas Oil Series.

Special Award presentations include Lifetime Achievement Awards for Brownie Brown along with Bill and Debbie Reed. As well as the Baltes-Memmer Advancement of the Sport Award to the late BJ Parker.

The Hall of Fame will also in 2026 present the Baltes-Memmer Award posthumously to Southern All Star Racing Series founder B.J. Parker. Lifetime Achievement Awards will go to Bill and Debbie Reed of Dirt Racing Outreach and longtime team owner and sponsor Brownie Brown, who fielded Ray Cook's national touring entry for many seasons.

The Class of 2026, elected by a 75-member committee and set to join more than 200 drivers and contributors enshrined since 2001, will be inducted next August during the Sunoco Race Fuels North-South 100 weekend at Florence Speedway in Union, Ky. A closer look at the Class of 2026 (listed alphabetically):

Drivers

Shannon Babb, Moweaqua, Ill.: A throttle-stomping star whose skills were a perfect fit for the home-state bullrings of the Summer Nationals, the still active 51-year-old has piled up 102 series victories, one more than his mentor and former teammate Billy Moyer. An upstart with hints of brilliance in subpar equipment in the mid-1990s, Babb caught fire and came into his own with major victories at Kentucky Lake Motor Speedway and Brownstown (Ind.) Speedway, then hit his prime, securing Summer Nationals titles in 2005-06 with 28 victories over two seasons. Driving for Bill Moyer Sr. and Ed Petroff much of his career, he became a national star with 25 national touring victories, captured DTWCs at two tracks and won two Dixie Shootouts and two Topless 100s. Overall he won four Summer Nationals crowns (also 2011 and ’14) and the 2004 title on the National Auto Racing Association that evolved into the Lucas Oil circuit.

Gary Crawford, Independence, Iowa: A winner of more than 300 races and owner of 15 track championships, he dazzled in the prime of his career with an amazing 120 feature victories from 1978-80, including some of the region’s biggest races. The 76-year-old’s career began driving for champion racer Ed Sanger in 1972 as Rookie of the Year at his hometown Independence oval, where he won 46 races over his career. The Cornhusker-Hawkeye Challenge Cup champion in 1978 and NASCAR regional champion in 1979, among Crawford's biggest victories were Minot’s North Dakota Late Model Championship (’79), Sundrop Late Model All-star Invitational in Fairmont, Minn. (’79), and the 1980 Spring Invitation at Sunset Speedway in Omaha, Neb. The driver of the No. 10 car, who in 1977 won the first NASCAR championship at Hawkeye Downs Speedway in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, was inducted into the Iowa Racing Hall of Fame in 2022.

Jimmy Edwards Jr., Hope Mills, N.C.: A winner of 400 races and 20 track titles, the driver of the No. 48 known as “Porky” was a standout in the Carolinas over a career of more than 30 seasons starting in 1975. He ran dirt and asphalt early in his career — sometimes with the same Late Model — and outran NASCAR stars including Bobby Allison, David Pearson and Dale Earnhardt in short-track competition. The prime of his career was the late 1970s and early ‘80s as he posted a 40-victory season in 1979 and in 1983 won 24 times in 35 starts. The Southeastern Nationals at Volusia County Speedway in Barberville, Fla. (’78) and the Purolator 101 in Fayetteville (’78-79) were among major victories in that stretch. He dabbled in NASCAR competition, making a single Busch Series start at Darlington, S.C. One of his younger brothers, Hank, was among his toughest career rivals and between them they captured 10 consecutive Late Model titles at Fayetteville. Edwards, whose last victory came at Fayetteville in 2007, died in 2011 at the age of 57.

Earl Pearson Jr., Jacksonville, Fla.: One of the Sunshine State’s winningest Late Model racers, Pearson captured one of the most thrilling World 100s at Eldora Speedway in 2006 amid a four-year stretch of consecutive Lucas Oil titles that ended in 2008. Other lucrative victories included the 2009 Colossal 100 at the Dirt Track at Charlotte in Concord, N.C., 2010’s Dirt Track World Championship at West Virginia Motor Speedway in Mineral Wells, W.Va., and 2018’s Dirt Million at Mansfield (Ohio) Motor Speedway, where he rallied after multiple pit stops for a career-high $202,940 payday. Sponsored by Lucas Oil and his close friend Forrest Lucas most of his career, Pearson found success with Dunn Benson Motorsports, Bobby Labonte Motorsports and Ronnie Stuckey’s Black Diamond house car among other teams. The 53-year-old was also the first Longhorn Chassis driver and captured 2004’s Xtreme DirtCar Series title. He entered every Lucas Oil Series event from 2005 through the spring of 2021, when he missed a race upon his father’s death.

Randy Weaver, Crossville, Tenn.: The terror of the Cumberland Plateau, the two-time Southern All Star Series champion captured some of the biggest races in the Southeast during a standout career in his No. 116 entry. Major victories included the 2005 Blue-Gray 100 at Cherokee Speedway in Gaffney, S.C., the 2012 Governor’s Cup at Magnolia Motor Speedway in Columbus, Miss., the 2014 Alabama State Championship at East Alabama Motor Speedway in Phenix City, and the 2015 King of the Commonwealth at Virginia Motor Speedway in Jamaica, Va. That 2015 season marked the hottest stretch of his career as he started the season with nine straight victories, going unbeaten until May and four times topping DirtonDirt’s Top 25 power rankings. A grinding, barrel-rolling crash at EAMS in 2016 curtailed his racing with post-concussion syndrome, but he’s found late career success primarily in Crate Late Models, still competing occasionally. In recent seasons, the 55-year-old has become a popular behind-the-mic analyst during FloRacing’s coverage at Eldora Speedway’s major events, taking fans into the pits and behind the scenes with racer-focused perspectives about what viewers are seeing at the sport’s biggest events.

Contributors

Russell Baker: A Dirt Late Model engine builder whose motors were renowned for their power and durability, the Miami, Okla., resident was an innovator in developing powerful, smaller motors during the golden era of the Hav-A-Tampa Dirt Racing Series in the late 1990s, powering standout drivers Wendell Wallace, Billy Moyer, Bill Frye, Dale McDowell, Steve Francis and others to victories in some of the sport's richest events over 25 seasons. Drivers and team owners lauded Baker for his powerful engines, reliable machine work, fastidious attention to detail, straightforward honesty and folksy customer service that turned clients into friends. A self-taught machinist who first began building engines when he was 18, switched exclusively to racing engines in the early 1970s and became a force in Dirt Late Model circles by the 1980s. Baker died in 2012 at the age of 66 after a brief battle with leukemia.

Sam Driggers: The face of United Midwestern Promoters and then DIRTcar over more than 30 seasons with the organization, the 67-year-old Driggers has been to more Summer Nationals events than anyone in series history after succeeding tour founder Bob Memmer. The St. Augustine, Fla., native’s father helped build the Jacksonville dirt track and his mother's florist shop sponsored race cars, so by age 14 Driggers was in a race tower scoring races. Eventually Memmer plucked him from Florida’s Volusia Speedway Park in the early 1990s to become his right-hand man at UMP with Driggers taking the helm when his mentor’s health failed. Rarely seen without a clipboard, a pen to sign dozens of paychecks and a cigarette, the leather-faced Driggers is mostly unflappable as a series director, letting drivers blow off steam while patiently listening to nightly complaints. Not above a well-placed expletive at a drivers’ meeting — particularly when drivers let tempers boil over in the pits — Driggers has navigated an evolving Summer Nationals circuit that has ebbed and flowed, surviving Covid’s split-season, facing the annual challenge of night-after-night scheduling and instituting a weekly points system to bolster the tour.

Rick Schwallie: With his original perspective of racing primarily coming through the camera lens, the 47-year-old Ohio resident has risen to the highest officiating levels of Dirt Late Model racing during his lengthy career. The teenaged photographer developed into a respected touring photographer in various capacities, joining the Lucas Oil Late Model Dirt Series 20 years ago. He stepped up from photographer to official, then assistant series director and in 2016 was promoted to series director, replacing mentor Ritchie Lewis. During 10 years directing the national tour, Schwallie has navigated the tour’s playoff era with the Big River Steel Chase for the Championship, adjusted to the loss of longtime series track East Bay Raceway Park in Gibsonton, Fla., as well as the continuing evolution of a new-look Georgia-Florida Speedweeks. Schwallie’s wife Ashley has been at his side throughout his Lucas Oil years, serving as administrative manager for the circuit.

Address

Florence Speedway
Walton, KY
41094

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