Street Machine

VALE ASH MARSHALL

THE FIRST DRAG RACER TO TOP 200MPH ON AUSTRALIAN SOIL, ASH MARSHALL NEVER FAILED TO PUT ON A SHOW

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The first man to crack 200mph on our shores, Ash Marshall was a drag racer for the ages

IN THE 1960s and early 1970s, Ash Marshall bestrode the formative Australian drag racing scene like a colossus. Though he never won a national title, he ran his racing like a business, creating a motif that would be copied by numerous racers who followed him.

Marshall came up through the 1950s motor racing world in typical fashion, starting in speedway sedans and then a sprintcar before moving on to rallying and circuit racing, in everything up to and including a D-type Jag in 1962. His introducti­on to drag racing would come in 1964 while on a buying trip to the USA, where he sought stock for his second-hand car business specialisi­ng in ‘luxury’ American vehicles.

His main US contact was Bob Fuerhelm, the workshop manager at a Pasadena Plymouth dealership and also a drag racer. Fuerhelm took Marshall to a race and organised a ride for him in a super stocker that went 11.7 seconds, and he was hooked. Seeing the fuellers run sealed the deal. “This, I knew, was the finest thing in motorsport I had ever seen,” Marshall would later relate. He was, he said, “just running around with my mouth open”.

Marshall bought himself two super stockers – a ’63 genuine factory performanc­e Plymouth Savoy Max Wedge and a ’64 Plymouth Belvedere, with lots of factory performanc­e extras. In November ’64, Fuerhelm flew in to drive one while Marshall drove the other. When Australia’s quickest dragster had just broken into the nines, these fullbodied sedans ran 12s and blew everyone away.

After just a few months, Marshall’s ambitions began to expand beyond those record-busting sedans. He sold both and flew back to the States to buy a dragster. He returned with an even-then outdated car. Called ‘The Vandal’, it had a short 137-inch wheelbase, full-length body, dropped I-beam front axle with transverse spring, and stunning paint. It was the first Us-built dragster seen Down Under, and instantly jumped to headline status. As with the sedans, Marshall found that he could command a premium price for his appearance­s and the performanc­e standard he set.

“I could see no point in going out and screwing my car up as hard as it would go on every run,” he would later say in a magazine interview. “I gave the promoters what they were prepared to pay for. If they wanted a run in excess of 200mph, I could do it for them…but it would cost them more. An Australian record attempt would be more again.”

Marshall was ever the showman. On one occasion he shut off The Vandal’s engine on the startline. Officials found

THE SCORCHER WENT ON TO BECOME THE FIRST LOCALLY OWNED CAR TO RUN 200MPH, WITH A 203.66MPH PASS IN FEBRUARY 1969

him slumped in the seat, apparently unconsciou­s. He was lifted out onto the track in front of the concerned crowd, apparently overcome by the nitro fumes, except that rescuers noted one eye open to check that all attention was on him – and he got paid without even having to run the car down the track!

Marshall sold The Vandal to fellow Sydney racer Ross Mellish in 1968 and returned to the US to buy a vastly updated car, dubbed The Scorcher. At just its second meeting here it went 7.99, bettering The Vandal’s best of 8.25 by some measure, but crashed into the Armco in Calder’s braking area, causing severe front-end damage. Marshall blamed bumps in the track, but to this day event manager Jack Collins insists it was caused by the removable steering wheel coming off in Marshall’s hands.

The car was repaired without its fancy front bodywork and went on to become the first locally owned car to run 200mph, with a 203.66mph pass under previous owner Leland Kolb’s supervisio­n in February 1969.

The Scorcher’s bests for Marshall were a 7.34 and a national-record 214.28mph, at Western Australia’s Ravenswood strip in October 1970.

At the end of 1970 Marshall sold The Scorcher and looked to be out of racing and the used-car game, as he moved into setting up a pyramid selling (Marshall called it ‘multi-level’) soap business called Golden Products for US racer Larry Huff. This was immensely successful for a short while, especially after Marshall returned to racing with a new rear-engined Us-built car named ‘Soapy Sales’.

With American Lee Drake tuning the car, it supposedly ran 6.98@219mph at Castlereag­h in December 1972, the first sub-seven-second pass, but the Australian Hot Rod Federation raised doubts about the legitimacy of the time. Marshall just shrugged and said he’d have to do it again.

The car only ran a handful of times before it was suddenly shipped back to the USA, possibly because the walls were closing in for Marshall. Pyramid selling schemes were made illegal here and the Golden Products empire evaporated. Marshall headed for the UK, where he set up the same deal in Europe. That lasted a couple of years before pyramid schemes were declared illegal in Europe and he hotfooted it to America, apparently just in front of the authoritie­s.

He settled in the US permanentl­y, setting up a business buying and selling exotic vehicles for high flyers. He remained distant from the drag racing scene in Australia until the 1990s, when the nostalgia movement kicked off. He returned in 1995 for a gathering and was amazed that anyone remembered him. Thereafter he was present at gatherings in California whenever Aussies were competing. In 2008 he was reunited with his old Scorcher, now in the hands of expat Dennis Young and restored by Sydney’s George Bukureshli­ev.

In 2016 he was inducted into the CAMS Motor Sport Hall of Fame.

Bad health dogged his later years. After suffering a major heart attack in Australia while travelling with his daughter in the late 1990s, he suffered a stroke in 2014 that left him severely disabled and unable to talk. His health continued to decline and he passed away in hospital in Tucson, Arizona on 23 January, aged 89.

Ash Marshall’s lasting legacy is the level of public profile that he brought to drag racing in Australia, being probably the first publicly recognised participan­t of the sport. His daughter’s summary of her father as being “larger than life” is as good an outline as we will get. He leaves an ex-wife and two children here and a wife and two more children in the US.

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