Story By: SHAWN BROUSE / WILLIAMS GROVE SPEEDWAY – MECHANICSBURG, PA – Williams Grove Speedway will present the 42nd annual York Building Products Jack Gunn Memorial for Lawrence Chevrolet 410 sprint cars coming up this Friday night, August 23 at 7:30 pm.
Twin 20s for the winged and non-win super sportsman are also part of the special program.
For the sprint cars, the race will be another leg of the 2024 Hoosier Diamond Series, of which Danny Dietrich is the point leader.
The 410 sprints will be vying for $8,000 to win in the 30-lap Gunn Memorial, run annually to honor the late Hall of Fame promoter.
Time trials will set the heat starting grids with the fastest qualifier earning $300 for the Fast Tees Fast Time Award.
The winged sportsman will compete in heats and a feature while the wingless cars go in a main event only.
Each 20 lap main for the sportsman will pay $1,000 to the winner.
Brent Marks is the defending Jack Gunn Memorial Champion.
Marks took the lead from Dylan Norris on lap 15 before speeding off to the victory.
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Adult general admission for August 23 is $25 with students ages 13-20 admitted for $10.
Kids ages 12 and under are always free at Williams Grove Speedway.
Gunn’s Promotional Prowess Remembered Friday
For the 42nd season in a row, Williams Grove Speedway will honor one of the finest showman and promoters the East has ever known on Friday night when the York Building Products Jack Gunn Memorial for 410 sprint cars is contested.
First run in 1983, the Gunn Memorial honors late Williams Grove promoter Jack Gunn, a native of Hancock, Maryland.
The 2024 event will be the 42nd annual Gunn Memorial and the winner’s list is impressive to say the least.
Bobby Allen was the first winner in 1983 with additional names on the win list like Frankie Kerr, Jason Johnson, Lance Dewease, Greg Hodnett, Fred Rahmer, Daryn Pittman, Keith Kauffman and many others.
However no driver has claimed more Gunn Memorials over the years than the now retired Don Kreitz Jr.
Jack Gunn was a Hall of Fame Promoter who heralded the speedway as promoter from 1967 until his untimely death from cancer at the age of 48 in 1980.
He began working at the track during the early 1960s as an announcer and honed his skill on the microphone while eventually relaying his talents into the oval’s captain.
It was during his tenure at the helm of Williams Grove Speedway that Gunn rose to prominence on the local and national scene and he took the facility with him.
During his career at Williams Grove, Gunn also promoted with much success at other area tracks.
Gunn’s mark on both Williams Grove and the region itself was to help raise sprint car racing to not only a weekly division but a premiere weekly headline division at that.
With his hand guiding them, Gunn first lured and then brought the likes of Jan Opperman, Bobby Allen, Steve Smith and more to the area to race, make a living and ultimately to make a home in this rich racing region.
Gunn was feted nationally as 1979 Promoter of the Year.
While at the top of his game, he not only stood at the helm at both Williams Grove and Selinsgrove Speedways, but he was also doing the job at Hagerstown, (Maryland) and Penn National Speedways.
In his day, Jack Gunn was known as the most powerful promoter in the East.
And it is that reputation and skill that Williams Grove Speedway will honor yet again this week with the running of the Jack Gunn Memorial.
Gates will open at 5:30 pm with action getting underway at 7:30 pm.
Adult general admission is set at $25 with youth ages 13 – 20 admitted for just $10. Kids ages 12 and under are always admitted for FREE at Williams Grove Speedway.