Colorado Auto Racing: A Brief History

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As to Co. Street winter driving,the solar snow removal takes care of the streets 98% of the time.
I lived in Albuquerque from '76-'85. If there were snow flurries at the wrong time of day the the city would shut down.

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There was CDR down by Castle Rock, and Rocky Mountain Dirt Tack Commerce City. There was also a combination track east of Denver in the 1970's, drag racing and oval track.

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My dad and mom both raced there in the early fifties. I have pictures of what the track looked like when it was a dirt track. I, also, have pictures of their race cars.

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La Junta, Mead (Mountain View), Continental Divide Raceway, Woody Creek, Pueblo Motorsports Park, Lakeside Speedway, Little Indy, Salida, Buffalo Bill Hillclimb, Georgetown Hillclimb, and more...

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Wasn't there a Midget/V-8 60cui
Dirt track in Grand Junction at one time?
Near 28rd and Grand Ave?

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Road racing has had, at best, an inconsistent level of popularity historically in the United States, but Colorado has had a long history with that genre of racing.

Some have claimed that Colorado, at least at one point, had more road racing venues per capita than any other US state. I've never seen numbers to back it up but, given the relatively high number of road courses and relatively small population, I think it's possible.

Some currently active road courses:

High Plains Raceway
Pueblo Motorsports Park
La Junta Raceway

And a couple "ghost tracks":

Second Creek Raceway
Continental Divide Raceways

That may not seem like a lot of tracks but, given the relative unpopularity of road racing in the US, it's a very good number.

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