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Cycle News 2022 Issue 25 June 21

Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles

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VOLUME 59 ISSUE 25 JUNE 21, 2022 P123 banked. The surface was rolled and oiled gravel. Pits were on the outside of the main straight and a 5000-seat grandstand was built on opposite side of the pits. The buildup to the race was huge, both in the local media and the motorcycling press. It was originally hoped that the British motorcycle makers would bring their factory teams over (thus, the International designation), but that never happened and the only international entrant in the 1919 race was New Zealand Champion Percy Coleman. The Marion Leader-Tribune newspa- per featured a racer each day in its pages in the weeks leading up to the race and the entire front page of the paper the day before the race was devoted to stories of the event. Admission to the race was one dollar and a reserve seat cost the same. Promoters expected a crowd of 20,000 (about the exact population of Marion at the time) and it's not clear how they were going to make enough money to cover the cost of build- ing the track, even if they got the 20,000 fans they'd hoped. It is apparent that the town of Marion was contributing in some way financially since the race was seen as a way to promote the town. The few hotels were filled to capacity and Marion residents were asked by city fathers to open their homes to the visi- tors coming from as far away as Butte, Montana, and Boston, Massachusetts. Marion was on top of the Tren- ton Gas Field, the largest natural- gas field ever discovered up to that time. In the 1880s, the field was thought to hold a near end- less supply of natural gas and the area boomed with businesses coming in to take advantage of the cheap resource. But, by the early 1910s, the gas field dried up due to waste and overuse, towns in the area were struggling to keep businesses alive. So, the race was an attempt to advance the cause of Marion commerce. Harley-Davidson, Indian and Excelsior fielded factory teams with six riders each. All the big names of the day were in the race and all three manufacturers came to the race with machines made to run at maximum, taking advantage of the two-mile long straights. Reports of the day put The Cornfield Classic in Marion, Indiana, was one of the biggest motorcycle road races of its era. A portion of the track as it looks today.

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