
The
off-road community knows Macey L. Corky McMillin simply as
Corky. Corky moved from Missouri to Chula Vista when he was
14. He started a small construction company in Bonita,
California in 1960, with his wife, Vonnie looking after the
accounting duties. In the mid-1960s, Corky McMillin, father
of two young boys, enjoyed outdoor activities, including
trips to the River and weekends at the dunes. He took his
ten-year-old son, Mark, with him to the dunes, where he
taught him to
drive.
In the early ‘70s, Corky and Mark built a Baja Bug in their
backyard so they could go to Baja to watch a friend, whom he
sponsored, compete in the famed Baja 1000. In 1975 they went
to serve as pit support for another friend. The friend’s
effort wasn’t successful, and he parked the car under a
tarp. The following year
Corky borrowed the car so he and Mark could go race the Baja
1000 one time. They wanted to be able to say they’d done it.
Now they’ve done it, and done it and done it. Not only that,
they’ve won it. Corky and Mark so loved the sport that they
never quit going. They convinced Mark’s younger brother,
Scott, to join in the fun, which he did a few years later,
and he, too, became thoroughly involved. Corky’s record
includes season class championships in 1981, 1985 and 1987.
Corky’s enthusiasm worked like a pebble in a pond. The
ripples kept spreading. His sons have become thoroughly
enmeshed in the sport, so much so that Scott is involved in
the sponsorship of the grass roots MDR/FUD series in the
Superstition Mountains area, and Mark has recently been
named to the California Off Highway Commission. Mark said,
“My dad believed in giving back to everything that’s been
good to us. Our families are functional, and we all believe
that it’s because we did the sand dunes and the river and
the off road activities as a family. Why not give back to
that?”
In addition, Corky so loved the sport that he imbued his
grandchildren with his enthusiasm, and now there are two,
Andy and Daniel, who are actively racing, and two, Macy and
Luke, who ride whenever possible. Luke,13, already has a
car, and impatiently awaits the time he’ll be old enough to
race.
Corky’s reason for going on with the racing was in part
because he “just loved it” and also because he loved the
fact that the family was together. He also introduced many
of his employees at the McMillin Companies to the sport, and
his sons continue the tradition. If an employee expresses an
interest in going to a
race, he generally gets to go. The race team gets the
employee a room or an experienced person to camp with. They
show him a good time “feed him hotdogs” and by the end of
the weekend, according to Mark, “he’s hooked.” A lot of
ex-employees still go racing with them.
Corky was a part of many of the developments that have
brought the sport of off-road racing to its current level.
His teams werethe first to invest time and money in the use
of the heavier and more powerful Porsche 911 motors for
off-road. Once they had ironed out the bugs, and proved it
by winning the SCORE San Felipe race in 1983, other teams
jumped on the bandwagon. From Porsches they moved on to
Fords and then Chevies, always looking for ways to improve.
For the last five years of his life Corky had been working
hard to develop a new, beefier, off-road transmission. Only
a couple of months before he passed away he’d finally
decided it was good enough to use in competition. The team
is now running one of Corky’s transmissions at selected
events.
But perhaps it was the way he felt about the sport that
endeared him to his off-road friends. He loved it. “And”,
said Mark, “He loved what it taught you. To be successful,
you’ve got to plan, got to practice (as in prerunning), then
do it, and follow through.” Mark explained that the team
would get back from a race and do a post mortem. They’d
discuss how things could have been done better. Mark said,
“He applied the same philosophies and lessons learned from
racing back to the family business.”
“Dad always told us, “Never, ever quit whatever you’re doin’
in life.” says Mark. Corky lived up to that maxim – racing
and working at improving the racing, until he was 76 years
old. He went from his race car to the hospital where he
passed away in September of 2005.
He leaves a void that will never be filled.
Biography By Judy J. Smith
Over the years McMillin won three SCORE Points Championships and on two occasions won overall titles at both the San Felipe 250 and the Baja 500. As the McMillin Companies continued to prosper, Corky expanded into different markets, eventually becoming one of the largest private developers in the country. Always a firm believer in the importance of supporting off-road racing, The McMillin Companies have been event sponsors at Best in the Desert and SCORE races, earning SCOREs Entry Sponsor of the Year award in 2005. Since 2001 The McMillin Companies have also been title sponsor of the Superstition Series, a local series of off-road races held in Plaster City, East of San Diego.
Corky McMillin once said, “The best thing we have isn’t our money in the bank, it’s our reputation”. He was the elder statesman of off-road racing. Corky passed away from heart failure on September 22, 2005 at the age of 76. His passing leaves a void in the heart of off-road motorsports which cannot be filled. We are honored to induct him into the Off-Road Motorsports Hall of Fame!
<< Back to Inductees