
Steve McQueen 1976 Inductee
Steve McQueen avidly participated in off-road motorsports
long before he became involved with some of the first
organized off-road races. He drove and raced many types of
off-road vehicles including motorcycles, the Baja Boot and
Chevy Pickups. McQueen worked as one of the most successful
movie actors in Hollywood from the late 1950s through the
1970s, however he spent as much time as possible racing. He
found racing to be his true passion, he once stated, “An
actor is a puppet, manipulated by a dozen other people. Auto
racing has dignity.”
McQueen had a rocky start to life. He was born Terrance
Steven McQueen, March 24, 1930 in Beech Grove Indiana.
Before he reached his first birthday, both of his parents
abandoned him, first his father and then his mother shortly
after. A great uncle took him in until his mother sent for
him to join her in California at age twelve. With little
parental guidance McQueen drifted towards delinquency and
was sent to the California Junior Boys Republic, a
reform-school in Chico. He credited the school later in life
for giving him direction and for keeping him out of further
trouble.
His mother once again sent for him when he turned sixteen
and he traveled to New York City to live with her. There he
worked odd jobs and joined the Merchant Marines. He jumped
boat in the Dominican Republic and worked his way to the
States ending up in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.
He found himself becoming bored being a beach bum in South
Carolina and joined the U.S. Marines. In the Marines he
quickly got into trouble for going AWOL and spent time in
the military brig. He however redeemed himself with the
military by acting in a heroic manner. During a training
exercise on the Artic Ocean a transport ship crashed into a
sandbank and tossed many of the Marines aboard into to icy
waters. McQueen personally pulled five men to safety. For
his actions the Marines appointed him to the Honor Guard
where he served out the rest of his duty protecting the
yacht of Harry S. Truman. McQueen honorably left the Marines
in April of1950.
McQueen drifted for a bit after the Marines. He worked as a
lumberjack in British Columbia, as an oil field worker in
Texas and a delivery man in New York. He settled into New
York and at the suggestion of a girlfriend took advantage of
military educational benefits to study at the Actors Studio
in New York City. He worked a harried schedule making
deliveries, taking acting classes and racing his 1946 Indian
Chief motorcycle on the weekends.
By the mid-1950s McQueen had worked on Broadway, television
and had made the move to movies and Hollywood. He stared on
the television show “Wanted: Dead or Alive.” McQueen is
famous for his roles in movies such as “Bullit,” “Hell is
for Heros,” “The Thomas Crown Affair,” “The Great Escape”
with its notable motorcycle jump escape scene and “The
Magnificent Seven.” He stared in “Sand Pebbles” for which he
received a Best Actor Oscar nomination. He also took part in
the production and financing of “On Any Sunday” a film about
off-road motorcycle racing which greatly helped increase its
popularity. The film’s cast included Malcolm Smith and Mert
Lawwill.
Early in the 1960s McQueen purchased his first off-road
motorcycle. He and fellow actor Dennis Hopper came upon some
off-road riders while they were out cruising on their street
bikes. Amazed by the capabilities of the off-road machines,
McQueen purchased a Triumph 500 cc the next day from Bud
Ekins. Ekins helped McQueen learn to ride the machine and
soon McQueen took to racing off-road. He raced the
motorcycle during the 1960s and early1970s. Heraced in the
Baja 1000, the Mint 400 and the Elsinore Grand Prix. He also
raced abroad. He was a member of the 1964 American team for
the International Six Day Trials, held in East Germany. His
team included Bud Ekins, Dave Ekins, Cliff Coleman and John
Steen. Their team lead the race until Bud Ekins broke his
leg then McQueen crashed.
The public closely associated McQueen with motorcycling. He
wrote a series of motorcycle reviews for Popular Science in
the mid-1960s. In 1971 he appeared shirtless on the cover of
Sports Illustrated jumping a Husqvarna off-road bike.
McQueen granted an extensive interview for the magazine
proclaiming his love for the sport.
McQueen raced four wheeled off-road vehicles as well as
motorcycles. He seemed to truly enjoy grueling off-road
races, either on a bike or driving a car. He drove the Baja
Boot for Vic Hickey in events such as the 1968 Stardust.
Hickey said “Steve McQueen was a good driver, and he was
tough, came out of that boys school in Chino.” McQueen
generally finished in the top ten in any race he competed
in. He raced despite contracts with his movie studios which
prevented him from doing so. Sometimes he raced under the
pseudonym of Harvey Mushman.
McQueen organized the firm Solar Engineering to produce
off-road vehicles and equipment. He patented the “Baja
Bucket,” a racing safety seat of his own design.
At the age of 50 on November 7, 1980 McQueen passed away at
a clinic in Mexico where he gone for experimental cancer
treatments. McQueen suffered from mesothelioma a cancer
caused by exposure to asbestos. At the time of his death
McQueen had amassed 210 motorcycles, 55 cars and five
airplanes.
Sources:
Rafferty, Tod. The Achievers, Central California’s
Engineering Pioneers. Central Coast History Foundation, San
Luis Obispo, CA. 2004.
2004, Motorcycle Hall of Fame Museum- Inducted1999, Steve
McQueen Biography, http://members.tripod.com/~stvmcqueen/McQbio.html
Steve McQueen Profile, http://turnerclassicmovies.com/ThisMonth/Articel/0,,93583[31494||,00.html
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