
In the 2004 movie Dust to Glory Vic Wilson stated “As you
go through life, if you knew you were making history you
would of paid more attention to it.” Fortunately since the
inception of organized off-road racing Wilson has won races
and helped shape the places where people can ride and drive
thereby ensuring that his name holds a firm place in the
written history of off-road motorsports. He won the first
Mexican 1000 in 1967 and repeated the feat again in 1970.
His place in the history of the sport goes beyond his
accomplishments as a racer to designing venues around the
country built specifically for off-road motorized use.
Wilson was born in April of 1935 in Glendale, California. He
spent his early years in Southern California in where his
father owned the Holly Hill Ranch, an avocado ranch. As a
young man Wilson raced his Triumph motorcycle in the deserts
California. While he enjoyed racing the bike he wanted to
cover ground in a four wheel drive vehicle so he purchased a
Jeep. He attended Orange Coast College where he earned an
Associates Arts Degree in Business Administration.
Wilson actively partook in the Southern California Jeep
Clubbing and race scene of the late 1950s and early 1960s.
He served as the President of the Orange County Four
Wheelers Club and partook in Hemet Jeep Club rides. He
traveled to Pismo Beach and Glamis, California where he
would drag race and take part in the hill climbing
competitions. He toured from the rural roads of California
to the Baja Peninsula in his Jeep, exploring the
infrequently traveled dirt roads of the time. In 1965 when
Brian Chuchua sponsored the first ever National Four
Wheel-Drive Grand Prix, at Riverside California, Wilson took
the title. He developed an excellent reputation as an
extremely capable driver and successful competitor.
Wilson at the age of 21 had opened his own service station
in Costa Mesa. By 1959 he decided to expand his business, he
sold the Costa Mesa Station and purchased a larger service
station in Newport Beach, California. The Newport Beach
business provided the automotive customer with full service,
from a mechanical shop to gasoline sales to a car wash.
Wilson employed over 30 people there. The shop at his
station provided Wilson with a space to modify Jeeps and
other vehicles for off-road use. Having a shop attracted
other off-road enthusiasts to his business. Bruce Meyers the
dune buggy innovator and 1976 ORMHOF Inductee was one of his
customers.
Meyers and Wilson often talked about their off road
experiences and traded notes on modifying vehicles. Meyers
offered Wilson a chance to try out one of his Meyers Manx
buggies. Wilson being a loyal Jeep driver did not exactly
jump at the opportunity. Meyers eventually talked him into
it and history was made.
Wilson drove the factory backed Meyers Manx buggy to victory
at the 1967 Inaugural Mexican 1000 along with Ted Mangels.
The inaugural race organized was not the highly organized
event it is today. Drivers found themselves on their own on
route finding through the cattle and fishing trails of Baja
with no pit support and no course markings. Wilson took on a
large part of the driving counting on the Mangels’
navigational skills to find the quickest route. The men won
the race with a time of 27 hours and 38 minutes.
Wilson did not slow down racing after the Mexican win, he
took the National Four Wheel Drive Grand Prix at Riverside,
CA and Mint 400 at Las Vegas both twice. In 1968 he returned
to Mexico to race the 1000, he and co-driver Jeff Jahns led
the race for the first three quarters when the wheel fell of
their Myers Tow’d, they finished fifth. The next year when
he returned, this time teamed up with vehicle builder Drino
Miller, they led the race until night fell when the
electrical system went out on the car, leaving them
literally in the dark to finish second place.
In 1970 Wilson once again teamed up with Drino Miller this
time repeating the feat of wining the Mexican 1000. Wilson
became the first two time winner of the event. The men took
turns driving the innovative single seat buggy built by
Miller and Stanford Havens. Wilson drove the first half of
the race and Miller took on the final leg. They completed
the course in 16 hours and 7 minutes. Their time bested
Wilson’s first win of the event in 1967 by 11 hours and 31
minutes.
Wilson’s life and involvement with off-road vehicles
stretched beyond the race course. In 1967, the same year he
won the first Mexican 1000, Wilson along with two partners
founded the Saddleback Park near Irvine CA. Saddleback Park
was a legendary proving ground for off-road racers and
weekend riders alike. Wilson along with Joe Parkhurst, then
publisher of Cycle World Magazine and Bruce Meyers founder
of the Meyers Manx leased 700 acres of land near Irvine Lake
in the hills of Orange County from the Irvine Company.
Wilson co-owner and operator of the Park and sold his
Newport service station in order to run the Park on a full
time basis. He studied the topography and determined where
to lay out the park’s trails. He developed new skills
operating machinery he shaped the landscape into challenging
courses, tracks and trails for all types of off-road
vehicles. The Park provided a place for off-road users to
run their vehicles during a period of numerous closings of
places they had driven in the past.
Saddleback Park hosted many championship events such as the
CMC Golden State series, Trans -AMA, Out Door MX Nationals,
World Mini GP, National Championship Trials, A BMX National,
Enduros, TT and Flat Tracks. The Park management hosted
events such as the “Baja De Saddleback.” “Baja De
Saddleback” utilized the entire acreage of the park to host
a rough and fast off-road course. At the Park Wilson created
and ran the “Motorcycle Olympiad.” The “Olympiad” followed a
format where the riders used the same bike in six different
events and combining the scores for the winner.
Saddleback Park was the first specialized off-road park
facility in the States and it featured one of the first
motocross tracks in this country. Over 700 visitors could be
found there on any Sunday of the year. Everyone from first
time riders to factory test teams utilized the Park. Wilson
operated the Park successful and sold it to Marvin Hendriks
in 1980. The Irvine Company did not renew Hendriks’ lease in
1983 due to the prevailing trend towards law suites and the
resulting high costs of insurance. Today the trails of the
Park once traveled by thousands of users are barely visible.
Wilson took his experience from Saddleback Park and started
the Reactions, a company which consulted Federal Agencies,
State Governments and Local Governments on the park design,
operations and feasibility of establishing dedicated
off-road use areas and parks. Wilson oversaw the development
of off-road parks in most of the western states including
Hawaii. Among the parks he designed are the Hungry Valley
Park near Los Angeles, Carnegie Park near Livermore,
California, Hollister Hills near Hollister, California,
Prairie City in Sacramento, California and Iron Range OHV in
Virginia, Minnesota.
In addition to his consulting work he remained active as a
promoter of off-road motorsports. He organized and promoted
events such as the Sierra Safari at Mammoth Mountain,
California and the all VW, Bug-In. The Bug-In ran from 1969
through 1989 and often had more than a ten-thousand
participants. The Sierra Safari took dirt bikers across a
300 mile long course and was limited to an exclusive group
of 150 riders able to handle the challenging trails.
Wilson lives outside of Reno, Nevada with his wife. He runs
the Spectrum company which works with mortgages and land
development in Nevada. He drives a Ford Ranger- pre-runner
and enjoys attending the occasional off-road event as a
spectator.
Sources:
Interview with Vic Wilson July 2006
Fiolka, Marty. 2005. 1000 Miles to Glory, The History of the
Baja 1000. Phoenix, AZ.: David Bull Publishing.
Movie- Dust To Glory
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