San Diego Racers Riot
July 7, 2008
'60 melee spurred creation of raceways
The drag street riot on El Cajon Boulevard is symptomatic of the disrespect
for authority so pronounced in some areas of our society. Those who riot or endanger
the public safety to enforce their demands on government and law-abiding citizens
cannot be tolerated. . . . San Diego must not be intimidated.
The San Diego Union,
Aug. 23, 1960
It began as a mass demonstration on El Cajon Boulevard near Cherokee
Avenue in City Heights. Young car racing enthusiasts from throughout the
county gathered to protest the lack of a legal drag strip in San Diego.
When the protest turned into street racing, police moved in with tear
gas and batons. More than 100 people were arrested in the bedlam that followed,
known thereafter as the El Cajon Boulevard Riot, which led to the creation
of raceways in Ramona and Carlsbad.
Drag-strip racing had been growing in popularity for many years. By 1959,
there were an estimated 200 drag strips in the United States. Racers in San
Diego used what was called the country's oldest official drag-race course,
a retired airstrip on Paradise Mesa east of National City. A new housing
development closed the Paradise track in 1959.
With no other drag strips available, hot rodders used an old Navy airfield
near the Miramar Naval Air Station, called Hourglass Field. Races sponsored by
the California Sports Car Club were held on a 1.8-mile track.
Unsanctioned drag racing also took place while the Navy turned a blind eye.
But when a racing accident hurt four people on Aug. 6, 1960, the Navy closed
the field.
Car clubs lobbied city and county officials for a drag-racing site. San
Diego Police Chief A. E. Jansen was unsympathetic, saying, “drag strips
actually stimulate highway recklessness among those viewing such contests.”
One car club member cautioned, “If we don't get the strip, cars will
be dragging in the streets.”
The warning would prove prophetic.
In mid-August, flyers began appearing in movie drive-ins, coffee shops
and car club headquarters announcing a “mass protest meeting” on El Cajon
Boulevard at 1 a.m. Sunday, Aug. 21. A disc jockey, Dick Boynton of KDEO,
spread the news to listeners.
That night, hundreds of teenagers and young adults began gathering
along the boulevard.
About 1 a.m., some in the crowd blocked off the street and began
racing. Between 35th and 40th streets, “cars, of all models and shapes,
raced two abreast,” The Union reported. “Thousands of spectators lined
the sidewalk and center island, leaving almost no room for the cars to pass.”
More than 65 police officers moved in about 2 a.m. and ordered the
demonstrators to disperse. Throwing tear gas grenades at the feet of the
spectators, they waded into the crowd with riot sticks.
“Almost everyone was running toward their cars,” a witness recalled.
“Other people were on the ground, unable to run because of the tear gas.”
About 100 demonstrators stood their ground at a service station lot
and “threw a barrage of soft drink bottles and rocks at the police.”
Three young men busted into the Coca-Cola bottling plant at 38th Street
and broke open cases of Coke, and began heaving glass bottles over a
fence at the police.
It took three hours to quell the “mob,” estimated at 3,000, the Los
Angeles Times reported. Two policemen were hurt, others had their uniforms
torn. A few officers lost their guns in the melee.
Eighty adult demonstrators and 36 juveniles were arrested. For the
ID technicians in the Police Records Bureau it was quite a night.
Two techs on duty the day after, a Monday, were swamped with fingerprint
cards that had to be checked for warrants or prior arrests through huge
index name files. The cards then were classified and searched individually
in numerous drawers crammed with thousands of fingerprint cards from previous years.
That night brought more unrest and fingerprint cards for the harried
ID techs. Cruising in caravans in San Diego and El Cajon, drag racers
taunted police. About 100 people were arrested, some charged with
disorderly conduct, others with weapons violations. More than 30 juveniles
were picked up for curfew violations.
Two days later, police arrested a printer named Herbert Sturdyvin,
20, on suspicion of conspiracy in the printing and distribution of the
mimeographed flyers that police blamed for the original mass demonstration.
Sturdyvin was released without having to post bail and never charged.
The following weekend, police braced for more disorder rumored to
be stirred from sympathizers coming from Los Angeles. The demonstrations
failed to materialize.
After the riot, new demands were heard in the community for an
authorized drag strip. The San Diego City Council promised to appoint
a committee to “study the possibilities.”
The president of the National Hot Rod Association pledged help from
his organization in getting an official strip, but insisted that enthusiasts
would have to “reform” their conduct.
Eventually, the campaign for a drag strip was rewarded. The San Diego
Raceway opened in Ramona in 1963 and operated until it became a runway for
the Ramona Airport. Carlsbad Raceway opened in 1964 and hosted drag racing
until the track closed in 2004.
Your humble Ace Reporter
Bob