In October, 1901, a race was scheduled at Old Grosse Point Blue Ribbon Track in Michigan. As a special feature attraction, there was to be an exhibition of a tandem racing bicycle ridden by the team of Barney Oldfield and Tom Cooper. Oldfield was a large, strong professional bicycle racer. His early life was very hard. He began work as a water boy on a construction crew, and moonlighted as a bellhop. He started bicycle racing at age sixteen, won his first race and found he could sell his gold medal back to the promoter for cash. After an unsuccessful venture in coal mining in Colorado, he resumed his bicycle racing career in Salt Lake City, Utah. He again became associated with Cooper in Detroit where Cooper had convinced Henry Ford to build him a race car. Oldfield learned the intricacies of automobile racing and having driven only one car in his life, he raced it at the Old Grosse Point Blue Ribbon Track, and completed the five miles in a world's record time of five minutes and twenty-eight seconds.

In 1907 an event took place that would forever change the look of auto racing. This was the opening of the Lakeside Auto Speedway in Lakeside, California, a little resort town in the foothills of San Diego County. The Lakeside Auto Speedway was claimed to be the first purpose-built auto racing facility in the country. Now races could be held off the dangerous public roads and horse race tracks, which are not ideally suited to cars. In 1907, Oldfield came to the new racetrack in Lakeside. Often another car and driver traveled with him to compete against him in exhibitions.
These were usually a series of timed laps with each car taking a turn on the track alone, running against the clock. On April 7, 1907, The San Diego Union announced the first event to open the new racetrack. Barney Oldfield in his "Green Dragon" was to be featured in a match against Bruno Seibel in the "Red Devil" on Saturday, April 20 and Sunday, April 21, 1907. Special excursion trains would run from San Diego to Lakeside and return after races. The Union said that the largest crowd in Lakeside's history was expected. Both Oldfield and Seibel pronounced the track as being excellent and without a peer anywhere in the world.
According to the April 22 issue of the Union, Oldfield had set a new record of 51 4/5 seconds for the mile. The first event featured perhaps the best-known driver in the country, Barney Oldfield. Huge crowds arriving by train watched him pilot his Green Dragon racer to a new speed record. The opening of Lakeside Auto Speedway initiated a successful run of events that continued until the Inn closed in 1920.
For about ten years, regular weekly auto and motorcycle races were held at the dirt circular track. Many old-timers recalled spending Sunday afternoons at the track, even testing their own driving and mechanical skills. The appearance of Barney Oldfield was an outstanding highlight in the history of the Lakeside Track. Oldfield retired a wealthy man in 1918, but lost his money in the depression. In later years, he ran a saloon in California. Henry Ford once visited him and they joked about how each helped to make the other. In 1946, at the age of 68, Oldfield died of a cerebral hemorrhage.
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