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Byline: Kevin Wilson
Amid the racing on Memorial Day weekend, you probably took time to recognize the war veterans. The rapidity with which we're losing the surviving vets of World War II is frequently remarked upon of late. Less noticed is that many of that generation were also leading achievers during the postwar booms of the auto industry and racing, and we're also losing them at an alarming rate.
This hit home as we prepared the weekly two-page spreads building up to AutoWeek's 50th anniversary in July. Year by chronicled year, the list of the deceased whose passing merited mention in our retrospectives grew. For the spreads covering the 1950s and '60s, we could mark the major deaths in a sentence or two; a bad year warranted a short paragraph. By the end of the '90s, the lists could have consumed half of the available space, and long lifetimes of major achievement were shortened into memory nudges such as "Indy 500 winner'' or "founder of the marque.''
Racing was more dangerous in the early years, but many of those who died hadn't lived long enough to accomplish much. Recently, though, in addition to ...
Source: HighBeam Research, They're Going Faster.