Attend the Ultimate Hershey Sprint Car Experience
On Thursday, May 11 from 4:30-7 p.m. Milton Hershey School, Hersheypark, and World of Outlaws will host the ultimate Hershey Sprint Car Experience. Read more about the event below and consider joining us!
Event Information
Where
May 11, 20234:30-7 p.m.
A Celebration of Local Racing History and Progress
The event celebrates modern-day racing while paying tribute to those who raced at Hershey Stadium Speedway 84 years ago. You read that right—Milton S. Hershey built Hersheypark Stadium in 1937 to be a speedway! From the outside looking in, you might question what Milton Hershey School, Hersheypark, and World of Outlaws have in common. A lot—and it all ties back to Mr. Hershey.
Join us for a chance to:
- Meet World of Outlaws and PA Posse drivers with their cars.
- Tour driver rigs and chat with crew.
- Sit in an antique race car.
- Snap pictures at the Victory Lane.
- Free event shirts, chocolate, and more at the Milton Hershey School tent.
- This is a free, family-friendly event.
- Alcohol is prohibited, and parking is free.
A History of Hershey Motorists
Hersheypark Stadium began construction in 1937. With seating designed specifically six feet off the ground for auto racing, the stadium was built as the last major project of Hershey’s Great Building Campaign.
Hershey Stadium Speedway was built with eight towers, each 98 feet high, to floodlight the field with 200,000-250,000 watts. Hershey Stadium Speedway’s formal dedication ceremony was held on July 4, 1939. Tickets for the speedway ranged from $.45-$.75 for adults and $.25 for children. On opening night in 1939, 11,265 race fans packed into Hershey Stadium Speedway to see midget cars.
Milton S. Hershey was an early adapter to automobiles. In 1911, at a time when the automobile era was still in its infancy, the town of Hershey produced a cocoa bean-shaped booklet titled, “Hershey, The Chocolate Town,” to encourage motorists to visit. Included in this booklet was a self-guided tour called, “The Motorist Delight.”