Danny Foster: The First Superstar
By Fred Farley - APBA Unlimited Historian
Danny Foster was to the 1940s and '50s what Bill Muncey was to the 1960s and
'70s and what Chip Hanauer was to the 1980s and '90s. Foster was Unlimited
racing's first superstar in the years following World War II.
He is the power boat inductee for 2005 into the Motorsports Hall of Fame of
America in Novi, Michigan.
Danny's first boat racing contact was with the California Gold Cup class of
the 1930s. The Gold Cup Class was a forerunner of the post-war Unlimited
Class and prohibited engines larger than 732 cubic inches in piston
displacement.
In 1938, Foster served as riding mechanic with driver Dan Arena of the
Hispano-powered MISS GOLDEN GATE. Foster and Arena finished second in the
1938 APBA Gold Cup race at Detroit. The winner was the Italian Count Theo
Rossi in ALAGI, powered by an Isotta-Fraschini engine.
Foster's Unlimited driving career began in 1946. His first appearance
behind the wheel of a Thunderboat was at the President's Cup in Washington,
D.C., with Albin Fallon's MISS GREAT LAKES. Danny won all three heats and
decisively outperformed the favored Guy Lombardo in TEMPO VI.
This was the first victory by an Allison-powered boat and the first of many
competitive triumphs by Foster, who quickly established himself as the top
driver of his day.
He was National High Point Champion in 1947 with MISS PEPS V, owned by the
Dossin brothers of Detroit. With this craft, a rebuilt pre-war campaigner,
overpowered with an Allison engine, Foster won his first Gold Cup on the
extremely rough water of Jamaica Bay, New York.
Although sponsored by Pepsi Cola, MISS PEPS V didn't carry her product's
full name into competition because commercial sponsorships were frowned
upon. But this situation would soon change.
In 1948, Danny made it back-to-back Gold Cups -- this time with MISS GREAT
LAKES at Detroit in a race that is recalled as one of the most destructive
in history. Boats crashed, burned, and sank on a day when all that could
possibly go wrong seemingly did. Foster was the only entrant out of 22 that
could go the full 90-mile distance.
Even at that, MISS GREAT LAKES barely made it back to the pits following the
last heat -- before itself sinking at dockside while Foster was receiving
the trophy!
In the ensuing years, Danny continued to make his presence felt with the
likes of SUCH CRUST, DELPHINE X, HORNET, GALE II, WHA HOPPEN TOO, and MISS
GREAT LAKES II. To his credit, Foster managed to finish first or second at
one time or another with almost every boat that he drove between 1946 and 1955.
Foster replaced his friend Lee Schoenith in the cockpit of GALE II during the
1952 campaign. With Schoenith away, serving in Korea, Danny won the Silver
Cup on the Detroit River.
The following year, Lee was having a difficult day with GALE II at the Silver
Cup. After a disappointing third-place in Heat One, Schoenith asked Foster to
step in as a relief driver. Danny scored a decisive victory in the next heat,
beating Bill Cantrell in SUCH CRUST V and Joe Taggart in SLO-MO-SHUN V, and
put GALE II back into contention. Schoenith then reclaimed the cockpit and
went on to win the race.
Foster had the kind of season in 1955 that most drivers only dream about.
That was the year that he teamed with bandleader Lombardo as pilot of
TEMPO VII, an Allison-powered craft that the press labeled as "The Sweetest
Boat This Side of Heaven." Foster and Lombardo had raced against each other
for years; together, with crew chief Roy Duby and under the sponsorship of
Decca Records, they were an inspired combination.
After being forced out of the 1955 Gold Cup at Seattle due to an on-board
fire in the first heat, TEMPO VII could hardly do wrong. Danny won the
Copper Cup at Polson, Montana, the Silver Cup at Detroit, the President's
Cup in Washington, D.C., the International Cup at Elizabeth City, North
Carolina, and the Governor's Cup at Madison, Indiana. The victories did
not come easy. Indeed, Foster had to defeat one of the most competitive
fleets in Unlimited history that season. Included were Bill Muncey in
MISS THRIFTWAY, Chuck Thompson in MISS PEPSI, Jack Bartlow in MISS U.S.,
Don Wilson in DORA MY SWEETIE, Cantrell in GALE IV, and Schoenith in GALE V.
It is interesting to compare Foster's driving with that of the budding
superstar Muncey, who had only just landed his first competitive ride in
the Unlimiteds. At Detroit and Washington, the veteran Foster clearly
outperformed the rookie Muncey. In the Final Heat of the latter event,
Bill appeared en route to an easy win after Danny had spun out in the
first turn.
But Foster rebounded quickly and took off after the rest of the field. He
passed one boat, then another, and caught up with the frontrunning MISS
THRIFTWAY. Foster and TEMPO VII roared past Muncey as if he were tied to
the dock and sprinted on to the checkered flag and victory.
After 1955, Foster had few worlds left to conquer. From then on, he was
mainly a relief driver or a shore mechanic. Over the next decade, he saw
occasional action with MISS U.S. I, MISS SUPERTEST II, GALE VII, and MISS
SMIRNOFF.
His last victory was in a secondary race for the Ponderosa Trophy at the
1965 Lake Tahoe World Championship Regatta with MISS SMIRNOFF. Danny was
substituting for his friend Cantrell who had been injured at a race in
Madison, Indiana.
Long retired from the competitive arena, Danny Foster -- "The Old Pro" --
is remembered as being one of the better of the best in the water sport of
kings.
His recent election to the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America is a fitting
tribute to one of racing's all-time greats.
Previous Hall of Fame inductees in the power boat category include Bill
Muncey, Gar Wood, Dean Chenoweth, Bill Cantrell, Ron Musson, Bernie Little,
Chip Hanauer, Tom D'Eath, Mira Slovak, and Ted Jones.
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