Soap Box Derby: This world-famous event was first held in Dayton 88 years ago today

Myron E. “Scottie” Scott was a Dayton Daily News photographer in 1933 when he came across of group of boys racing homemade coasters. That chance meeting turned into the very first Soap Box Derby race. It’s estimated more than 40,000 people lined Burkhardt Avenue for the event. The young faces watching “Scottie” award the inaugural loving cup sum up the excitement of that day. DAYTON DAILY NEWS ARCHIVE

Myron E. “Scottie” Scott was a Dayton Daily News photographer in 1933 when he came across of group of boys racing homemade coasters. That chance meeting turned into the very first Soap Box Derby race. It’s estimated more than 40,000 people lined Burkhardt Avenue for the event. The young faces watching “Scottie” award the inaugural loving cup sum up the excitement of that day. DAYTON DAILY NEWS ARCHIVE

Imagine hundreds of young boys flying down a breakneck hill in wooden contraptions of their own design.

That scene was the very first Soap Box Derby — and it was held in Dayton in 1933.

The race, held on steep and brick-paved Burkhardt Avenue, was conceived by Myron E. “Scottie” Scott, a Dayton Daily News photographer.

Soap box drivers take off at the start of a heat at the top of Burkhardt Avenue in 1933. DAYTON DAILY NEWS ARCHIVE

Credit: Dayton Daily News Archive

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Credit: Dayton Daily News Archive

Scott had run across a few boys coasting homemade vehicles on Hilltop Avenue in Oakwood and, inspired by their ingenuity, organized a race the following weekend.

Nineteen boys and their hand-crafted autos showed up along with a crowd of onlookers.

Intent on creating a real race, Scott asked his editor for assistance and was given $200 to promote the very first derby.

Word spread about the competition that drew more than 325 entries, all boys except for one, a dark-haired girl named Alice Johnson.

A crowd estimated at more than 40,000 lined Burkhardt Avenue in Dayton and found vantage points on top of buildings to watch the first soap box derby race in 1933. DAYTON DAILY NEWS ARCHIVE

Credit: Dayton Daily News Archive

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Credit: Dayton Daily News Archive

A grand parade kicked off the event Aug. 19, 1933.

Young soap box drivers were towed in their homemade cars along Monument Avenue and Ludlow streets by their mechanics and then converged to fill the width of Main Street.

>>WATCH A VIDEO OF THE PARADE AND FIRST SOAP BOX DERBY IN DAYTON

The wooden cars, in all shapes and sizes, paraded along supported by “wheels from baby carriages, wagons, bicycles, tricycles, wheel-barrows, automobiles and even kiddie cars,” according to a story describing the scene in the Dayton Daily News.

“The vehicles ranged in form and beauty from the proverbial sublime to the ridiculous,” the newspaper reported. “Junk yards, dumps, garrets and cellars must have been raided of all the available materials that could be pieced into a movable contraption. It was an Indianapolis Speedway classic in miniature form.”

August 20, 1933:  The front page of the Dayton Daily News covering the first Soap Box Derby.

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A crowd estimated at more than 40,000 scaled buildings for the best views and lined the course that ran three-eighths of a mile.

A telephone line was installed from the starters’ line to the finish strip just for the race, and cameramen representing the three major newsreels of the country were on hand to film the inaugural event.

The races began in the afternoon with ages 11 to 16 racing for the grand prize, the Dayton Daily News cup, and the winner of the younger group competing for a “handsome red bicycle.”

Racers hunched over self-designed steering mechanisms urging the cars to hurtle faster down “Burkhardt’s famous coasting hill.”

Myron Scott, shown working on artwork for the Dayton Daily News in the 1940s.  Scott was also a photographer at the newspaper, invented the Soap Box Derby and was the man who named the Corvette automobile.

Credit: Dayton Daily News file photo

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Credit: Dayton Daily News file photo

The heats ran for four hours as the crowd waved their hats and shouted encouragement to the racers.

Moments after “little David Wyse” captured the prize for the younger competitors, “a flashing yellow comet on wheels, its gas-pipe steering handles clutched in the vice-like grip of a 16-year-old boy, whizzed across the finish line.”

Randall Custer, an Oakwood High School student, became the “champion of champions” of the first soap box race.

A photograph documents the winners of the first soap box derby held in Dayton in 1933. Seated in the derby car is Randall Custer, champion of the derby in the 11 to 16-year-old age range, next to him is Alice Johnson, the only girl who competed in the event and who took third place in the D-2 classification. David Wyse, winner of the boys up to 11-years-old is seond from left in the back row. DAYTON DAILY NEWS ARCHIVE

Credit: Dayton Daily News Archive

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Credit: Dayton Daily News Archive

The following year Chevrolet agreed to sponsor Scott’s competition, and the first official All-American Soap Box Derby was held in Dayton. Racers from across the nation competed for the grand prize, a four-year college scholarship.

The crowd swelled to more than 65,000, and the event drew celebrities of the day including Wild Bill Cummings, the 1934 Indianapolis 500 winner, and famous aviator “Jimmie” Mattern.

In 1935, the race moved to Akron due to its central location and hilly terrain, according to the All-American Soap Box Derby organization.

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