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John Morton
John's interest
in racing was probably first sparked as a child by attending
local dirt track races with his dad at the Waukegan Speedway
in his Illinois hometown. In 1949 his father took the family
to the Milwaukee Fairgrounds to see the AAA race. The mile
track was dirt then; that race today would be called an Indy
car race. Myron Fehr in the Marchese Special won the race.
A
neighbor across the street from John got an MGTF followed by
an XK140 Jaguar, an Austin Healey, and later a Porsche. That
exposure followed by a trip to the Road America 500 in 1957
with his family convinced John that this is what he would do.
In college in South Carolina, John bought a 1940 Ford 2 door
sedan for $43 and began his racing career on the dirt tracks
near Clemson. Two years of higher education was all John could
stand so he traveled to California to attend Carroll Shelby's
School of High Performance Driving. This was a five-day course
in which John fared better than he had at Clemson; Peter Brock
was the instructor.
John was given a job at Shelby American, the Cobra Factory,
not because he was fast, but they just needed a few warm
bodies to clean up, chase parts, etc. While working at
Shelby American, he purchased a Lotus Super 7 to begin racing
when he was old enough, twenty-one at that time. After a
season of club racing in the 7, it was replaced with a Lotus
23B. He ran a few races on the Cobra team during this period,
1964, as well as having his 23 entered by Shelby American in
some races.
John stagnated mostly in SCCA Club races through 1968 until
Peter Brock gave him a big break on his new BRE Datsun team.
The period between 1969 and 1972 were fruitful for John, Peter
and Datsun. The team disbanded after the 1972 season after
dominating both SCCA C Production with the 240Z and Trans-Am
with the 510.
A few seasons
in F5000, Can-Am and various IMSA races occupied the next few
years. A short almost accidental foray into the movie industry
in 1975 led to stunt work on a couple of feature films and
several TV shows. In 1981 Phil Conte joined John's small
Can-Am team as a sponsor for two years after which Phil formed
his own IMSA team with John as one of his two drivers in the
GTP category.
In 1985 Jim Busby hired John as team driver in one of his BFG
sponsored 962 Porsches with Pete Halsmer. The pair won the
Times GP at Riverside in 1985. In 1987 John drove for the
Group 44 Jaguar team of Bob Tullius and won the last Times GP
at Riverside and the West Palm Beach GP, both sharing the car
with Hurley Haywood. The Walkinshaw team replaced Tullius'
Jaguar team for 1988 and the Electramotive Nissan Team signed
Morton. John and Geoff Brabham won several races that year
setting the stage for Nissan's domination of the IMSA series
for several years, finally being dethroned by Dan Gurney's
Toyotas and finally succumbing to mismanagement and over
spending.
Other notable Nissan races for John during 1989-95 include an
overall victory at Sebring and several class wins, including
Le Mans in 1994, one of nine times he has competed at Le Mans.
Several races in various other classes and categories include
Sprint cars, Indy cars, and Karts. In his most recent
professional races, 1997-2001, John raced Porsches in both the
Grand American series and ALMS.
Currently most of John's competition is in vintage races
driving a variety of cars, which include Cobra Coupes,
Corvettes, Porsches, a Lotus 23 (that same one) and a Sunbeam
Tiger.
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