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17 - The Indianapolis 500: Making the Pilgrimage to the ‘Yard of Bricks’

from SURVIVALS AND LEGACIES: SPORT, HERITAGE AND IDENTITY

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 April 2013

Jean Williams
Affiliation:
De Montfort University in Leicester
Jeffrey Hill
Affiliation:
De Montfort University, Leicester
Kevin Moore
Affiliation:
National Football Museum, Manchester
Jason Wood
Affiliation:
Heritage Consultancy Services
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Summary

Back Home again in Indiana

And it seems that I can see

The gleaming candleight

Still shining bright

Thru Sycamores for me

(MacDonald and Hanley 1917)

I married an engineer. As someone who read books like Germaine Greer's The Female Eunuch (1970) while waiting for the school bus, it is perhaps a miracle that I married at all; but who could resist the charm of a first date to the Sutton Cheney Steam and Country Fair in rural Leicestershire? The honeymoon was four days in York. This included a full day in the National Railway Museum. On the way back we stopped off, mercifully only for the afternoon, at the Crich National Tramway Museum. Calling at a supermarket before getting home, I asked my husband to get whatever he fancied, meaning quite clearly for the evening meal. He returned with a £40 trolley-jack for the car and asked what was for supper. We survived a decade together thus, occasionally attending slightly more glamorous European events, such as the British Grand Prix and the Le Mans 24 Hours. I had by now discovered that part of Simon's agenda for our combined ‘bucket-list’ (of things to be accomplished before we die) was a visit to the Indianapolis circuit for the 500-mile event. So we went to the self-styled ‘motor-racing capital of the world’ for our tenth wedding anniversary in May 1996.

Type
Chapter
Information
Sport, History, and Heritage
Studies in Public Representation
, pp. 247 - 262
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2012

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