Whiskey Roads featuring Junior Johnson (2006)

Video Statistics and Information

Video
Captions Word Cloud
Reddit Comments
Captions
[Music] the dirt roads at bootleggers ran on help pave the way for today's multi-billion dollar industry and the fastest growing sport forever known as the whiskey roads they lead to the super speedways of NASCAR these stories enough the history of stock car racing are truly a piece of Americana there were three factors involved in the formation of racing the first was guys coming back from World War two and found out there was another world out there when I came back they wanted to do some of them want to do adventurous things and race was one of those things second there was the the old Ford automobile which was very inexpensive to take one and make a race car out of it and get their buddy in the sign shop put a number on it buy him a football helmet they went races and then all while all that was going on there was people up in the mountains that were building fast cars to transport corn whiskey and sugar whiskey down to the Piedmont in other dry areas they liked the old forts too because they had young boys driving these cars down the mountain mostly teenagers they got involved in a lot of chases and you didn't want to get caught some of them never did get caught the junior Johnson never got caught known as the grandfather of NASCAR jr. Johnson is arguably the most important and influential person in the history of stock car racing as Wilkes County folks would say he's a legend around here the drivers now today don't know how they got toward the air basically and we were through the good part of racing we had a great time a race and it was adventure the good part erasing now it's a profession type atmosphere that you don't have fun with it it's a 24-hour job it's you do all the time tell these other things it's brought the sport to the level it is now been taken away all that stepping went on back in the old day today racing has evolved from a strictly southern sport into a national American pastime with multi-million dollar sponsors playing for high stakes these sponsors demand winning teams that produce brand recognition in exchange for their millions with nearly a third of Americans considered diehard racing fans it's a good gamble with their money if they back a winning team with a well behaved driver most of the early racers today wouldn't even be able to get a job on the teams even though they were great race drivers they could not have represented the sponsor in a meaningful way now Junior on the other hand he adapted to all this juniors a brilliant guy juniors brilliance in the automobile began well before he started racing at age 17 by then had already been hauling whiskey for years one day in 1949 juniors brother said he should take his whiskey hauling car down to the local Speedway in North Wilkesboro Junior went and ran his first race coming in second sure beats plow in the field was its only comment about racing so well in Wilkes County and lived on a farm leave dad ran for our lives could first remember the bootlegging moonshine and stuff was very large and therefore I live there and my dad was involved in it he was one of the kingpins you might say of the bootleg business his dad's involvement in whiskey making really meant that he made more moonshine than anyone else this resulted in the Johnson family raid where ATF officers busted up the largest moonshine operation in American history and it was a 20,000 gallons their largest real heir been seen the Johnson family never did anything halfway you know you look at it the people that were in that industry even if it was illegal buy back in the 40s and 50s they hadn't been in there their ancestors has been in a long time to them it really wasn't a bad thing they were servicing the need as long as North Carolina and many of its neighboring states had dry counties there was a tremendous need for their product there just a way of life actually had nothing that'll be ashamed of that's just the way they had them bacon is not robbing somebody it's just okay I'm not gonna live it it was ABC an island I'm sure it's apartments new you're just trying to make a living up there is it was a lot easier to haul that corn down the mountain in liquid form than it was in baskets what [Laughter] [Music] moonshine activities were concentrated in the Blue Ridge Mountain areas of Tennessee Georgia and North Carolina a particularly well-established region for whiskey Megan was Wilkes County North Carolina where life wasn't very easy on the people in that area Bob Martin and Dave Graham remember the good old days of chasing whiskey runners standing in a field in Davie County where one of the most memorable raids occurred they reminisce about the good times and the dangerous times when Martin was almost killed the a five-shot Christian I fired two shots he ran around the house and into the wood you were laying there in the driveway Wilkes County however was not known for violence it was known for plain old good whiskey and lots of it County was a moonshine capital of the world we had more agents federal agents stationed in Wilkes and they had west of the Mississippi River you know it was sort of a way of life in Wilkes County and frankly the the chicken business in its early stages was the first alternative that a lot of farmers had to grow in corn and making making corn whiskey so if you were in the chicken business you had to know a little something about the background of the farmers that were in it and the people had been in it and a lot of them had some connections there and jr. was one of them their forefathers had made liquor legally least a little small legal stills up here and they did how to make it so heck they were started making liquor and they made up liquor and it's time went along you know being around it your father being in it and stuff it wouldn't long as I growed up got older I was you know involved it in one way or the other hippie to him or doing whatever he told me to go to and stuff that involved the whiskey business and times was hard nobody had money and I was in it's a deep a fort was all over with you know it was my whole life moonshining was usually a family business and a way of life that was handed down from generation to generation marriages were often mergers of moonshining know-how and tradition and some of the mergers would actually be quite profitable during its heyday five to ten million gallons of liquor was produced each year in Wilkes County alone but the whiskey business had its dangers too had often led to fatal accidents and long prison sentences tragically leaving families without any source of income at all back in the late middle fifties they finally saw the light and started organizing and what they did they had one group all they did was put them on here and there's a lot of money because you see it was ten dollars and a half of proof gallon of federal tax and you had your state tax so it was a lot of money to be made and that group put the money up who would even go to the steal and then you had a group would go down and set to the story up they were paid to do that then you had a group that would come in there and what they did was operate the still and they paid them by the gallon by the hour and so forth and then you had a group all they did was hauled away the wholesale horse and that's where jr. net crowd came in there that's where they learned to drive and then they would haul and they'd unit like you say when they would get a chase on Hansy look a wide open you know I was in manufacturing of the moonshine I had several people working for me as hauling of the moonshine I've seen every aspect to us to be involved in it to make money that was what I was into I know plenty of shortcuts I'm just not feeling junior I've heard that ATF has been out here roaming these areas and just don't feel comfortable doing it I've done this run during the day and I've done it at night over a dozen times you know lawman been born it's going to catch me I'm told a lot of people they have to try got out I got into the automobile racing that I had more people working for me in the moonshine business and I didn't and my stock car stuff I really you had to have a skill and don't and it was it was hard work I mean it wasn't easy work you had to carry a hundred pound bags of sugar up and down those mountains and carry a five gallon wouldn't jacket the cans of whiskey out I mean that wasn't easy and you had to do it under a lot of it under cover of darkness because you know you can't come out wide open be violating the law making moonshine was hard work but transporting it was exciting and dangerous Junior it was fun most others it would be nerve-wracking to say the least the pollen part of it was to me the most exciting part and the most intriguing part of it making it it was a pretty standard thing if you made it you took the chain to get coal they break those little cars down loaded with liquor during shift change and if people if you'd pick one out and chase it first thing I do we hit a dirt road and filed on a dust and they'd bail out you'd have a carload of liquor that's all shut down faster car that's a big good drug a smart person and how to figure all the officers of different kinds like a BCI with the truck sure you stuff that you'd look for roadblocks bridges blah huge tires down a stageful used to a sheriff are they with or belt across the road with spikes in your bust all full of dyers he never let you guard down because you could bet they were something in store for you every time he left our dock he think of a night that we didn't have a recent one hands down certainly don't say we called him all the time it certainly didn't but every night we went out I mean you'd have a race on your hands and if you got behind jr. you'd know it I mean cause he it was nothing if you didn't get chased [Music] to be able to manipulate that kind of odd was very intriguing to personalize myself because you know the challenge the excitement part of being able to if I got in touch his choice was like yet to be able to take care of it now run them and get away from it's also cool I know a lot of those car folks over in NASCAR tremendous progress but jr. I mean even he had more nerve than anybody's ever seen I mean he just knew one way and that was wild Jr was such a tremendous hard charger that he he was either gonna run up front or he was gonna blow up and he did his fair share boat I never got caught it at all in the hall inside I understood the serious get caught [Music] illegal whiskey manufacturers and haulers were called moonshiners the men who chased them were called revenuers because the whiskey was non tax paid whiskey which of course is why it was illegal today the moonshiners and the revenuers both admit it was an exciting but dangerous game of cat and mouse the the revenue agents and the the the bootleggers had a code amongst themselves yakety Agnon and there was a code to a certain extent but they threw that away most of the time I mean it was a mean mean bunch of guys trying to make a living selling moonshine and the people chasing them or trying to put them out of business obviously we were doing our job and they were violating the federal law and all that all the violations there were felonies under federal law we had a job doing they had a job doing we respect 2/3 of it if a bootlegger got called he accepted the fact he is caught and that was it the the farmers in Wilkes County were at a tremendous disadvantage they we have fairly poor soil around here and and not many very large farms and making illicit whiskey was just a way of life for a lot of farmers it was the way they could grow a few acres of corn and and make some corn squeezings out of it and and make a living and feed their families they didn't shoot at us and we didn't shoot at them but they knew us all up then Wilkes I mean it come call us by name we do them and sometimes it even follow us around I was on top of my game and tried to hit I'm like the Highway Patrol own the sheriff's and stuff and they started getting shorter walkie talkie radios and stuff Lee I listened to everything they had to say all the time I never did have her in trouble with anybody I'm Gulf County my dad never did and it was Union his crowd never had a problem except trouble trying to catch him obviously we had a good time it was probably a game to me but not just me there's a lot of other people in Wilkes County in heaven too so it was kind of a contest who had to face this always it took more than driving skills in a fast car to beat the law every time junior employed innovation and his moonshining career to his tactics included things like putting a siren and light on his whiskey car to fool the revenuers into thinking it was a local lawman or he would drop oil on his hot exhaust pipe creating an instant smoke screen cutting off his lights he would disappear into the night forever they would put two spotlights mounted on the back bumper well you jump them at night and you first thing you come to occur and all of a sudden you get a blinding light hits your knives and you ought all you could do to get your car stopped not worrying about him and so and then it get away obviously we didn't think that was quite kosher so we started using what they call a wall thick canvas and had spikes in it then when that liquor car hit the Wampus you know it was punchy and pull the tire just about off from around and then we're gonna faint apprehend them and so they they sent word to us that if we have a quit using the Wampus as they would quit using the light the spotlights and so we kind of had a code of the hills and we agreed and didn't want to use it anymore the biggest the most evasive tactic was simply to outrun them and get on a dirt road and cloud the road with dust so they couldn't see it and also made it very dangerous for the following car a lot of those guys knew those wrote so well that sometimes they just turned all the lights out and they became uh a ghost I used to have a little old policeman set up here boss and he weighed about 400 pounds and he just sit there and sleep all time and he waits that's old [ __ ] let it be said that it's all flopped over on one side for he said no sternly if when we go on load down and hear someone else and go back through that he'd be sitting there sleep we pull up side on the jump get up and get over sterling crank that thing up turn it's blue light up and here you come around out see there about 40 50 mile-an-hour Lucky's gonna catch [Music] this is a 39 Ford coupe it's got a black grille in it and this was the favored car of the moonshiners because it was so plain looking just like in racing the whiskey runners had to know their cars and state current and technology and innovation the bootlegger was the car owner driver engineer and pit crew they had to do it all to survive it was almost a must that you had know how to work on the car know what to do to keep innovating stuff into you you moonshine cars to have better cars and and the Highway Patrol or the ABC also shows up like in they don't bounce around and jump around like so it's rare to see one up in the condition is called a [Music] you probably take this thing that today put a good seat belt in it you'd be surprised how fast it run around this racetrack all right if I desired I Derek to see so we costs me upgrading our colors to get more speed out of them get more drivability out I'm better tired better wheels better sway bars my axles they ever think you know I kept the inside you know just like it was other than the you know I put some leather seats in it but steering wheel and speedometer it's all pretty much like it was you like some of their mechanics became very adept at getting the most out of these cars possible there's the link right there between the racer to boot later I think that's a groundwork was laid for the stock cars we've been smart enough to know if this piston is this I said it makes certain horsepower these'll make twice as much oil you know and we we had ventured into that blind folk but it was the right correct just knew how to like like a cargo come happy is with paps going everywhere right over the dyno to see which one I gave a little horsepower which way the cops no money it was another big leg and that is the fact that the people that drove these bootleg cars they weren't old men there were kids they were teenagers mostly number one they had little fear number two they were available cheap and number three they did not have a criminal record we wind up really making race cars in reality out of our bootlegging cars they got caught it was a federal offense and they kind of confiscated the car if they didn't the revenue agents didn't use it themselves then they sold it at auction and finally I was about sixteen and a half and and making my own money and I bought one of them a good bootlegging car was sitting somewhere to a house or a barn or some loading up in the revenuers come in and caught it then they had the same thing you did so you had left he then with who's the best driver they had something drive for I mean I know it wasn't the money they get today but back then it was their liberty and that's why they would learn to drive and they started driving young ages and they could learn to drive because they didn't want to get caught junior was one of a whole lot of them he was he just just became extremely prominent by being one of the the best ones to go over a race and there were a lot of drivers back in the 40s and 50s that drove stock cars that would not admit they were there with bootleggers and so you could never come out and say he was junior never worried about that I think he knew he was king of the hill I think he knew he was the best driver up there and if he was the best driver in Wolfe County and obviously he's the best driver in the state and I think he had that little cocky added no I don't way my father would have been - because he he built up a reputation like I said and that's what the first of all eyes would do I mean it always challenged him he was the he was the the guideline if you if you throughout run junior then you were you were good I never got caught it at all and in the hall inside on and I done went through the whole my whole career of the bootlegging business and I was into the racing business and I'd signed a contract to drive cars and not do anything else but drive a car but the Johnson family business would finally catch up with jr. his prominent position of racing was about to come to a screeching halt [Music] [Music] after winning yet another race jr. went home and suddenly found himself in the wrong place at the wrong time he may have never been caught hauling liquor but he was about to get caught with his shovel in hand I had won a race in Oxford Pennsylvania on a Saturday night and I come in and but that morning is almost daylight when I got home they my dad my brother had to steal back over the hood to the side of the house and both of them in County or slept and my dad he asked me to go far as still up for him cause if he didn't fire it and get the smoke away for daylight serve I'd see the smoke they said well mr. Johnson got steel over in the holler I didn't think anything about doing what my dad said of his today I'd still go do what he asked me to do when I went into the steel they was nobody but neither and I was far in the steel if not got the fire going real good and I heard my brother and one of my uncle's coming up through the woods down there I said you know how far the burner one more time then I'm going to the house they can take it from here when I reached over to show some coke up and stick it in the burner I heard something right behind me hey John West I think was one action apprehended and it was four or five he said about I don't ten or twelve agents I believe I forgot what he said but really I think there's about four agents there but then did a pretender yeah I left do his shoulder and it's a guy standing on top of boss just fixing to jump on the back of him on my back you know so steady throwing that coke in this burner I just thought come back on my shoulder like that and hit him in the face with it and all that stuff and he was a well known revenue learn whisper that everybody knew his name was John West and when I hit him in that show he hollered out you know catch jr. Johnson he's hit me in the head of the show well they've had it surrounded they had the thing staked out it's probably 15 officers you know all through the woods I had got away from John down through the woods and I knew who they was opening the gate of the fence down there and I know that's gonna have to get that open if it did now it's gonna run into that fence and I did miss the opening in the fence and I hit him that ball boy fence got tangled up in John and two other guys caught me jr. was off to federal prison in Ohio where he stayed for 11 months and three days well I come out penitents I learned in in prison you had to do what was right or he was in trouble all time and it was a great lesson for me I never fooled who it could be is besides that I I went on and got bigger and bigger in the race and when I got out and I'll say our Merle our life around I just you know went in a different direction there were attempts made within the industry to try to keep this completely quiet they wanted to watch the bootleg thing out and particularly as we got toward the beginning of the super speedway era and this plague Junior Johnson's career to a certain extent in the in his early days in 1947 at Daytona Beach Florida the National Association for stock car auto racing was organized this new Association called NASCAR was organized by race promoters seeking to promote the sport of raising and cleanup it's questionable image a lot was done to try to keep jr. from getting to the top of his profession of racing because he did have a record and a lot of people were trying to improve the image of racing which in those days wasn't very good but jr. couldn't be stopped his constant innovation led him to the discovery of drafting jr. Johnson partha in first place despite the fact he was driving a much slower car he used this drafting technique in 1960 to win the Daytona 500 coming out of the second turn the rear window a number three tore out and the rush affair lifted the rear wheels off the tracks Jones was driving on ice at a hundred and fifty two miles an hour [Music] jr. Johnson grabs first place [Music] eight days before race day jr. was asked by Ray Fox to run in the 1960 Daytona 500 juniors 59 Chevy was much slower than the 1960 plenty as he was about to compete against lose it a toll on those driving a car for the dog track which is right outside the race driver ray Fox was working on a car and it was a 59 she lay well in 59 Pontiac was in racing he's building a high powered motors and stuff like that and they built it just to race and we had a stock car that's what we have stock and it had a full non-cuban inch motor in it and 409 cubic inch motors was made for trucks it was made for a race car and I something like thirty my line 37 my plate was slower than the guys said on the pump ray kept telling me I'll get it better I'll get it better we you know mortar keeper and I was a jack man had a big old fat boy and I came across with the other jack pretty strong and we sort of got ahead of the curve on Jack's although we took the jacket took the best thing there 13 strokes to get the jack up there get it off the ground but then I was a big fat boy we put it down to where it took three strokes a gate on so I hit it three times as big up and go to the front tires push it in and Jack Jack the car out and go around the other side and work on the front turn over there and the whole time that when the car would hit the pits Ray's thoughts would be before you ever got the jack up he'd be slapping on the hood go go go go go that's the most nervous man that's ever been in the pits in the world that's right Fox he'd go all to heck when the car came me that's all the pieces and you may have somebody was a good mechanic I mean didn't he knew that abit applause even though jr. thought about packing it up and heading home ray promised to make the car run faster and Kotlowitz come by and when he come by I just ducked away in my hiding all of a sudden my car started picking up speed and I just run right up against him and stay dirty either dan Plante jr. Johnson wars at home well hanging on him thing is turn about Sydney five hundred eighty thousand rpms and that's a that was honored avi the pit could realized what junior was doing Cory knew damn well that the car would not run that fast by yourself on the racetrack though we got in the race your get int with somebody else another FAQ are comparable to his or a little faster in his he'd get right under him and go with him and then he would slingshot around him when he got ready to win the race but nobody knew at the time was that jr. had discovered the aerodynamic draft from the car in front of him totally mastered AI think I can I can run on that boss he said how you gonna do that I didn't want to tell him it you know I found a a hanging on to them and drafting them if nobody else finds out nothing about it I've got an advantage finally I'm the 170th lap of the race Bobby John's past jr. for the lead for the next 20 laps jr. drafted hanging onto Bobby John's faster Pontiac when jr. witnessed one of the strangest things ever to happen on a racetrack no he's you feel and he recovered he's back in the race coming out of the second turn the rear window on number three tore out and the rush of air lifted the rear wheels off the track Jones was driving on ice at a hundred and fifty two miles an hour jr. Johnson grabs first place Bobby John's after his amazing recovery is still second well my car suck it off his back class and and the wind going inside the car - it took this back twice I want objectives back alas out Hickey this his whole car come up off the ground it spun around went down the infield I went off and I wanted to race that everybody then by the time the race is about over what I had done all day long was just drafted people you know and that's how I got to where I said amazingly jr. took the checkered flag 23 seconds in front of John's the victory at the Daytona 500 was jr. Johnson's biggest win ever don't mean Daytona Beach being at my slower than anybody else's just absolutely a love top deal and you know like a dream come true [Music] [Music] he wanted to race cars we want somebody that we could sponsor our sell our chickens in his name would sell chickens he was a chicken grower a car racer and he became a well known name and strictly through the southeast month necessary New York City or California but then southeast and we thought it would be a good spokesperson although he didn't talk a lot about it but he would be a good good name to hang our hat on and we did and I think probably the first year we spent very little money because all the work was done the Corps sent up her own garages that worked on trucks most of time and on a couple of days a week and work on the race car and we had some good times now Junior in 1964 in one of the milestone deals in the growth of this sport when Tom Wolfe came down and did a profile on him that tabbed him the last American Hero and later put him in his tangerine kool-aid acid whip book that he that he wrote and junior was the predominant chapter in that so he got a lot of national exposure and he wanted to go out on top and he decided that he could be a car owner and he knew enough about cars and I think he thinks there's more money she's pretty tight with the dollar he felt like as a heck of a lot more money to be made as a car owner that he could as a driver and they probably think I'm sure they are chalo when he became one of the national champion told the lady that had to check in the checks came to said I'm going all the Maestri champion bunny you said oh no he said I'm the driver yes a year said completely just like we'd always said you'd it wasn't driving a bicycle you driving my car and I will sway just like we always say and that's what he said I think jr. felt like he could be more profitable that's less danger to himself as a car owner then it was anyone to go out as jr. Johnson not go out as jr. Johnson has being run on the tail end and because he was not off he was not a follower he was a leader and he was a leader when he went out so he's he's have been a leader all the way most major manufacturers had pulled their sponsorship money out of racing by the end of the 60s until in 1970 cigarette companies could no longer advertise on TV or radio of course jr. recognized this as an opportunity to bring money to racing and the financially strapped NASCAR jr. said hey I'll get gold that I'll get Weston to sponsor a car camel to sponsor one and Salem to sponsor one they said we don't want to sponsor cars but we might be interested in sponsoring a circuit and the next thing you know the NASCAR people got involved in it and it became the Winston Cup circuit and that was in 72 I believe and the rest is sort of history it proved to be one of the best sports marketing ventures that corporate America has ever been involved with Winston Cup racing would remain a NASCAR tradition for the next 32 years [Music] Jr had been nominated for the Sports Hall of Fame every year since 1971 however his felony conviction for moonshining had always kept him from being inducted finally his wish came true in 1982 President Ronald Reagan called jr. up to the White House it was almost like a Cinderella type thing for me when that first happened Reagan gave him a pardon I was a little perturbed but now when you look back on it I wasn't all that bad I think juniors done a lot for the economy not made certainly so I have no problem not kind of glad he did but if you'd asked me back then in the 50s and the 60s or so I said hey crazy do you think about a kid no apart but I think he looked back hold it and you melt a little bit with age and I think that's probably the right thing to do in 1981 jr. Johnson had filed the request for his presidential pardon I started my pardon process underneath the Jimmy Carter cause I was good friends with Jimmy Carter I knew him from a time and he's ran for governor down in Georgia and then went through his whole process of the investigations and stuff like that and it wound up under Ronald Reagan some people contended the junior was nothing more than a common criminal but those who knew him spoke kindly on his behalf he's got a pardon from Ronald Reagan because really do anything wrong hey that's what they do I've never been the mouse I still do some of it you know to be asked to come to our house to receive a pardon from President Reagan personally was a great honor if you would have told me hit up like you are hot I said you all crazy no way but he's really turned into a great elder spokes spokesman for the for the industry today I said you know I said here you are Papa multi-billionaire you've made all your buddy able to start car racing and so forth and I said I'm not envious obvious but I said you know we hear premium laugh they said yeah but you didn't catch a son but despite their chases arrests in jail time Millard junior and the other Wilkes County boys still get along with Bob and the other revenuers that tried to hunt him down we had a good time on me and it was all right and you know long and you get people deal with get along fine there I never thought we would yeah I run in the ball a lot he was pretty aggravate in 1998 jr. Johnson was named by Sports Illustrated as the greatest driver in the history of NASCAR [Music] if you could have told me back in those days that Millard and jr. would be billionaires a day I wouldn't believe there are no hard feelings shared between the moonshiners of Wilkes County and revenuers who tried to stop them there is only mutual respect for the hard work and innovation they each put forth when there's some bad times had some sad things happen someway somehow survived didn't and it's when I look back on it you know you say well I wish I dad always said done did I wouldn't take anything for adventures I had in love in the moonshine I don't have any regrets of anything that's happened to me my life I'm a bore a very very honest person and I think I'm a good person I've done a lot of things for a lot of people I've been blessed they come down to here say journey because you know we can't get this car to run to her mother run 199 points up in 198 or 1:9 not all but we can't get to run 200 what can we do to it sure you look David said you better go and work on the clock seize them so the cars not going if I just work on the clock a little bit and they come back a few laps there's right through miles an hour but that's just one of those things that usually got cut through the crap got right to the me the business come on I want you to get in and I want to let you feel bring back some memories for you I kept inside you know just like it was other than the you know I put some loving seats in it but steering wheel speedometer all pretty much [ __ ] work yeah well if it failed white 39 standard used to feel comes in the spring you know the balance of the carts basically what I am used to driving back Fagin Jr's opportunity to get out of racing came in 1995 when he sold his racing team for the third and final time today jr. and his family live atop a hill in Yadkin County facing old u.s. 421 a road Junior knows well this is one of the whiskey roads where jr. started his liquor hauling career that helped make him the legend he is he now spends his time working on his 300 acre cattle farm with his wife Lisa and their two young children Meredith and Robert there isn't a race car in sight I don't see him in race I think it's too hard a thing for a young person I want him to have a good education finish college and manages money well cause normally himself two things that'll never stop running down the mountainside race cars and whiskey but no one has ever combined the two as successfully as jr. Johnson
Info
Channel: HODIUSDUDE
Views: 85,738
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: NASCAR, Humpy Wheeler, ATF, Moonshine Running, Frank Rhodes, Whiskey Runners, Moonshine Whiskey, Bob Martin
Id: iSDuwvu8slY
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 45min 5sec (2705 seconds)
Published: Wed Apr 17 2019
Related Videos
Note
Please note that this website is currently a work in progress! Lots of interesting data and statistics to come.