Saanich’s Gord Alberg with Billy Foster’s 1965 Indy car Old Bess. The car is on display tomorrow at Western Speedway for the Hall of Fame ceremonies, starting at 2:30 p.m.

Saanich’s Gord Alberg with Billy Foster’s 1965 Indy car Old Bess. The car is on display tomorrow at Western Speedway for the Hall of Fame ceremonies, starting at 2:30 p.m.

Billy Foster’s ‘Old Bess,’ 1965 Indy car, finds a home in Saanich

Racing aficionado Don Alberg to share his prize collectible

To call Gordie Alberg an auto racing fan would be an understatement.

Over the past 50 or so years, the lifetime Sanitize has had stretches where he lived, ate and breathed racing, whether it was driving, building motors or working with other drivers as a team owner.

He has the luxury these days of being a collector, with around 20 classic and customized vehicles in his collection.

His most recent acquisition is without question his most special, he says.

It’s the 1965 Rolla Vollstedt-built Indy car driven for most of that season by Victoria-born Billy Foster, one of Alberg’s racing pals. Foster, who died in 1967 in a practise for a NASCAR race at Riverside, Calif., had a car custom-made for him for the 1966 USAC Champ Car series, but it was Old Bess, as the ’65 model became known, which was unique.

“I haven’t been this excited since I was a kid,” Alberg says. “I’ve been trying to buy this car for 30 years.”

Now restored to the 1965 paint scheme it had when Foster took over driving for Vollstedt midseason, this first North American-built rear-engine Indy car will be on display at Saturday’s Victoria Auto Racing Hall of Fame 2016 induction ceremonies at Western Speedway.

Alberg was there in 1965 when Foster, a professional rookie at the time, made his debut at the Indianapolis 500 and became the first Canadian driver to qualify for the legendary race. He lined up in sixth spot and finished 12th.

In the mid-to-late 1960s, various young drivers had a chance to pilot the car, including future Indy 500 winners Mario Andretti, Gordon Johncock and Tom Sneva. Vollstedt, based out of Portland, Ore., even ran it for a while as a modified car on the Northwest circuit.

Alberg bought the car last summer from Don Shervey, an old sports car racer also based in Oregon. Shervey ran the car at Indianapolis on the 100th anniversary of the Indy 500 in 2011 when he was in his eighties.

“We became really good friends,”Alberg says. “He told me he was doing 185 (miles per hour) down the backstretch at Indy.” Alberg didn’t believe him at the time, but a later check with track officials confirmed the speed.

Alberg plans to take the car to Portland in June for an event with two more legendary

Vollstedt cars, and for a stint at the a World of Speed museum. Following that he will  make sure it still runs well, which includes converting it from methanol fuel.

The ultimate goal is to run it around the Indianapolis track, possibly in 2017.

“That’s going to be one of the highlights of my life.”

This year’s Hall of Fame inductees class features former Western Speedway manager (and now owner of South Sound Speedway in Tenino, Wash.)

Butch Behn,  Gerry Flesh, and Terry and Tracy Cessford. In the pioneer category is Stu Young, Gary Haskell and Derick Stratford.

editor@goldstreamgazette.com

 

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