"I
wanted to devise a wholesome, constructive activity that would
foster a closer father-son relationship and promote craftsmanship
and good sportsmanship through competition."
Don
Murphy,
Founder of the Pinewood Derby in 1953
Manhattan Beach, CA Cub Scout Pack 280C
The
Birth of the Pinewood Derby Car Race
Don Murphy’s idea for the Pinewood Derby began in the Management Club
at North American Aviation, where he worked. Mr. Murphy wanted to create a
Cub Scout activity he could do with his son. The idea of racing miniature cars
came to him while thinking of his company sponsored Soap Box Derby races.
"I'd
made models of airplanes, cars, boats, and any number of other
structures and remembered the pleasure I got out of doing it," he
said. "I also wanted to devise a wholesome, constructive activity
that would foster a closer father-son relationship and promote
craftsmanship and good sportsmanship through competition."
He
asked the Management Club at his company, North American Aviation,
to sponsor a miniature racing event for his Cub Scout pack that
he had named a "pinewood derby." The club agreed to pay
for the wood and other materials.
Murphy
designed a miniature car that could be carved out of soft pinewood
and wrote the rules. "Pack 280C had seven dens and den mothers," remembers
Murphy, "and totaled 55 Cub Scouts at the time. Originally
the block of wood we included in the kit was carved down in the
forward third to a kind of cockpit. We put the wood, wheels, and
nails into a brown paper sack with an assigned number. Some Cub
Scout fathers built a 31-foot race ramp with two lanes and a battery-run
finish line made from doorbells. Light bulbs would identify the
winner."
Catching
on like wildfire, the derby was an instant success and for a time
was copied, with the Management Club's permission, by the Los Angeles
County Department of Recreation. Then word reached the national
director of Cub Scouting Service, O. W. (Bud) Bennett, who wrote
Murphy:
"We
believe you have an excellent idea, and we are most anxious to
make your material available to the Cub Scouts of America."
Within
the year the pinewood derby was adopted for use in all Cub Scout
packs. In its October 1954 issue, Boys' Life publicized the event
and offered plans for the track and a car, which featured "four
wheels, four nails, and three blocks of wood."
Little
has changed in the derby since 1953. During that time an estimated
43 million sons and fathers (mostly) have participated. And today's
generation of Cub Scouts, moms and dads share the same fun, thrills,
and rewarding moments.
Another event similar to the Pinewood Derby is
the Shape N' Race Derby. This derby is part of the Christian Service
brigade.
(Parts
of this article were reproduced from The Founder and the Finder,
By Barbara M. Wolcott, Scouting Magazine)
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