Jake Query Profile picture
Sep 27, 2020 16 tweets 4 min read Read on X
If you’ve ever driven to the Children’s Museum, you’ve upassed this house 100 times. In its history is the story of a man who once went out the backdoor to avoid the Press- & they weren’t there to ask of the man he’d killed 2 years earlier. Rather, a triumph brought them.Thread👇
On July 17, 1889, in Odon, IN, Dawson was born into a family of engineers. His father worked for the Marmon motor company, the same company for which Joe and his brother would later serve as engineers. Yet it was not designing cars, but racing them, in which Joe Dawson made a
name for himself. The fledgling automobile industry used racing exhibitions to showcase their product, and Marmon found a daring pilot in Dawson. By 1910, he was winning short distance races at mesmerizing speeds. He took the 100 mile Remy Trophy at Indianapolis, and followed up
winning the 200 mile Cobe Cup, and the 100 mile City of Atlanta trophy. Dawson’s success led him to run the prominent Vanderbilt Cup of Long Island in 1910. He was enjoying a comfortable lead when a spectator entered onto the 12.5 mile course, & Dawson, unable to avoid him, hit
the onlooker, catapulting then man into the air. A crowd gathered, and Dawson, who admitted to a damaged psyche, limped his car to pit road. He was told the man was miraculously unharmed, so a relieved Dawson returned to the race, finishing 2nd behind Harry Grant.
By 1911,
with Dawson’s impressive 1910 record garnering positive attention, the Marmon company contemplated ending its racing efforts. But a new, 500 Mile “International Sweepstakes” promising a $25,000 winner pay day was too much to decline. Marmon entered two cars, and selected Dawson,
along with his co-worker Ray Harroun to race them. Dawson, with a riding mechanic, started 27th and finished 5th. Harroun, the only of the 40 entries without a passenger, drove his Marmon “Wasp”, with advent of the 1st rear view mirror, to victory. The race was the 1st Indy 500.
By 1912, Marmon finally elected to retire their racing efforts, and Dawson was “loaned” to the National Car Company to pilot one of their 3 entries for the 2nd “International Sweepstakes.” Ralph De Palma, who the shy Dawson greatly admired, dominated the race in his Mercedes But,
when a piston failed on his 199th lap, DePalma was left to try pushing his car for the final distance. The slow down allowed Dawson, who was avergaging 78 MPH, to eventually pass DePalma to lead the final 2 laps. At 22 years of age, Joe Dawson, born in Odon, Indiana and residing
with his parents in Indianapolis, was an Indianapolis 500 champion. Today, he is still the 2nd youngest winner of the event, his record standing for 40 years before Troy Ruttman tasted milk in 1952.
For Dawson, it was not milk, but a sandwich, the sent him home after his win.
Dawson, hungry and sore from his 6 hour and 21 minute drive to victory, got out of his car to find the majority of reporters flocked to DePalma. So, he went home to that house near today’s Children’s Museum and did what any kid does while living at home- asked his Mom for a
peanut butter sandwich. News had started to spread that the kid on North Illinois Street had won the big race, and eventually newspaper writers came calling. The shy Dawson, his hunger satisfied but his body still sore, eluded their interview requests by slipping out a back door
and walking to Capitol Street. There, he caught a trolley car ride to the downtown YMCA for a steam bath, after which he walked home- presumably up the same path you’ve driven 100 times. He raced only once more at Indianapolis, an accident on lap 45 of the 1914 Indy 500 injured
him to the point of ending his career as a racer. All told, the once short race champion turned 444 laps in 3 Indy 500s, but his 2 career laps led are the fewest of any Indy 500 champion. Dawson eventually moved to Pennsylvania and became a respected race official of the American
Automobile Association. It was in that capacity that he was inspecting the track at Langhorne on June 17, 1946. Feeling ill, Dawson pulled his car to the sode of the road, where he suffered a fatal heart attack. He was month shy of his 57th birthday. Little is left as reminders
of his legacy. But, that house still stands. Where a guy ate a sandwich and slipped out the back door. In a place you’ve passed 100 times.

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More from @jakequery

Aug 25, 2021
There is such a cruel irony about the passing of Robin Miller. Robin always had the perfect thing to say when eulogizing his heroes- often times upon the most unexpected of losses.
Yet, with his passing, there is seemingly no one to do the same for him. Both because his ability
was without peer- but, also, because it’s impossible to summarize what he was. Quite simply- to so many people from so many corners- Robin Miller was their favorite person. He was the most encouraging, loyal, knowledgable and dedicated friend you could ever have.He defined what
it was to be from Indiana. Robin knew basketball icons, racing legends and degenerate gamblers. He was threatened in the locker rooms, slapped on pit road, and was worried by none of it. He brought enemies together to find common ground, never let them pay for lunch, cherished
Read 7 tweets
Aug 24, 2021
Much will be said, rightly so, upon the passing of Jerry Harkness, about his contribution to civil rights within basketball.
He, however, was more than just a major player towards the integration of basketball & the NCAA tourney.
He decided to pursue basketball after a chance
encounter with Jackie Robinson. Robinson encouraged Harkness to pursue hoops. His pre game handshake before facing Mississippi State in the 1963 NCAA tourney was a watershed moment.
It was, perhaps, after his playing career- which led Harkness to a brief stint with the @Pacers
that Jerry left his greatest marks. He was the first African-American sales person with Quaker Oats, before becoming a key philanthropist around Indianapolis. He was the 1st African American sports anchor in Indianapolis history.
In typical fashion of his quiet but graceful way,
Read 5 tweets
Aug 22, 2021
I have a huge favor to ask. It won’t cost you a cent, you won’t have to go anywhere, and it won’t take any longer than it will take to read this. It is for the people you see pictured below. I never met them. But, I’d like to introduce you. Thanks for reading this thread.
Earlier today, I was driving near the Indianapolis Hebrew Congregation Cemetery, and realized it’s the final resting place of a friend. I pulled in. There was one other person in the cemetery- sitting next to a headstone, with a large water jug. I quietly nodded and asked how he
was. Dumb question, I guess- we were in a cemetery. He looked at me, and, in a heavy accent, touched his chest and replied. “I am broken hearted.”
I walked over and we began to chat. Michael Grin. A veteran of the Russian Army, who came to the United States 21 years ago.
Here
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Jul 2, 2021
The 17th feature of #20TriumphsIn20Days is Matt, 22. A native of Wabash, he enjoys time at home with his “pet” pigs Oreo, Sprinkles, Rusty & Fudge. Sure- he understands they’re part of a working farm- but Matt likes that “they’re smart in their own way.”
He can relate. Thread👇
Matt grew up in Wabash like most kids. Social, while introspective, he enjoyed most of his classes and felt the same as everyone else. After school he enjoyed watching nearly every sport- @IUHoosiers @Colts, the @Yankees & @FloridaGators have become his favorites- but when he
came of age to participate, something just didn’t fit. Like the pigs he helped raise, there were things he was good at, but it just didn’t seem to mesh with the work by the rest of the barn. Perhaps his diagnosis of Autism was an explanation, but Matt found more joy in being
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Jul 1, 2021
Today’s #20TriumphsIn20Days features Josh, 21. As a youngster, Josh felt somethin different. His brain “was on overdrive”, & only music seemed to soothe him. “I’m obsessed with music”, he says.
Now he’s moving to a new beat- and it’s in harmony with where h needs to be. Thread👇
The signs were there as early as pre school. The glue bottles. Josh formed a bit of an obsession with them. “I had this habit”, Josh recalls with a sheepish grin. “The dried glue on the bottles. I’d pick it all off. Normal people don’t pick off glue. I felt like the weird kid.”
There were other problems. Josh developed social anxieties. He ran from people. “I feared people would always look at me differently”, Josh tells me. There were numerous tests to find out why he was obsessed with things-like those glue bottles.
Nothing would stick.
Read 9 tweets
Jun 30, 2021
Today, for #20TriumphsIn20Days, features Alec, 23.
Born with Arthrogryposis Multiplex Congenita, a joint degeneration, Alec dreamed of playing in the NBA. He says he didn’t make it, not because of his ailment, but rather, because he’s 5’4”.
He’s finding new heights. Thread: Image
He begins by telling me of his love of basketball. A 2016 North Central grad, Alec is clearly a student of the game. He marvels over the stats of Russell Westbrook, admires the skill set of Kevin Durant- but he likes small market teams. The Thunder. The Pacers. Alec identifies
with them. His favorite Pacer, he tells me- one he dreams of someday meeting- is @MalcolmBrogdon7. “I see a lot of myself in him”, Alec says. “He’s quiet, but he’s an absolute plus. And he proves people wrong. I can’t imagine meeting him.”
It’d be another in a long series of odds
Read 13 tweets

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