Home » Suspected Moonshine Cave Found Under Grandstand At North Carolina Speedway

Suspected Moonshine Cave Found Under Grandstand At North Carolina Speedway

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The history of racing in America is deeply intertwined with bootlegging. For North Wilkesboro Speedway, though, the connection may be closer still. Recent investigation has revealed what may have been a secret moonshine cave under the track’s concrete grandstands.

“When we began renovating and restoring North Wilkesboro Speedway in 2022, we’d often hear stories of how an old moonshine still was operated here on the property under the grandstands,” said Steve Swift, the senior vice president of operations and development at Speedway Motorsports. Indeed, rumors of the track’s illicit history have circulated for decades, suggesting the speedway once played host to an illicit moonshine distillery. The new find under the grandstands provides significant supporting evidence to that theory, but it’s not 100% confirmed just yet.

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The find occurred when track staff were undergoing cleaning and inspection of the grandstands on the track’s front stretch. Cracks were identified in section N of the stand, with approximately 600 seats subsequently removed as crews inspected the structure. Further investigation revealed an area of approximately 700 square feet under the stands.

“We haven’t found a still [yet], but we’ve found a small cave and an interior wall that would have been the perfect location to not only make illegal liquor, but to hide from the law as well,” said Swift. “We don’t know how people would have gotten in and out, but as we uncover more, there’s no telling what we might find.”

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Fans of North Wilkesboro Speedway need not fear for the track. Speedway Motorsports staff are in the process of evaluating the grandstand for repair works. The clock is ticking ahead of the upcoming NASCAR All-Star Race Week, taking place at the track from May 14 to 19. “Now we have a race before the race,” said Swift. “The area that’s been affected by the sinkhole is a front stretch grandstand area with some of the best views of the track. We’ll have a lot of work to get done before NASCAR All-Star Race Week.”

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We’re yet to get a good look inside the cave revealed under the front stretch grandstand.

North Wilkesboro Speedway first opened in 1947. That’s long after the Prohibition era, but bootlegging wasn’t just limited to that period. Indeed, in the American South, moonshiners continued to operate illicit stills well into the 1940s. Drivers involved in the trade would modify their cars to better outrun the police on bootlegging runs, and competitions between these cars would eventually help spawn the series we know today as NASCAR. Thus, it’s easy to see how a vintage speedway track could have played host to  an illicit moonshine operation.

The Autopian has reached out to NWS for comment on whether any historical investigation is ongoing. It could be quite revealing to see what historical artifacts a dig on site could turn up.

Secret

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Today, the worlds of motorsport and alcohol are strictly split for good reason. In the past, though, it was an entirely different matter. The history of American motorsport has rich and storied roots, and it’s always interesting to learn more about the secrets lurking beneath the speedways of the American South.

Image credits: North Wilkesboro Speedway

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Lew Schiller
Lew Schiller
7 months ago

On the off chance you haven’t seen Thunder Road
https://youtu.be/uvGUIlzAYmg?si=PUTo1dEV3ETCRQAl

Sklooner
Sklooner
7 months ago

Quick get Geraldo Rivera for a TV special

Scott Wangler
Scott Wangler
7 months ago

A picture of inside the cave instead of just the entrance woulda been super cool

ProfessorOfUselessFacts
ProfessorOfUselessFacts
7 months ago

My wife’s grandmother still keeps some on hand as cough medicine. When we lived in Johnson City, TN, my dad worked on the national forest and would find stills tucked away all the time. I guess that is why there were mason jars in the garage, lol. Like many others have said, the tradition lives on in the entire Appalachia region.

Turbotictac
Turbotictac
7 months ago

There is an ancient barn in the woods near my parents house that had to have been for moonshine. There isn’t a still but there are several dozen 5 gallon glass jugs and an old flathead V8 sitting on the ground.

WR250R
WR250R
7 months ago

‘Secret tunnelllll, secret tunnellllll’

Segador
Segador
7 months ago
Reply to  WR250R

Oh, it’s a real legend

D M
D M
7 months ago
Reply to  WR250R

Through the Mountainnnn!

Hiram McDaniel
Hiram McDaniel
7 months ago

SW Virginia and the adjacent parts of NC, TN, and KY were active with bootleggers well past the prohibition era. I grew up there, and while my dad was not a bootlegger, he was a welder, and he was the go-to guy for when a still or some other part of the operation needed welding.

Dad worked in a factory until 5pm, came home, had dinner, and then went out to the big garage/workshop on the backside of our property. Most nights at least one or two farmers brought a tractor part or plow in for repair. As dusk fell, some other more eclectic visitors might come by for a needed repair.

I remember distinctly one guy who would bring his still in for repair. It was cleverly hidden in the back of a retired school bus. The bus had about half of the rows of seats removed, and was still roadworthy, so he could actually drive the whole assembly in for repair, and then take it back to where he had it hidden way back in the woods.

@TOSSABL mentioned Franklin County VA a few posts earlier. I grew up in Henry County, immediately to the south. Big moonshine country.

TOSSABL
TOSSABL
7 months ago
Reply to  Hiram McDaniel

I swear that for most of the people I met who were involved in the 90s, it was more about giving a raspberry to the authorities than profit motive. And pride and ingenuity: I never would have thought of a freakin’ mobile still. Love that.

Ted Fort
Ted Fort
7 months ago
Reply to  TOSSABL

Ain’t it funny how in the last couple of decades, the “outlaw country” crowd have become to most notorious bootlickers around?

SNL-LOL Jr
SNL-LOL Jr
7 months ago
Reply to  Hiram McDaniel

TIL where Breaking Bad got their RV meth lab idea from.

Protodite
Protodite
7 months ago

North Wilkesboro sounds like a weird SEO scam version of Wilkes-Barre

Last edited 7 months ago by Protodite
Ncbrit
Ncbrit
7 months ago

 Indeed, in the American South, moonshiners continued to operate illicit stills well into the 1940s”

Errrm. I live not far from Wilkesboro. The practice has not ended.

Pupmeow
Pupmeow
7 months ago
Reply to  Ncbrit

Right? Did they mean the 2040s? Like it might stop in 20 years?
Because that would also be incorrect.

Palmetto Ranger
Palmetto Ranger
7 months ago
Reply to  Ncbrit

My dad was transferred to North Wilkesboro for work back in the 1980s. He likes to tell a story about how one day in the office he mentioned that he had never tried moonshine. The next day, a crate of mason jars appeared on his desk.

Red865
Red865
7 months ago
Reply to  Ncbrit

Still available in East TN if you know the right people. No, not talking about the legal tourist Moonshine Distilleries (?) in Pigeon Forge.

Turbotictac
Turbotictac
7 months ago
Reply to  Ncbrit

Also not far away and I am sure if I think really hard I could come up with one or two families that don’t know offhand where to get shine. Hell, most of them know the “brand” names of multiple homegrowns.

AlterId
AlterId
7 months ago
Reply to  Turbotictac

I am a couple hundred miles east of the heart of the shine belt, and I’ve seen it and probably could get some here if I asked around some.

BunkyTheMelon
BunkyTheMelon
7 months ago

I guess “hole where backfill settled” just doesn’t sound as cool as “Hidden Super Secret Moonshiners Cave Found!”

Evan M
Evan M
7 months ago
Reply to  BunkyTheMelon

lol yeah that certainly looks like settled backfill or erosion, but hey a good story is a good story I guess

Michael Beranek
Michael Beranek
7 months ago

Indeed, in the American South, moonshiners continued to operate illicit stills well into the 1940s”
You forgot about-
Just a good old boys
Never meanin’ no harm
Beats all you never saw
Been in trouble with the law since the day they was born

Chronometric
Chronometric
7 months ago

Atlanta Motorsports Park is in Dawsonville, Georgia, prime moonshine country. During construction of the track, the workers were bridging a creek on the property and found a very old still on the waters edge. A hand drawn plaque quoted Psalm 23, “He leads me beside still waters”.

TOSSABL
TOSSABL
7 months ago

I was gifted some moonshine out of Franklin County Va in the late 90s. I had stopped drinking by then, so it ended up in my dip bucket for carburetor cleaning. Was awesome for that—but I definitely only could use it in a well-ventilated area.

(I did try to give it to a friend first: he’s the one who suggested parts-cleaning with it)

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
7 months ago

A still needs a chimney. Where would that have gone?

(unless its heated electrically)

Last edited 7 months ago by Cheap Bastard
Greensoul
Greensoul
7 months ago

wow, when my grandpa took me there he told me we were doing maintenance on the plumbing for grandmas hooty tooty fancy people warshing machine plumbing. Wow, grandpa duped me into doing illegal crap. God rest his soul.

Jonathan Hendry
Jonathan Hendry
7 months ago

Empty space under a grandstand?

Must be a moonshiner’s cave. Not a standard feature because filling it with concrete would be kind of pointless.

CSRoad
CSRoad
7 months ago

A good story, a fine myth that gets busted by lack of access.
I think about concrete formwork removal, backfilling, poor compaction and fill migration due to adjacent soil instability exposing a void and a foundation wall.
Probably nothing to see here unless you are a structural engineer.

Not Sure
Not Sure
7 months ago
Reply to  CSRoad

That was my first thought.
It’s just a cavernous byproduct of a shoddily constructed grandstand.

Richard O
Richard O
7 months ago
Reply to  CSRoad

And water. That concrete is not i good condtion.

SNL-LOL Jr
SNL-LOL Jr
7 months ago
Reply to  CSRoad

+1
–NYS Licensed PE

Crank Shaft
Crank Shaft
7 months ago
Reply to  CSRoad

I can’t help but think that if the soil were that unstable and poorly filled that the stands would have failed long ago. This does seem more intentional to my eye. That’s a pretty big void.

Note, I am not a structural engineer, but my stepfather was, so I’m not entirely unfamiliar with the concepts.

Crank Shaft
Crank Shaft
7 months ago

I love America so fucking much! Seriously.

Not Sure
Not Sure
7 months ago

What, the empty space under bleachers being used for illegal or immoral activities?
Who’d a thunk…

(walks away whistling suspiciously)

El Jefe de Barbacoa
El Jefe de Barbacoa
7 months ago
Reply to  Not Sure

Don’t walk away, we’re not done yet!

BloggyMcBlogBlog
BloggyMcBlogBlog
7 months ago

So that’s where I left my booze!

A. Barth
A. Barth
7 months ago

Today, the worlds of motorsport and alcohol are strictly split for good reason.

Yep. Nobody drinks at a race.

Jack Trade
Jack Trade
7 months ago
Reply to  A. Barth

Not to mention Kevin Harvick’s Busch Light car. The cameras would sometimes even catch him drinking one on the grid immediately after a race.

Manwich Sandwich
Manwich Sandwich
7 months ago
Reply to  A. Barth

Of course people drink! They drink milk, right? RIGHT???

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
7 months ago

“They drink milk, right? RIGHT???”

Like clockwork.

https://fanfan.es/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/R-3.jpg

Joe The Drummer
Joe The Drummer
7 months ago
Reply to  A. Barth

Well… there’s booze *at* NASCAR, just not booze *in* NASCAR. Which is honestly a shame. There should be an additional grading component based on carrying a couple of boxes of mason jars full of water in the back of the car, and having points deducted at the end of the race for however many are broken.

NASCAR is now virtually free of its hillbilly DGAF roots, and that’s why it has sucked so bad for the last 20 years.

Pupmeow
Pupmeow
7 months ago

NASCAR might be free of its hillbilly roots, but the crowds are most certainly NOT

Cool Dave
Cool Dave
7 months ago

Well now they need to clean it up, preserve it and put a bar in it. Hell, make it a box and sell it as the ‘moonshine suite’!

Not Sure
Not Sure
7 months ago
Reply to  Cool Dave

A speedway speakeasy?
“The Speed-Easy.”

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
7 months ago
Reply to  Cool Dave

The Underground Ale Road?

Morgan van Humbeck
Morgan van Humbeck
7 months ago
Reply to  Canopysaurus

Ba dum tch

Not Sure
Not Sure
7 months ago
Reply to  Canopysaurus

Brilliant, I’d make a pit stop there.

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
7 months ago
Reply to  Cool Dave

Whisky A Go Go?

Not Sure
Not Sure
7 months ago
Reply to  Cool Dave

The Slip Angle Saloon?

Last edited 7 months ago by Not Sure
Joe The Drummer
Joe The Drummer
7 months ago
Reply to  Not Sure

Or serve beer and call it The Draft House?

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
7 months ago

“ For North Wilkesboro Speedway, though, the connection may be closer still.”

Hahaha! Nice double entendre.

Wayne Rudiger
Wayne Rudiger
7 months ago

I knew two moonshiners when I lived in NE Tennessee in the 70’s. Wouldn’t surprise me at all if the profession is still alive and well in that area and across the border in Kentucky.

S13 Sedan
S13 Sedan
7 months ago
Reply to  Wayne Rudiger

It’s definitely still a thing in some areas. I was in college in the early-mid 2010s and a friend of a friend lived in Virginia. One weekend he came back after a visit home with a jar of real deal, distilled in the middle of the woods moonshine. That stuff tasted more like rocket fuel than something a person should be drinking.

Jack Trade
Jack Trade
7 months ago
Reply to  S13 Sedan

I had some in the early 2000s, and while it was serious (e.g. safe) stuff, it was like paint thinner.

Booze is one of those things, like motor oil or light bulbs, where I definitely want something non artisanal.

SNL-LOL Jr
SNL-LOL Jr
7 months ago
Reply to  Jack Trade

Ugh my pet peeve is all the restaurants touting their this and that is “homemade.”

I’m not David Tracy. I don’t want to eat something made in someone’s bathtub.

Cayde-6
Cayde-6
7 months ago
Reply to  S13 Sedan

There’s a good chance you got the heads, not the hearts

Wayne Rudiger
Wayne Rudiger
7 months ago
Reply to  S13 Sedan

Some of the stuff I tried was definitely of the rocket fuel variety, some of it was remarkably smooth. I mean, generations of the same family working the craft they developed some real skill. Still kicked like a Tennessee mule.

Joe The Drummer
Joe The Drummer
7 months ago
Reply to  S13 Sedan

The one and only time I’ve ever had authentic white lightning was courtesy of a friend of mine who got some from his brother. And where did his brother get it? He was a helicopter pilot, and a yearly participant in what the state of Alabama calls “The Green/Gray Sweep,” an annual joint task force between the Alabama Department of Public Safety and the Alabama National Guard, where helicopters are used to spot illegal stills and marijuana grows from the air, then state troopers come in and clear the site and make arrests.

Not only did it make me sick as a dog and give me one of the worst hangovers I’ve ever had the next day, it also made me grumpily wonder how much weed and ‘shine never made it into evidence each year.

Last edited 7 months ago by Joe The Drummer
Balloondoggle
Balloondoggle
7 months ago

I got to ride on some of those drug interdiction flights in Florida back in the day. Great way to spend an afternoon, if you like riding in a Huey with the doors open.

Cayde-6
Cayde-6
7 months ago
Reply to  Wayne Rudiger

We’ve just gentrified. You have been able buy distilling lids for all-in-one home brewing systems for like a decade now. Of course, they’ll be for “essential oils only!”

Or something

Last edited 7 months ago by Cayde-6
SirRaoulDuke
SirRaoulDuke
7 months ago
Reply to  Wayne Rudiger

I was still buying shine in the 2000’s in West Virginia.

Joe The Drummer
Joe The Drummer
7 months ago
Reply to  Wayne Rudiger

The legendary Junior Johnson once said that more than any of his countless racing accolades, his proudest accomplishment as a driver of anything was “they never caught me a-runnin’.”

Chronometric
Chronometric
7 months ago
Reply to  Wayne Rudiger

A racin’ (note the apostrophe) buddy of mine brings his North Carolina hooch to the track for his friends to share (never before a race!). In classic tradition, we pass around clear Mason jars. His apricot and peach infused 140 proof is remarkably tasty and smooth.

Last edited 7 months ago by Chronometric
Cayde-6
Cayde-6
7 months ago

Stories like this are why I am STILL disappointed that Autopian comments don’t support images, because I could have made a great Avatar/”Secret Tunnel” song joke.

Dogisbadob
Dogisbadob
7 months ago
Reply to  Cayde-6

they don’t support emojis, either, except for very basic ones 🙁

Ranwhenparked
Ranwhenparked
7 months ago

Lasted a decade or two longer than the 1940s, still a lot of dry counties in the South in that period (think its down to like 36 now, number’s been dropping for a long time)

Joe The Drummer
Joe The Drummer
7 months ago
Reply to  Ranwhenparked

Fun fact: “dry” counties often have markedly higher rates of DUI, because of all the people going to the next county over to get loaded, then driving home.

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