
1971 Miss Madison (replica)
Reprinted from Skid Fin Magazine, 2003, Volume 1 Number 2.
There are some stories that are almost too good to be true. The story of the
1971 Miss Madison is one of them. Madison, Ind., is a tiny town full of
turn-of-the-century brick buildings with wrought-iron gates and cobblestone
walkways. Flow baskets hang from streetlights and little kids play with their
dogs on the grassy banks of the river. It is a town that feels virtually
unchanged since the 19th century. Madison grew up along side the
mighty Ohio River, and the people of Madison are especially partial to boat
racing. They have been putting on one type of boat race or another since before
World War I.
In
1960 Samuel DuPont gave the town one of his Nitrogen race boats. The city
quickly formed a race team around the boat, renamed her Miss Madison and began
to campaign her across the country. The effort was short lived when the boat
crashed and was destroyed in the 1963 Gold Cup. DuPont sold them a second boat,
and soon that one was called the Miss Madison.

The
Madison team had talent, determination, and love for the sport, but they had no
money. By the early 1970s the second Miss Madison was almost obsolete, but she
was still loved by the town’s 13,000 residents. In 1971, with the economy
flagging, the city fathers decided to try to boost tourism by hosting unlimited
racing’s most prestigious race, the Gold Cup.
Ten
teams qualified for the race, with the high-roller teams like Budweiser, Pay ‘N
Pak, Atlas Van Lines and Notre Dame all qualifying well over 100 mph. The aging
Miss Madison, operating on a shoestring budget, qualified near the bottom of the
field at only 99 mph.
On
the day of the race the big big-budget teams slugged it out toe-to-toe. Several
boats fell by the wayside due to accidents and mechanical breakdowns. By the end
of the final heat, much to everyone’s surprise, the Miss Madison and driver Jim
McCormick had won the Gold Cup in front of the hometown crowd!

The
story was so compelling that is has been made into a movie that was released in
2005. The star of the movie about the Miss Madison would have to
be the Miss Madison hydroplane, but the real Miss Madison wasn’t in running
condition when the movie came along. The Hydroplane and Raceboat Museum quickly
put together a replica using the Savair’s Mist hull. The “Mist Madison” has been
one of the Museum’s most reliable hulls, running at a number of different sites
across the country to promote the movie.
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