Brunots Island Race Track
Race track in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
40°27′47.02″N 80°2′35.99″W / 40.4630611°N 80.0433306°W / 40.4630611; -80.0433306Brunots Island Race Track was a one-mile dirt oval on Brunot Island in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. It hosted races from 1903 to 1914, including a race in 1905 AAA Championship Car season won by Louis Chevrolet. It is now the site of a fossil-fuel power plant.
References
- Galpin, Darren. "Brunots Island Track Info". Retrieved 2009-05-12.
External links
- Brunot Island Race Track
- v
- t
- e
AAA National Championship race venues (1905, 1916, 1920–41, 1946–55)
- Darlington
- Indianapolis
- Milwaukee
- Narragansett Park
- Southland
- Twin City
- Altoona
- Arlington
- Ascot Park
- Bainbridge
- Bay Meadows
- Brunots Island
- Centennial Park
- Charter Oak Park
- Del Mar
- Detroit
- DuQuoin
- Empire City
- Fort Miami
- Glenville
- Good Time Park
- Grosse Pointe
- Hudson River
- Indianapolis
- Kansas City
- Kenilworth Park
- Lakewood
- Langhorne
- Las Vegas Park
- Legion Ascot
- Milwaukee
- Morris Park
- Oakland
- Phoenix
- Randall Park
- Readville
- Recreation Park
- Roby
- Rockingham Park
- Sacramento
- St. Paul
- San Jose
- Springfield
- Syracuse
- Trenton
- Williams Grove
- Akron-Cleveland
- Altoona
- Atlantic City
- Baltimore-Washington
- Beverly Hills
- Charlotte
- Cincinnati
- Cotati
- Culver City
- Des Moines
- Fresno
- Fulford–Miami
- Kansas City
- Omaha
- Pittsburgh-Bridgeville
- Rockingham Park
- San Francisco
- Sheepshead Bay
- Speedway Park
- Tacoma
- Uniontown
Street circuits
- Corona
- Elgin
- Fresno
- Lowell
- Mines Field
- Roosevelt
- Santa Monica
- Allentown
- Altamont
- Batavia
- Bedford
- Bloomsburg
- Charlotte
- Dayton
- DuBois
- Essex Junction
- Flemington
- Great Barrington
- Greensboro
- Hamburg
- Harrington
- Lakewood
- Langhorne
- Port Royal
- Powell
- Raleigh
- Reading
- Richmond
- Rutland
- Selinsgrove
- Shelby
- Skowhegan
- Thompson
- Trenton
- Uniontown
- Washington
- Williams Grove
- Winchester
- Winston-Salem
- Indianapolis (brick oval)
- Pikes Peak (hill climb)