James E. Herbert was born and
raised in McCloud, California, a small community a few miles
east of Interstate 5 on state Hwy 89. The landscape in McCloud
is dominated by 14, 162 foot Mt. Shasta and the town's history
and culture has been heavily influenced by the presence of timber
and lumbering interests. Though a popular destination for sports
enthusiasts looking to ski, hike, and climb, there wasn't a lot
of interest in motor sports in general, or drag racing in particular.
Jim was a standout at McCloud High in both football and baseball,
but his true interest was hot rods and fast cars.
By the late 1950s, Jim was living
in Sacramento and began frequenting the 1/8 mile drag strip at
the old state fairgrounds. His first race car was a 1934 Ford
coupe with a stroked 283 cid Chevy that he ran in B/A class.
From there, he joined forces with life long friend Ted Taylor
to race an injected Olds-powered dragster. Jim had so much fun
driving the slingshot that he knew right then he would always
be a dragster guy; "The Lizard" had found his niche
in drag racing. Despite his growing passion for the sport, Jim
had other concerns that needed to be addressed.
Recently married to his high
school sweetheart and eager to start a family, Jim knew he would
need to continue his education. With that in mind, he enrolled
at California State University Sacramento and would eventually
graduate with a degree in business administration. After a stint
as general manager of several Tognotti Speed Shops, Jim used
this experience and his business savvy to open Jim Herbert's
Performance World in the early 1970s. All the while, he continued
to race, sometimes with a dragster he owned or as a hired gun,
but always a nitro-burning, supercharged, front-engined dragster.
 Herbert's first race car, a '34 altered coupe.
It was 1962 when Jim Herbert
took off the training wheels and jumped into the seat of a top
fuel dragster. He formed a partnership with Dwayne Starr, welded
together a homemade chassis, and hit the local tracks ( Kingdon,
Vaca Valley, and Fremont) with a blown hemi combination. As his
driving skills improved and reputation spread, he, like a lot
of successful drivers, would soon get saddled with a nickname.
First coined by the announcer at Kingdon Drag Strip, "The
Lizard" would become Jim's alter ego for as long as he raced.
And, just how did he inherit such a unique moniker? Well, it
came not only from his slight and sinewy physical countenance,
but also from the uncanny ability to slither through top fuel
fields to emerge top eliminator. The Starr-Cox-Herbert dragster
would go on to have reasonable success, but after about 18 months
of racing, Jim would leave the team when Harley Van Dyke and
George Wulf approached him with an offer to drive their new fuel
dragster.
 Jim Herbert with the Van Dyke-Wulf dragster; Sacramento
Raceway, 1964
This was Jim's first opportunity
to prove himself on a bigger stage. With a more ambitious agenda
in mind, the team took their 336 cid blown Chrysler to Bakersfield
to race Norm Weekly driving the OCMP Spl. for the Drag News Mr.
Eliminator No. 8 spot. After a win for each in the first two
rounds, Herbert laid down a stout 8.55 in the decisive third
round match to win the coveted spot on the Drag News list; a
first for a Sacramento-based fuel dragster. Though the Van Dyke
and Wulf rail would be his customary ride for about two years,
Jim also drove for Masters-Richter and Tognotti's Speed Shop
during this time. By the mid-60s, the Sacramento drag race scene
was coming into its own as more and more top fuel dragsters were
being built. When Sacramento Raceway Park opened in October 1964,
it gave all the drag racers a local venue in which to compete.
Not only was there the Van Dyke-Wulf team, but others like John
Cox (Starr-Cox-Hutchison), Gary Ormsby and the Vagabond, Don
Argee and Tognotti's Speed Shop, and B & N Automotive. This
drag strip also became the place where other Northern California
racers came to challenge the capitol city boys. It was not unusual
to see the likes of John Batto (Sonoma), Roger Harrington (Richmond),
or Brown-Vargas (Redding) in the pits of Sacramento Raceway.
 Sacramento Raceway opened its gates in October 1964;
wouldn't this be a great way to watch a drag race today? Drive
in, park your car, and stand by the fence and watch Jim Herbert
launch a top fuel dragster.
 Harley Van Dyke and George Wulf's B/FD;
Bakersfield 1965 (no more weed burners-zoomies).
Jim
Herbert would drive Harley Van Dyke and Greg Wulf's rail to a
best of 8.17 and 189.46; not too shabby for a 336 cid iron hemi
Chrysler.
Jim's next venture would involve
the team that truly made him a legend in the sport of drag racing.
In retrospect, 1966 turned out to be the greatest year in the
sport of organized drag racing with top fuel dragster car counts
peaking that year. There were literally hundreds of top nitro
dragsters, fueled (no pun intended) by generous, if not lavish,
purses. Every week there was a big race, be it the NHRA Winternationals,
the AHRA Winternationals, the UDRA, the Smoker's race at Bakersfield,
or the Hot Rod Magazine Meet at Riverside; and, that was just
in California. This was also the year that the team of Herbert-Pitts
(Frank)-Bishop (Bill) hit the tracks. It didn't take long for
the trio to start winning events, and over the next couple years
they would win over 30 top eliminators. Never did the phrase,
"he owned the track" ring truer than this team's domination
at Sacramento Raceway from 1966 through 1968. Despite an increasing
number of rivals like Gary Ormsby, Shorty Leventon, John Batto,
Roger Harrington, Don Cook, Jim Davis, and Dwight Bale, none
of those racers came close to duplicating the success of this
threesome from Sacramento.
 Four shots of the original Lizard at Sacramento Raceway
(1966).
 In this case, the "Leaping Lizard ", March
Meet 1967; yes, he actually qualified on this run.
<Jere Alhadeff Photography>
 When H-P-B won the 8th Grand Nationals
at Kingdon in March 1967, they prevailed over a field that included
more than just the local NorCal contingent. The ladder was loaded
with out of state talent such as Tom Hoover and Marvin Schwartz,
plus big stars from SoCal like the Hawaiian and Tommy Ivo.
<Photo by Ted Stewart>
 Kingdon Grand Nationals; over 10,000
fans showed up and The Lizard beat Starvin' Marvin (Schwartz)
in the final.
<Photography by Bill Golding>
 Their success was not limited to just
winning purses; in November 1967 they set the track record at
Fremont with a run of 228.09.

 The news clipping below tells the whole story of
this little adventure; this deal was only possible because Fresno
was 100 ft. wide! The Lizard is the dragster closest to the camera.
 Jim tells all; see inscription on photo.
 This is actually 1967; the only year with the full
body on the car.
<Steve Reyes Speed Photos>
 Don Argee in
the Capitol Woody (near side) against Raynor-Bishop-Herbert;
El Dorado Raceway 11/26/67; Herbert the winner at 7.66-212.76
to Argee's 7.86-209.78.
 Drag racing at its best. Far lane, the late Jim Herbert
in Jeff Starr's digger racing Chuck Flores in the Safford, Gaide
& Ratican "Shark Car". Half Moon Bay, 1967
Photo by Jim Phillipson
 Nice chute shot at El Dorado Raceway; 1968.
 Raynor-Bishop-Herbert at Fremont Raceway; 1968
<Steve Reyes Speed Photography>
 R-B-H was the ex-"Quickie Too" car of Bill
Leavitt; the 156' Woody chassis weighed in at 1250 lbs. and ran
a best of 7.31-228.09 with a Bill Bishop prepared 392 cid Chrysler.
<Steve Reyes Speed Photography>
In February 1968, Jim would experience
his one and only serious injury driving a top fuel dragster.
It occurred at Lodi (Kingdon) during qualifying. Nearing the
top end clocks and traveling well in excess of 200 mph, the oil
filter split, spilled onto the headers, and ignited a fire. Though
the aluminum fire suit kept the hot oil from directly getting
to him, the heat was so intense that he essentially baked inside
of it. With second and third degree burns on his arms, chest,
neck, and shoulders, Jim would spend the next 15 weeks in the
hospital. It would be more than six months before he could race
again, healing just in time for the West Coast Championships
in September 1968 at Sacramento Raceway.
 The fire at Kingdon; it was just short of miraculous
that Jim was able to get the chutes out and stop the car. The
next four shots were taken by Steve Reyes, a resident of Newark,
CA. at the time.
 Any wonder drivers prefer the engine behind them?
 Back racing after recovering from the fire at Lodi;
Fremont Raceway,1969.
<Steve Reyes Speed Photography>
 Commentary by the driver.
<Les Welch Color Photography>
 Ditto!
<Les Welch Color Photography>
 <Les Welch Color Photography>
 <Steve Reyes Speed Photography>
 Launch shot at
Fremont; 1970
<Steve Reyes Speed Photography>
 This is the before;
see below for the after...
<Photo by Alan Earman>
 March Meet,1970;
instant junior fueler.
<Photo by Leslie Lovett>
The little escapade at Bakersfield
curtailed the top fuel operation for the duration of 1970. While
the team amassed an inventory of parts to return to the track,
Jim jumped into the seat of the Burkholder Bros. (Harry and Pete)
AA/FA for the duration of the year. At the first annual Governor's
Cup at Sacramento, the altered set low e.t. and top speed of
the meet with a 7.37-204.60, losing the final to Rance McDaniel.
This was quite an accomplishment considering the rest of the
field consisted of top fuel dragsters and funny cars. It was
during this time that the sport of drag racing started to move
in a different direction. By 1971, Don Garlits had successfully
demonstrated that the future of top fuel racing would be with
the engine behind the driver. Don had been seriously injured
in a clutch explosion at Lions Drag Strip in 1970 and spent the
rest of that year recuperating, all the while perfecting his
design for the rear-engined dragster. His RED was immediately
successful, winning both the 1971 NHRA Winternationals and a
few weeks later, the Bakersfield March Meet. The days of the
front-engined top fuel dragster was over, and by 1972 the bulk
of the racers had converted over to the new design. Equally important
was the development of the after market engine like the Donovan
cast aluminum block. After years of managing the Tognotti speed
shop empire, Jim realized it would be a good time to start his
own enterprise. He opened Jim Herbert's Performance World in
Sacramento in the early 1970s to service the growing demand for
high performance race components. Yet, for many drag racers,
the inflation that crippled the country in the 1970s would also
knock them out of the sport. With costs soaring just to put a
race car on the track, many competitors were silenced forever.
Jim, with the resources of the speed shop behind him was able
to continue on, and in 1972, he and Chris Raynor debuted their
beautiful, new Don Long rear engined top fuel dragster. Drag
racing had a new look and a growing professionalism, but the
Golden Age of Drag Racing was gone forever.
 Jim driving for the Burkholder Bros.; first ever
Governor's Cup, Sacramento Raceway, October 1970.
 Burkholder Bros. at the 'Dale; 1971.
 Herbert in the Burkholder Bros.AA/FA utilizing the
rarely seen experimental Crower injectors.
 Ah yes, the VHT-fueled fire burn out; Sacramento
Raceway, 1971.
 By 1971, the nitro-burning, supercharged FED was
becoming extinct; despite a few stubborn holdouts, the breed
would vanish from the drag racing landscape by 1973.
 The last time Jim Herbert would drive a front-engined
dragster; NHRA World Finals, Ontario Motor Speedway, October
1971.
Postscript to Herbert - Part
1 by Henry Walther
Recently, while
at Dave Uyehara's shop, I came upon an old front engine car that
was in there for restoration. I was told it was one of Jim Herbert's
old cars, but I couldn't remember it. I should have, as I did
the lettering on most of Jim's cars. I was told it was orange,
and that is was the car in which Jim was burned, and that is
what threw me off track. I was also told that there were pictures
of the car in the Jim Herbert story on WDIFL. I have just looked
at that story.
Although many
of the pictures used to illustrate the story are in black and
white, the car in which Jim was burned was a dark blue. If you
look at the photo that shows how the windshield melted down onto
Jim's hands, you can easily see the lettering I did on that car.
Us old sign painters can easily recognize our work and the details...like
color.
Also in part
one of Jim's story there is a cartoon called Pop-Top Herbie and
the Bakersfield Boom. I drew that cartoon and gave it to Jim.
He and I worked together at Tognotti's Speed Shop so there was
always a bit of friendly ribbing whenever one of us stepped in
our own steaming heap. If you knew Jim you knew you needed to
take your shots at him whenever you could. They didn't come very
often. I hadn't seen that cartoon since I gave it to him.
There are also
some photos of the Davis chassied, Hagerman bodied Lizard. I
am sending you another photo of that car (below) before I had
a chance to do all of the lettering on it. It is a qualifying
run at Bakersfield in which the car did a big wheelstand. I had
the body in my garage just before the race, and the bellypan
was an inviting piece on which to add some lettering. It was
a gorgeous smooth orange metalflake painted by a custom car painter
in VacaVille. It was my intention to letter something like "Oh
Shit" in the bellypan, just in case the car ever got up
high enough to be seen, but I didn't get it done. Too bad, for
as this photo shows, it would have been appropriate.
Finally there
are pictures of Jim driving the Burkholder Brother's fuel altered.
Jim Herbert, Pete Burkholder, and myself all worked at Tognotti's
together. I raced against Jim that first day he drove the car.
Needless to say there was a bit of honor on the line. No one
wanted to go to work the next day having been beaten by a coworker.
I tried a bit too hard and launched into a giant wheelstand (higher
then shown in the photo). Jim on the other hand recorded the
fastest speed the car had run to that time, so I had a little
recourse in claiming I must have scared him into legging it out
the back door.
Herbie, as I
called him was a great friend, and I miss him. He was talented
with a race car and as sharp witted as they come. We had a lot
of fun together.
Jim
Herbert Story - Part 2
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