Leonard Kerbs and his first racing car at Loveland, Colorado

 

Butch Lebsack at left with John Luft and the Kerbs Special.  Illegible here but across the cowl is painted, “Kansas Raises the Best Wheat In the World”

 

Leonard Kerbs in his Fronty in 1919

 

Leonard Kerbs in his Fronty in 1920

 

Left to Right:  Butch Lebsack, John Hohweiler and John Shiber at Lexington, Nebraska Fair on September 4 & 5, 1923

 

Leonard Kerbs in his own Fronty in 1924

 

Butch Lebsack with some of his trophies in 1924

 

Leonard Kerbs

 

Pat Cunningham in Kerbs’ car taken on November 24, 1932 probably at Neal’s Speedway at San Diego, California

 

Kerbs in his own D. O Fronty in 1932

 

 

Leonard Kerbs with some of his trophies

 

 

Leonard Kerbs in 1917

 

Leonard Kerbs on his way to a race at Loveland, Colorado

 

#4 Butch Lebsack - #1 Leonard Kerbs

at Hutchinson, Kansas in 1926

 

Charles “Butch” Lebsack

 

Butch Lebsack standing behind Leonard Kerbs at Center Park in Lincoln, Nebraska

 

Leonard Kerbs in white at right

 

Kerbs at Oakley, Kansas in 1928

 

C. O. Bennett with Pat Cunningham in the supercharged Fronty B & B Special.

 

Leonard Kerbs

 

Leonard Kerbs

 

Kerbs Special at Oakley, Kansas in 1931

 

Sam Hoffman in the D. O. Fronty Kerbs Special in 1931

 

 Kerbs’ Garage at Otis, Kansas

 

Pat Cunningham in a Krebs Special 

 

Pat Cunningham in a Kerbs Special

 “The Kansas Cyclone”

Leonard Kerbs

His Cars and His Racing Team

 

Leonard Kerbs began his racing career at the age of 19 riding an Indian motorcycle in 1914 but moved into a flat-head Motel-T Ford bobtail of his own design in 1915.  By 1917, he and cousin Benny Kerbs had built a faster rocker-arm engine for the car.  Kerbs promptly destroyed that car when he crashed it through a fence at Great Bend, Kansas.

          After World War I, Leonard, Benny, and machinist John Schoeber built two new cars using 16-valve rocker-arm heads cast by Craig-Hunt of Topeka, Kansas that may have been designed by Johnny Mais.  Those heads did not prove to be strong enough so they were replaced by Rajo heads.  Another cousin, Butch Lebsack joined the team to drive the second car which was also a bobtail.

          In 1923, Kerbs reportedly won every race he entered on dirt tracks ranging from half-mile up to two-miles in length and in races ranging from 10 miles up to 100 miles long.

          In the late 1920s, both Kerbs and Lebsack started winding down their driving careers and Sam Hoffman started driving for the Kerbs team.  Jim Pickens also competed in at least one race in a Kerbs-owned car at Winfield, Kansas in the fall of 1928.

          About that same time, Kerbs is rumored to have built the #700 B & B Special for car owner C. O. Bennett of St. Joseph, Missouri.  That supercharged Fronty powered creation was campaigned successfully in the Midwest by another St. Joseph native name Pat Cunningham.

In 1930, Kerbs built a new Kerbs Special fitted with a 16-valve dual-overhead cam Fronty engine.  (Note that a number of Kerbs’ racing cars were known as the “Kerbs Special”.)  The engine in this car had a Wills St. Claire crankshaft with tubular rods, and sported a pair of Winfield carburetors.  The frame was “T” rails with truss rods and the car was painted yellow with blank lettering.  A year later, Kerbs is said to have purchased a special Fronty head for this car from the Chevrolet brothers for $600.  It had been run on Dutch Baumann’s car and differed from most D.O. Frontys as it had cups over the valves.  There was also a #69 Kerbs Special that raced with in Pacific Coast AAA events in California that year but it is unclear who drove that car.  Earl Hovenden raced a Kerbs Special at Ord, Nebraska and one source states that Hovenden drove the car in California too.  A letter from Earl Mansell states that he drove the #K-1 Kerbs Special Fronty “with the cups over the valves” in some California races.

After the birth of a son in 1930, Kerbs retired from driving and Sam Hoffman of Sioux City, Iowa assumed the driving duties in the Kerbs Special in the Midwest.  Hoffman heavily damaged the car in a crash at Ord, Nebraska on August 26th of that year but stayed on to have a very successful year with Kerbs in 1931.

Pat Cunningham became the driver of the Kerbs Special late in 1931 and they traveled more racing occasionally with IMCA and as far away as Phoenix, Arizona and Neal’s Speedway in San Diego, California.  Herb Balmer drove the K-1 car at least once at San Diego's Silverlake Speedway.  Herb’s brother, Everett Balmer also drove the K-1 at San Diego.

Kerbs sold the Fronty to R. W. Caldwell of San Diego while it was in California in 1932.  Caldwell later offered the car for sale but it is unknown if he was able to sell it or not.  It is believed that car remained in California for the rest of its days.

Kerbs gave race promotion a try when he was named race director of the Kansas State Fair in Hutchinson in September of 1932.  He entered two cars himself, one being the K-1 car for driver Pat Cunningham and another for driver Bill Carroll of Lewis, Kansas.  Good friend John Gerber entered his two car team and C. O. Bennett entered the supercharged B & B Fronty for driver Tex West.  8,000 people saw 16 cars compete and the program would have been a success if it had not been for a serious accident leaving three people injured including Carroll in Kerbs’ car which was destroyed.

In 1933, Kerbs built another Kerbs Special powered by a Riley engine but he never got it to run as well as he felt it should have.  Pat Cunningham continued to drive the Kerbs Special until 1934 when Kerbs sold the Riley powered car to Jack Keys of Dallas, Texas and retired as a car owner.  Cunningham moved to Texas and appears to have finished out 1934 driving the Riley for Jack Keys.  Kerbs spent the next 25 years as a flagman and racing official at several Midwestern racetracks including Belleville, Kansas and Ord, Nebraska.  He died of a sudden heart attach at his home in Otis, Kansas in 1960.

          P. D. Plant drove the car for Jack Keys early in 1935 and Howard “Howdy” Cox also drove for Keys before Keys sold the former Kerbs Special to Bob Kemp of Oklahoma City.  While Kemp owned the car, he rebuilt the body although some say he actually got Carl Oliver to do the work.  Kemp also installed a new engine built by Melvin ‘Slim’ Rutherford of Whiting, Indiana.

          Texan Ted Parker drove this car for awhile in the late 1930s although it is unclear who owned the car at that time.

          This Kerbs Special seems to have disappeared until around 1950 when it turned up at a race at the Kansas State Fair in Hutchinson, Kansas with a rocker-arm McDowell engine that would barely run.  Commadore White of Emporia, Kansas purchased the car (one source says from Bob Kemp) but White only kept it for a few weeks before selling it to Emmett Taylor of Augusta, Kansas.  Taylor sold the engine to some boys building a dragster.  He then sold the chassis to Marvin Church of Whitewater, Kansas who installed a 248 cu. in. Chevy truck engine with a Wayne conversion.  Church raced it with IMCA for a while with Jerry Shumaker as driver but the engine was too heavy and broke the chassis.  Church hauled it to a salvage yard in Wichita, Kansas where it was picked up by Bob Billups who raced it as a super-modified with driver Wylan Cattrell until 1968.  By then, it had been wrecked so many times that the welds weighted more than the car so this former Kerbs Special was junked for good.

 

  

Sources:

            Dirt Track Auto Racing 1919-1941, A Pictorial History by Don Radbruch

            Article by Fred Houston in 1983 issue of Vintage Ford magazine

Letter from the late Emmett Carpenter.

            Photographs from the Betty (Kerbs) Able collection

            Photographs from the Jeff Adams collection

            Photograph from the Jack Earle collection

Valley County THUNDER, The History of Racing at Ord, Nebraska

            by V. Ray Valasek and Bob Mays

                The Illustrated History of Sprint Car Racing, Vol. 1, 1896-1942

            by Jack C. Fox

            Coast Auto Racing News, July 1, 1934

            Letters from the late Earl Mansell  

 

Pat Cunningham in a Kerbs Special

 

Earl Mansell in a Kerbs Special

 

Jack Keys in his former Kerbs Special

 

Earl Mansell in a former Kerb’s Special at San Diego, California  in 1934

 

Howdy Cox in a former Kerbs Special

 

P. D. Plant in a former Kerbs Special

 

R. W. Caldwell in his former Kerbs Special

 

Ted Parker with a former Kerbs Special

 

An unidentified driver in a former Kerbs Special c1940

 

Former Kerbs Special when it was owned by Marvin Church in the 1950s

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

 

Pat Cunningham leading the feature in the Kerbs Special at Oakley, Kansas in 1931 

 

Eddie Balmer at left in the green #K-1 Kerbs Special is shown leading #34 Pete Bertrand in the 60-lap feature at Slivergate Speedway in San Diego, California on June 3, 1934.  Frank Wearne won this race with Balmer finishing in second place.  Bertrand finished in third place.

 

 

 

 

 

Leonard E. Kerbs

1895 - 1960

 

 

Ben “Benny” Kerbs

1900 – 1969

Charles “Butch” Lebsack

1895 - 1967

 

 

Patrick “Pat” Cunningham

1903 - 1972

John Schoeber

1891 - 1966

 

 

James Floyd “Jim” Pickens

1895 - 1968

Samuel A. “Sam” Hoffman

1902 - 1965

 

 

Herbert B. “Herb” Balmer, Jr.

1905 - 1934

Earl A. Mansell

1908 - 2003

 

 

William Jackson “Bill” Carroll

1900 - 1975

Everett Freeman “Eddie” Balmer

1908 - 1979

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Thank you to:

Betty (Kerbs) Able, Jeff Adams, Janet Bean, Ruth Geisen, Bob Mays, Charles Pauley, Don Radbruch, Floyd Smith,

Jim Smith, Jim Taggart, Barbara Thompson, V. Ray Valasek and the Fick Fossil Museum