| Owner(s) Name | Carl Kiekhaefer |
| Racing Series | NASCAR Grand National |
| Number of Championships | 2 (1955 and 1956) |
| Number of Wins | 52 (including 16 straight) |
| Car Number(s) | 300, 300A, 300B, 300C, 301, 500, 500B |
| Notable Driver(s) | Buck Baker Bob Flock Fonty Flock Tim Flock Speedy Thompson Herb Thomas |
| Notable Sponsor(s) | Mercury outboard motors |
| Manufacturer | Chrysler |
| Shop Location | |
| Year Opened | 1955 |
| Year Closed | 1956 |
He brought his car with no driver to the first race at the Daytona Beach Road Course. Retired former champion Tim Flock had "retired" after the 1954 season, but he was convinced to come out of retirement by Kiekhaefer for $40,000 *.
Kiekhaefer had 6 drivers race for him during the 45 event season. The drivers had a combined 22 wins, 47 Top-10s, and 23 poles in their 64 races.
Speedy Thompson was also a primary driver for the team. Thompson entered 39 events, with 8 wins, 7 poles, and 28 Top-10 finishes on his way to finishing third in the final points.
Kiekhaefer had 9 drivers race for him in the 56 event season, including first, second, third, and ninth in the final series points. The drivers combined for 30 wins, 25 poles, and 92 Top-10 finishes in their 126 races. Four drivers combined for 16 straight team wins between March 25 and June 3.
Kiekhaefer left NASCAR after two highly successful seasons because he was accused of cheating by the other competitors (even though no rules infractions were found under NASCAR's close scrutiny), NASCAR changed the rules to Kiekhaefer's disadvantage, and he didn't want a backlash to affect Mercury sales after fans booed the team.
In 1961 Kiekhaefer Marine merged with the Brunswick Corporation.
Later that year Kiekhaefer would use his NASCAR and boat engineering skills to develop the 100 hp stern drive engine now known as MerCruiser. And as any offshore racing fan knows, the MerCruiser engine is the most successful stern drive ever developed. The engine once held over 80 percent of the worldwide market share.
Kiekhaefer resigned as president of the company in 1969, and the company name changed to Mercury Marine.
1906 births | 1983 deaths | American engineers | NASCAR owners | People from Wisconsin | American motorboat racers
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"Carl Kiekhaefer".
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