Ultimate sleeper performance car....the moonshine car. Designed to be the fastest and the least eye catching. I wouldn't want a flashy car, too obvious and conspicious, says "arrest me!" gimme a 'shine car!!
@i hate you skum yeah that also xD, having a fast car is pointless now as everything is digitised and documented, you'll just end up having to get beater cars that you throw away after each chase
Funny how America now looks back on moonshine runners with nostalgia and respect, but people smuggling weed are still seen as dangerous criminals. Ah the hypocrisy!
Illegal growers turned legal are highly respected, times will change just like they did about alcohol and we can all have a laugh over a bong or brownies.
Moonshining kept on after prohibition. The guys who made the moonshine didn't want to have their products taxed and regulated, so they did it illegally.
@@ostrich67 that's government propaganda. During prohibition, the U.S. government purposely poisoned alcohol to deter the public from breaking the law killing thousands of their own citizens. If anyone made hooch from an old radiator, I'll bet he was colluding with the revenue service.
Most alcohol consumed during prohibition wasn't made clandestinely, rather it came the same breweries, vineyards and distilleries it always came from. It had to be either smuggled in or "robbed" during transit. Moonshine was sort of always an option, just people really didn't prefer it. The scandal pertaining to poisoning alcohol was the Jamaican ginger incident, this was in the tail end of the prohibition which was the early days of the depression so people started to drink whatever they could that had alcohol in it. The issue with the black market in general is having the alcohol tainted this could happen from poor technique or people trying to make more money, it could be as harmless as adding water to adding toxic chemical's to make people believe it's more powerful. Something alot of people forget is that most states had prohibited alcohol already, or were mixed on it and in a handful of states it lasted through the thirties and in a few today prohibition is defacto.
@@superspooky4580 Yes, I know what he said. Same thing that has been said over and over. Pay attention. Anything involving wheels and people create competition.
The most successful moonshiners were the ones with the least obvious vehicle. Wild crazy driving would get you stopped quickly. That's the last thing a hauler wanted. I've been that hauler. Horsepower is wonderful. On the track or in the backwoods. However, there is no substitute for driving skill.
I seem to remember Willie Clay Call's favorite vehicle was a 1961 Chrysler New Yorker, otherwise known for being a upper-scale high class car. He said that was his best car for hauling moonshine. I can imagine why because I don't think any LEO would suspect that car of hauling liquor.
My great grandfather was a bootlegger. A long time ago. He had a 1929 Mclaughlin Buick roadster with a V16. Wish it was still in the family but my great uncle wrapped it around a tree in the 60s lol.
So, his savings of the Federal taxes on liquor, and the markup the 'shiner could put on a quart of hooch if he could just get it to the county seat, combined, were such that he could pay a young guy **$A HUNDRED AND FIFTY DOLLARS (in '50s dollars) a load**?! Unbelieveable.
Back in the Moonshine days they were not racing to get the checkered flag they were racing to escape the law. Moonshine cars were built for one reason to outrun and escape The Cops. Soon other shiners were trading in their stills for a drivers seat in a car and thats when Big Bill France came around and with that NASCAR was born and they have been racing at Daytona ever since.
I had halogens in a '59 Olds 98. The high beams and low beams were separated by the turn signals. That car had the brightest headlights of any car I ever owned!
the funny thing now is that it'll cost you like $150 in gas alone.. (today that $150 is like $1600 and thats not really that much money with all the risk involved)
@@k3kboi665 lets look at this and really break it down, you ain't going to be running everyday (more likely than not you're going to be making a run once maybe 2times a week) cars back then would've cost you like $25k-$30k and you have to remember that back then car parts was unreliable when compared to today cars and if they was running these cars hard i would expect something to break every run they made, sure the gas was cheap when compared to today but there was much more repairs heck back then it was common for ppl to change their oil every 1000mi and rebuild a carb every 3k miles... and running a car hard means that the tires are going to wear faster (nothing like today tires)
Had a chance to buy a supposed Willie Clay Call ford Sedan once, still.kicking myself for not having the money, but it was pretty crusty. Was definitely a bootleggers car. One homemade race style seat and an old old black repaint.
I love the true storys like this one with the real guys that did it they realy are true Hot Rodders. I would of loved to take my 1952 plymouth @ go flying down the back roads hauling something like that just to see how it realy was back then. Is there A surtant year @ model of A plymouth that the old moonshiners might of drove ? because I was thinking about making A old plymouth in to A tribute car for moonshiners like A 1948 plymouth coupe thanks for posting this video I would love to see more
Traveler was also the name of Robert E Lee’s horse. I’d seen a magazine article about 1957-58 Chrysler 300 or similar model also named Traveler that was a runner.
It became a game between the drivers and the law, from all iv seen on it that was basically the reason.... either that or america was backwards and everyone was getting smashed at 6am
Less people on the road, cause everyone is in bed and less cops then what would be out at day back then. If they lost you they'd probably never find you at night. Daytime could be risky, though I'm sure there was alot of day running.
@@k3kboi665 MOST old engines actually RUN FINE on alcohol and I know SEVERAL people who have done it. Works well on the old VW hippy vans too. Basically you drive with the choke out. HOWEVER moonshine isn't strong enough and why would you waste good moonshine that's FAR far more expensive than gasoline.
🙏💝🇺🇸🦅GOD BLESS THE OLD GUARD 🙏💝🇺🇸🦅 JUST TRYIN TO MAKE A LIVIN🇺🇸🦅🙏💝 BIG BILL FRANCE 🙏💝🇺🇸🦅HAD A WONDERFUL VISION 🦅🇺🇸💝🙏 GOD HELP US TODAY 🙏💝🇺🇸🦅🤠❤️😺💜 WYOMING 🏞️🏔️🌄🇺🇸🔵💞🦅
Why was moonshine illegal? Wasn't it normal alcohol. Apparently nothing is wrong with drinking it or whatever is done with it today because those guys don't seem to be afraid of going to jail anymore.
Ultimate sleeper performance car....the moonshine car. Designed to be the fastest and the least eye catching. I wouldn't want a flashy car, too obvious and conspicious, says "arrest me!" gimme a 'shine car!!
$150 even in the late 50's was well over $1,200 today!
Keith M $150 is kinda a lot day
$150 a day is great pay for driving fast cars at night!
@@gemizu4874 not when you consider how much some people make off one street race
Over 107 ounces of silver.
$1,200 3 years age is well over $1,600 today
Love hearing the elders talk about their wild days & ghost stories.
Screw the 50's I hauled in the 60's and the 70's as well. Paid for my first Son being born and bought my first house hauling shine.
The moonshine was still a lot cheaper because it wasn't taxed.
150$ a run is alot, even nowadays
@@migueldenboer5186Indeed, even today $150 in one night is a lot.
$150 in 1940 is approx. $3300 today. Most people don't make $3300 per month in USA.
@migueldenboer5186 150 now days ain't nothing
@@chrisedgemon4943that 150 might cover your gasoline costs lol
As a boy in Gainsborough TN, the neighbor always haulin old tires in his mid fifties Chevy pickup until rear ended once. Shine all over the road.
Oh nooo lawd
He didn't cry over spilt milk but I bet he cried over that spilt liquor.
I suppose the modern day version of this is haulin' pot from the growing areas to the big city. Yee-haw!
@i hate you skum all drugs etc
They just use crown vics and Chrysler 300s.
There is no modern version.... not with modern draconian laws and militaristic law enforcement.
@i hate you skum yeah but the race for fast cars, high horsepower and nimble handling is gone, police have helicopters and will catch you easily.
@i hate you skum yeah that also xD, having a fast car is pointless now as everything is digitised and documented, you'll just end up having to get beater cars that you throw away after each chase
Now I understand why my uncle's back in the day used to put a caddy motor in their chevys.
Funny how America now looks back on moonshine runners with nostalgia and respect, but people smuggling weed are still seen as dangerous criminals. Ah the hypocrisy!
Depends on the state. Where i live in Michigan you can drive around with ounces nd the cops can't do anything about it.
You just can't have a crazy amount like pounds of it though
In 50 years it will be looked back in the same way
Moonshine is still illegal....
Illegal growers turned legal are highly respected, times will change just like they did about alcohol and we can all have a laugh over a bong or brownies.
Love how these old timers talk bout the good ole days
Hehe, in the South, we start driving once we can see over the wheel. ;)
Chiara Rossi really?
Ain’t that the truth
Qlthough i could see over the wheel when i was about 10
TvSnake Yes, people in the South start driving earlier
@@547ak6 The unstoppable love of the revving automobile
You're right. When I began driving I had to look through the steering wheel. Of course the wheels were a little bigger than today.
Moonshining kept on after prohibition. The guys who made the moonshine didn't want to have their products taxed and regulated, so they did it illegally.
The untaxed alcohol was much cheaper and just as good.
@@NIKOLAP7 Nah. They used old car radiators in their stills, and the lead solder would leach out into the product.
@@ostrich67 that's government propaganda. During prohibition, the U.S. government purposely poisoned alcohol to deter the public from breaking the law killing thousands of their own citizens. If anyone made hooch from an old radiator, I'll bet he was colluding with the revenue service.
Most alcohol consumed during prohibition wasn't made clandestinely, rather it came the same breweries, vineyards and distilleries it always came from. It had to be either smuggled in or "robbed" during transit. Moonshine was sort of always an option, just people really didn't prefer it. The scandal pertaining to poisoning alcohol was the Jamaican ginger incident, this was in the tail end of the prohibition which was the early days of the depression so people started to drink whatever they could that had alcohol in it. The issue with the black market in general is having the alcohol tainted this could happen from poor technique or people trying to make more money, it could be as harmless as adding water to adding toxic chemical's to make people believe it's more powerful.
Something alot of people forget is that most states had prohibited alcohol already, or were mixed on it and in a handful of states it lasted through the thirties and in a few today prohibition is defacto.
Bootlegging lead to the founding of NASCAR everyone's favorite event.
I'm so tired of hearing that fable. Racing was around well BEFORE bootlegging.
Everyone?
Boring race but cool story behind it
@@gearshifterg9756 yes car racing was around before but that’s not what he said now was it. Read it again. Founding of NASCAR not racing in general.
@@superspooky4580 Yes, I know what he said. Same thing that has been said over and over.
Pay attention.
Anything involving wheels and people create competition.
Nascar used these legends when it first started on Daytona beach
Anyone who doesn't know: the video ends just before saying this is how Nascar was started true facts
My grandfather was a moonshiner. Ran his goods in a heavily modified 1936 Buick!
The legend Benny Parsons ! RIP Benny you are missed!
I rode in a '40 Ford coupe on the country roads in upstate New York back in the Sixties. Pretty stock from what I recall and a great car.
2:23, That was hilarious. Good ole Junior Johnson and Benny Parsons.
I miss hearing Benny Parsons call the NASCAR races, he sure knew his stuff
I think that's part of the problem with NASCAR today. The fact that there is no more direct connection to it's beginnings. They're all gone now.
The most successful moonshiners were the ones with the least obvious vehicle. Wild crazy driving would get you stopped quickly. That's the last thing a hauler wanted. I've been that hauler. Horsepower is wonderful. On the track or in the backwoods. However, there is no substitute for driving skill.
I seem to remember Willie Clay Call's favorite vehicle was a 1961 Chrysler New Yorker, otherwise known for being a upper-scale high class car. He said that was his best car for hauling moonshine. I can imagine why because I don't think any LEO would suspect that car of hauling liquor.
Well....calling it "whiskey" is a bit charitable.
Thats right😂
My great grandfather was a bootlegger. A long time ago. He had a 1929 Mclaughlin Buick roadster with a V16. Wish it was still in the family but my great uncle wrapped it around a tree in the 60s lol.
anyone an idea where I can get the full version of the video?
@nationalgeographic We want the full-length documentary!! 😩
hahahaha that was really good to hear such a tale worth the time.
Ok thanks guys. Appreciated the input even the not so friendly one.
“I think the fastest car I ever drove was moonshiner”....Junior Johnson.
Moonshiners really kick started not just Nascar but the tuner scene.
I love that guy lol 14 dint need a license bc I wasent gonna stop lol that's awesome
oooohhhh moonshine....yum yum yum!!! =)
awesome story
It's crazy how we are still able to meet and talk with the guys who made NASCAR happen. Well, they're becoming scarse unfortunately. Godspeed.
like learning about the pre v8, cops had cars also and radio
My grandpa used to make liquor in Arkansas. He said he never liked to drive fast so he left that to his brothers
I’m from Wilkes County and this is accurate
In modern terms that is $1800 for a 30 minute drive.
Lots of places were damp back then!
So, his savings of the Federal taxes on liquor, and the markup the 'shiner could put on a quart of hooch if he could just get it to the county seat, combined, were such that he could pay a young guy **$A HUNDRED AND FIFTY DOLLARS (in '50s dollars) a load**?! Unbelieveable.
Illegally hauling liquor is what I do once I go over my DOT 14hr mark but still haven't gotten where I want to be lol
You put the elog on personal conveyance though right? 😂
0:58
Aaaaaah... So thats where the term 'how loooooow can you goooooo' came from...
Back in the Moonshine days they were not racing to get the checkered flag they were racing to escape the law. Moonshine cars were built for one reason to outrun and escape The Cops. Soon other shiners were trading in their stills for a drivers seat in a car and thats when Big Bill France came around and with that NASCAR was born and they have been racing at Daytona ever since.
The stuff that they are transporting is MUCH stronger than A LOT more illegal
Shoot, I drive anything older than a 1965 today, and the lights aren't to good @ night...
I had halogens in a '59 Olds 98. The high beams and low beams were separated by the turn signals. That car had the brightest headlights of any car I ever owned!
OldsVistaCruiser , but, in 59, halogens weren't available, when the car was new... may not have been available in 65
@@lewspeedwagon6330 - I owned the car from 1991-1998, and retrofitted halogens very early in my ownership. They first came out in the late 1970s.
My 92 has useless brights, actually worse then low beams
Where was nitrous and turbo when ya needed it ,,, lol. Long live Moonshine
hey thanks apple gonna go grab some books tomorrow nothing like readin on the porch sippin shine
'Stroker Ace was born to race' 🎸🎻🎶
very interesting!
good job
the funny thing now is that it'll cost you like $150 in gas alone.. (today that $150 is like $1600 and thats not really that much money with all the risk involved)
The cost of living was cheaper though. So making the equivalent of 1600 a weekend was a real good living. Especially out in the country
Making 1600$ a *DAY* is great also this is not like running drugs, you are not going away for decades even if caught
@@k3kboi665 lets look at this and really break it down, you ain't going to be running everyday (more likely than not you're going to be making a run once maybe 2times a week) cars back then would've cost you like $25k-$30k and you have to remember that back then car parts was unreliable when compared to today cars and if they was running these cars hard i would expect something to break every run they made, sure the gas was cheap when compared to today but there was much more repairs heck back then it was common for ppl to change their oil every 1000mi and rebuild a carb every 3k miles... and running a car hard means that the tires are going to wear faster (nothing like today tires)
Those days weren't really shiny in terms of economy, so $150 were a lot of money for some people who were poor.
I’m more into the engine or power upgrades of the bootlegger cars
Had a chance to buy a supposed Willie Clay Call ford Sedan once, still.kicking myself for not having the money, but it was pretty crusty. Was definitely a bootleggers car. One homemade race style seat and an old old black repaint.
is there a full version of this?
this just popped up in my reccomendeds, when it came out, I was six days old
The 1940 Ford had an 85hp, 221 cu in V8. The 100 hp, 239 cu in V8 didn't come out until 1946.
what is the song starting at 2:38, please?
Does anyone know the name of this documentary ?
It almost seems comical now to think of them racing around just to get their alcohol where it was going.
Amanda Mackey comical now? There are still many many many counties that are dry.
this is my home sweet home
My great grandfather said he would put mothballs in the gas tank so it would run on "high test" gas
I love the true storys like this one with the real guys that did it they realy are true Hot Rodders. I would of loved to take my 1952 plymouth @ go flying down the back roads hauling something like that just to see how it realy was back then. Is there A surtant year @ model of A plymouth that the old moonshiners might of drove ? because I was thinking about making A old plymouth in to A tribute car for moonshiners like A 1948 plymouth coupe thanks for posting this video I would love to see more
Always going to miss Ol' BP.
And that ladies and gentlemen was how nascar was born.
The General lee is based off a car called traveller wich was a 50s ford that used go run shine
Traveler was also the name of Robert E Lee’s horse. I’d seen a magazine article about 1957-58 Chrysler 300 or similar model also named Traveler that was a runner.
God, could you imagine that going on today? Like just somebody rocking a Toyota Supra lmao
Dosent have enough boot spaces and is the opposite of unsuspicious
Bootleggng tofu to the top of the mountain every night
candles for lights.
lol Thus Nascar was born
yup and they have been racing at Daytona ever since.
And that is how NASCAR was born!!!!
wow they caught that guy after 50 years ago lol
$200.00 and make a car that can run on Moonshine
Only drove at night? Why didn't they just drive normal cars during the day? Wouldn't it be harder for the police to catch you by blending in?
It became a game between the drivers and the law, from all iv seen on it that was basically the reason.... either that or america was backwards and everyone was getting smashed at 6am
Less people on the road, cause everyone is in bed and less cops then what would be out at day back then. If they lost you they'd probably never find you at night.
Daytime could be risky, though I'm sure there was alot of day running.
What’s the title of this doc
And this is how NASCAR came to be
Big Block Dodge. You never come back from Copperhead Road.
I know these people,, I live in North wilkesboro
i wish i grew up in that age ide be the most wanted shiner around
Anybody know the song at about 01:55?
This is how NASCAR got started.
the birth of NASCAR
I love nascar
M👀nshine Racing
love this video
love shine also
:) mmmmmm
Carburettors don’t jack up the engines capacity.
@andrew powers ah, yeah, I’m aware of that. Carburettor size or amount doesn’t impact the engines capacity at all though.
@andrew powers no most likely someone wrote a script after reading a magazine and they’ve got no idea about engines so just picked a few buzz words.
150 dollars is a little over 1700 in 2021 that is good money 😂
Didn't they use moonshine as a fuel?
Kind of an alcohol burning engine?
Ofcourse not. Old engines dont like that at all.
@@k3kboi665 MOST old engines actually RUN FINE on alcohol and I know SEVERAL people who have done it. Works well on the old VW hippy vans too. Basically you drive with the choke out. HOWEVER moonshine isn't strong enough and why would you waste good moonshine that's FAR far more expensive than gasoline.
now we got lean and hellcats
Prohibition started in 1919.
And that’s how nascar was born
I believe sometimes you gotta do around to make a right to feed your family
Junior Johnson lol that's a bad name 🤏🏻
American AE86! 20+ years earlier!
My grandfather and his brothers were bootleggers in West (by God) Virginia. Oh the stories I heard sippin moonshine.
@Comeback209 Moonshine is whiskey not beer
'Homemade' Whisky.
Can ya imagine if they prohibbited cigs yes lung cancer rates would drop but we'd have mass genocides/suicides waiting in front of the stop and go
🙏💝🇺🇸🦅GOD BLESS THE OLD GUARD 🙏💝🇺🇸🦅 JUST TRYIN TO MAKE A LIVIN🇺🇸🦅🙏💝 BIG BILL FRANCE 🙏💝🇺🇸🦅HAD A WONDERFUL VISION 🦅🇺🇸💝🙏 GOD HELP US TODAY 🙏💝🇺🇸🦅🤠❤️😺💜 WYOMING 🏞️🏔️🌄🇺🇸🔵💞🦅
red dead redemption anyone?
@Comeback209 Well back then they were just smuggling beer now people are smuggling drugs and human slaves
@MusicLopez123
that's the price we pay for "free". Quit whining! ;)
Why was moonshine illegal? Wasn't it normal alcohol. Apparently nothing is wrong with drinking it or whatever is done with it today because those guys don't seem to be afraid of going to jail anymore.
Alcohol is still illegal if you don't pay the $27/gallon tax on it.
Bootlegging moonshine drivers lol