Pete Romcevich

Pete Romcevich (July 7, 1906September 7, 1952) was a Serbian-American racecar driver. He was born Slavko Romčević[1][2]to a Serbian family in the small village of Stipan near Lasinja, Croatia in what was then the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia (an autonomous kingdom within the Austro-Hungarian Empire). Romcevich arrived to the United States in 1922[3] as a 16-year old, joining his brother, Gjuro (George) Romčević who emigrated and arrived in the United State first. George saved money and sent for Pete. Romcevich had a successful midget car racing career and fabricated racing cars at his Speedway Garage in Roby, Indiana (now part of Hammond, Indiana). He qualified and raced in the 1947 Indianapolis 500 driving a car owned by Anthony "Andy" Granatelli[4] and attempted to qualify again in one of Granatelli's cars before a crash during qualifying. He was killed in a midget race at the Michigan State Fairgrounds Speedway in Detroit when his car went out of control.

Indianapolis 500 results[5]

gollark: Not just "chemistry would be slightly different" or something.
gollark: To some extent, sure, but I think some of it is "if this physical constant was wrong stars wouldn't work" and such.
gollark: Complete omnipotence is logically incoherent anyway.
gollark: Ongoing memetics campaigns.
gollark: Some things are apparently quite precisely tuned for human life, but that doesn't say anything because if they were not precisely tuned for human life there would be no human life observing that they are precisely tuned for human life.

References

  1. "Ancestry - Sign In". www.ancestry.com. Retrieved 2019-04-27.
  2. "Ancestry - Sign In". www.ancestry.com. Retrieved 2019-04-27.
  3. "Ancestry - Sign In". www.ancestry.com. Retrieved 2019-04-27.
  4. "2014.05.14 Indy 500 without Andy Granatelli unthinkable". statelineobserver.com. Retrieved 2019-04-27.
  5. - Driver Stats


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