Wally
Wally GRM+ Memberand SuperDork
10/5/09 4:25 p.m.

http://www.kenoshanews.com/news/racing_in_peace_6494145.html#

Racing in peace

Family arranges for coffin’s final pass at Dragaway

BY DENEEN SMITH dsmith@kenoshanews.com

PARIS — If Jerome Miller was watching somewhere, he would probably have been yelling “go faster.”

Miller, 72, an avid racing fan, died Tuesday. On Friday, his family arranged for Miller to have a final pass at Great Lakes Dragaway in Paris, where he had raced for decades.

“It was his passion,” said Miller’s daughter Michelle Cook.

To honor that passion, the funeral procession left Piasecki-Althaus Funeral Home in Kenosha and headed to the drag strip. At the track, family and friends gathered in the spectator stands overlooking the track, while the hearse carrying Miller’s flag-draped coffin rolled up to the starting line.

Miller was born Aug. 8, 1937 in Racine. He loved cars from the start. “He street dragged all through the 50s when he grew up,” Cook said. “His pride and joy was a ’59 Chevy.”

For decades, he spent weekends at Great Lakes, 18411 First St., racing and talking cars. For a time, when he and his wife Carolyn were raising their children, he put his hobby aside. “Then he picked it up again in the ’80s,” Cook said.

His son Tony Miller, now 34, remembers spending nearly every weekend with his father at Great Lakes. They would camp at the track, becoming part of the community of racers who spent hours and hours working on cars so they could spend seconds tearing down the quarter-mile track.

“It was really like another family over there,” Tony Miller said. “Everyone helped one another. Dad was someone who knew everybody, who was always helping people out.” He said his father loved that atmosphere, loved hanging out with the people as much as he loved the cars.

Miller’s own car, in his last decade of racing, was a red AMC Concord.

Beyond racing, Miller served in the United States Marines, worked as a salesman, and from 1983 until his retirement in 2009 owned and operated his own company, Omega Advertising in Milwaukee.

Miller, who lived in Milwaukee, was forced to stop racing his AMC in 1993 when his vision was damaged after he suffered a brain aneurysm. But he still enjoyed going to the track, and most recently spent the day at Great Lakes on Labor Day.

He died this week after suffering a sudden illness.

At Great Lakes Friday, a group of racers from the Rockford, Ill., area who had rented the track for the day made way for the funeral party. Drivers gathered along the fence near the track, as the family climbed into the stands. Some drivers chatted with mourners, asking about Miller and, in true track fashion, questioning what kind of car he used to drive.

The hearse paused for several seconds at the starting line, then took off down the track. In the stands, Miller’s friends and family cheered and applauded. “Let’s hear it for Jerry,” someone shouted.

The digital scoreboard at the end of the track recorded the run’s time, and a worker from the track brought Miller’s ET slip — a slim, receipt-like recording of the run time and speed — to Miller’s daughter Michelle Cook. She held it in her hand and smiled.

The time, 45 seconds at 27 mph.

“So what’s going on? Is that someone who raced here?” one of the drivers waiting in the parking area asked.

When told the circumstances, he nodded. “So they took him on his last pass. Cool. That’s cool.”

NYG95GA
NYG95GA SuperDork
10/5/09 5:03 p.m.

That IS cool!

Keith
Keith GRM+ Memberand SuperDork
10/5/09 5:34 p.m.

Awesome. I can completely see that happening, and I'd be applauding from the stands if it happened when I was at the track.

I'm gonna see if I can get taken for a lap of the Nuerburgring. Time to rewrite the will!

I once got in a drag race on the Las Vegas strip. 1966 Cadillac sedan (me) vs 1965 Cadillac hearse. I won, but he would have done better than 45@27.

Stealthtercel
Stealthtercel New Reader
10/5/09 6:12 p.m.

Well, if Mr. Miller's hearse was a late-model FWD Caddy, and if it had all that weight in the back, maybe the time slip is more understandable.

cwh
cwh Dork
10/5/09 7:56 p.m.

No matter what the time slip said, he was up there, looking down, with a big grin. You go,Pops!

mistanfo
mistanfo Dork
10/5/09 8:13 p.m.

That is cool. I have asked that my urn be put on the parcel shelf of my Miata, without a lid. Drive till it's empty. Not sure that I care where you drive either.

mad_machine
mad_machine GRM+ Memberand SuperDork
10/5/09 8:24 p.m.

never got into dragracing. but if that was his thing.. I am sure he enjoyed it.

aussiesmg
aussiesmg SuperDork
10/5/09 8:27 p.m.

Philip Island in a V8 Supercar.....oh yeah

Keith
Keith GRM+ Memberand SuperDork
10/5/09 10:42 p.m.
mistanfo wrote: That is cool. I have asked that my urn be put on the parcel shelf of my Miata, without a lid. Drive till it's empty. Not sure that I care where you drive either.

Given the aerodynamics of the car, I'm gonna say you'll end up all over the dashboard

mistanfo
mistanfo Dork
10/6/09 2:42 a.m.

I will leave money in the will for respirators for my drivers.

Jay
Jay Dork
10/6/09 6:56 a.m.

That is pretty cool. The only problem is that they used the wrong hearse.

pete240z
pete240z Dork
10/6/09 7:13 a.m.

I attended a lot of races at Great Lakes Dragaway in Union Grove, Wisconsin. The original owner: "Broadway Bob" was a character and would have welcomed this funeral procession.

And the fact the guy raced AMC's made it even better since Kenosha was one of the production facilities and there were always a lot of AMX's racing at Great Lakes.

Gearheadotaku
Gearheadotaku GRM+ Memberand Reader
10/6/09 8:30 a.m.

Nice tribute. I would have smiled trough the tears had I been there.

alex
alex HalfDork
10/6/09 10:32 a.m.

Last year (I think) at the Springfield Mile (that's on the Grand National flat track tour, for you four wheeled folks) during the parade lap at 'halftime,' where spectators get to do a few laps, there was a burly guy on a H-D with a coffin sidecar rig, with a flag draped over the casket. I never tracked the guy down to get the story, but it sure looked like a 'last lap' scenario to me.

poopshovel
poopshovel SuperDork
10/6/09 11:05 a.m.
Jay wrote: That is pretty cool. The only problem is that they used the wrong hearse.

Damn right.

Keith
Keith GRM+ Memberand SuperDork
10/6/09 2:02 p.m.

With that purple hearse, you'd have to make sure the coffin was well secured!

patgizz
patgizz GRM+ Memberand Dork
10/6/09 5:49 p.m.

thats awesome

i want to be burned and my ashes put in the ash trays of my cars

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