Duane Fredrickson still remembers being 7 years old, pulling his red Radio Flyer wagon filled with drive shafts around what would become Elko Speedway.
The speedway, located in Elko New Market, is celebrating its 50th racing season, which kicks off Saturday. The track has come a long way in that time, but when Fredrickson was still pulling around car parts, it was just a patch of gravel-filled land with potential.
Fredrickson's neighbor and the speedway's first owner, Charlie Hanson, gave Duane and his brothers odd jobs around the track.
"My earliest involvement was we would go over to Hanson's Junkyard — that's what we always called it — and Charlie [Hanson] had a front-end loader with all these cars sitting there," Fredrickson said. "He would tip the cars up on edge so they would be standing up, and then my brother Bob and I would go and take drive shafts out."
Hanson welded the shafts together to create posts for a barrier that helped protect spectators from debris and cars. The barricade stood for 35 years before recently being replaced.
"[If] you knew where to look a few years ago, there was a crack in the concrete wall and you could see one of those old drive shafts in there," Fredrickson said. "So, that's where I started."
More than five decades later, Fredrickson is back at the Speedway working on its marketing and promotions.
Though the track still has remnants of its history, the Elko Speedway is barely recognizable from what it was a half-century ago.