Jimmy Horton

Driver

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James Horton III (born July 3, 1956) is a racecar driver currently racing a dirt modified for the HALMAR racing team weekly at the Orange County Fair Speedway. He raced in 48 NASCAR Winston Cup races in eight seasons. He was a regular on the ARCA circuit in the 1980s and 1990s. Horton has won many of the most noted races for dirt track modifieds in the Northeastern United States.

Horton first became known as a modified racecar driver in the Northeastern United States. He began racing in a small block powered sportsman car, his father's racecar, in the early 1970s. He won the sportsman championship at Orange County Speedway in 1974.

Subject ID: 82351

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James Horton III (born July 3, 1956) is a racecar driver currently racing a dirt modified for the HALMAR racing team weekly at the Orange County Fair Speedway. He raced in 48 NASCAR Winston Cup races in eight seasons. He was a regular on the ARCA circuit in the 1980s and 1990s. Horton has won many of the most noted races for dirt track modifieds in the Northeastern United States.

Horton first became known as a modified racecar driver in the Northeastern United States. He began racing in a small block powered sportsman car, his father's racecar, in the early 1970s. He won the sportsman championship at Orange County Speedway in 1974.

He won modified track championships at numerous tracks. He was the 1976 Modified champion at Orange County driving his dad's No. 43 and won it again in 2017 driving the Halmar Racing No. 43. That season, he was involved in one of the rare dead heat modified feature wins along with fellow future NASCAR racer Tighe Scott. It was the first race of a twin 50 feature and it was too close to call. Scott and Horton's cars collided after the race. After 1976 he started racing in the No. 3 Statewide dirt modified. He won track championships at Bridgeport Speedway (NJ) in 1975, 1977, 1980, 1982, 1983, 1997, 1998, 2003 and, 2014. Horton won the most races on Bridgeport's 5/8 mile track (before it was reconfigured as a 4/10 mile in 2020). He is a 2-time winner of the premier race in dirt modified racing, the Super DIRT Week 200 (1987 & 1994). He won the Eastern States 200 in his later career. He won modified track championships at New Egypt Speedway (NJ) in 2004 and 2006. He is still racing in weekly races in New Jersey as of 2020.

Subject ID: 82351

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Subject ID: 82351