Guest guest Posted July 8, 2004 Report Share Posted July 8, 2004 Adam’s Legacy: Late driver’s presence is everywhere at the Petty family’s Victory Junction Gang Camp in N.C. By DAVID NEWTON Posted on Fri, Jun. 18, 2004 http://www.thestate.com/mld/thestate/sports/8952053.htm RANDLEMAN, N.C. — A light drizzle fell as and Pattie Petty began the opening ceremony for the Victory Junction Gang Camp on 75 acres of rolling hills not far from the race shop of NASCAR’s most famous family. Some said they were tears from heaven. Some were more specific, saying they were the tears of Adam Petty. That’s because this camp for kids ages 7-15 with chronic or life-threatening illness was founded in honor of Adam. “I know how important it was to Adam to have the best of the best,” said Adam’s sister, Mongomery Lee, as she fought back tears of her own during the ceremony earlier this week. “And now he does.” Adam Petty died during a practice session at New Hampshire Speedway four years ago at age 19. Since then his parents, and Pattie, his grandparents, and Lynda, and much of the NASCAR community have worked tirelessly to complete the $24 million race-theme camp in his honor. More than 2,000 people, including actor Newman, who co-founded the camp, and driver Tony , who has pledged more $1 million over the next five years, attended the official ribbing cutting. The reaction, from NASCAR chairman France to race team owner and camp board member Rick Hendrick to four-time Cup champion Jeff Gordon, was the same. “Wow!” France said as walked onto the property for the first time. Wow, indeed. The nearly 40 state-of-the-art buildings decorated in a rainbow of colors and with a Disneylike imagination were beyond words for many. “I’ve been hearing about it and we’ve been a part of it through our foundation,” said Gordon, whose foundation sponsored one of the 16 camper cabins. “I don’t think any way they describe it would live up to what this is. “It’s amazing.” The camp, centered around a road in the shape of a racetrack, is more than or anybody imagined when ground was broken more than a year and a half ago. From the chandelier shaped like an engine to the race car hoods on the ceiling of the theater to the giant motorcycle in the water pool, everything is, as likes to say, over the top. “We had an idea of what we wanted to do, but we just kept adding,” he said. “You get to a point where you say, ‘Man, that’s pretty cool. But if we did this then it would be really cool.’ “It’s kind of like NASCAR Nextel Cup racing. Until you come here and see the camp, all the pictures you take and all the things we say on TV ... you don’t understand the scope of what it is.” But the real scope won’t be felt until Sunday — by no coincidence Father’s Day — when the first group of campers, about 60 kids from the Carolinas and Virginia with hemophilia and juvenile rheumatoid arthritis, begin filling the buildings with smiles and laughter. “That’s what the thing is all about,” said. “Sometimes we get caught up in the buildings and how spectacular they are, but it’s all about changing lives for those kids.” DRIVE THROUGH TOUR Less than 24 hours remained before Tuesday’s ceremony, and Pattie was watering plants in front of a three-story purple, green, red and yellow building in the shape of a racecar with the No. 45 on the side. It’s called Adam’s Race Shop. “The flowers were not doing very well and I looked out and saw (a group of friends and volunteers) and they’re all covered in mud and they have been for two weeks working with 150 other people without pay to make this happen,” Pattie said. “I had a meltdown then.” The race shop easily is the most unique structure. It will help introduce campers to the world of NASCAR with racing simulators, show cars and some of Adam’s memorabilia. “We felt like in a lot of ways we lost one son and we’ve gained hundreds, hopefully thousands,” said. “It’s just a building where kids can come in and learn about NASCAR.” The first place campers go after a short trip to the welcome center is the Goody’s Body Shop, a fully-staffed medical facility where kids go for tune-ups ranging from chemotherapy to kidney dialysis. The company for which ’s famous father — — has been promoting headache powders for years picked up the bill. But this doesn’t look like a medical facility. There are multi-color couches and beanbags in the waiting room. Beds are built like racecars, complete with fake wheels. Nightstands are built like fuel pumps. The walls are as colorful as the couches and beanbags, ranging from lime green to hot pink. The staff wears colorful clothing as well. No white coats allowed. Medical equipment is hidden by replicas of Craftsman toolboxes like the ones teams use on pit road. “We hope and pray that is the only time they have to enter that building,” said. Next to the Body Shop is the Fuel Stop, otherwise known as the campus cafeteria. This was the donation of Rick Hendrick, as evidenced by the Jeff Gordon and Jimmie cars on the roof. Hanging from the ceiling inside are Terry Labonte’s No. 5 car and Vickers’ No. 25. Every hour on the hour the engines rev up, the tires begin to spin and smoke comes out as though they’re doing a burnout to remind everybody of the time. “It is the loudest building on the premises all the time,” said. Next door is the sports and recreation building built for everything from volleyball to wheelchair basketball. “That’s an empowerment building,” said. “We can do things in there where these kids can be the Jordan of basketball.” Then comes the Silver Theater, an 186-seat facility equipped with costumes from every movie or play imaginable “so kids can be whatever they want to be.” Next to that is an arts and crafts building, in NASCAR terms known as Research and Design. Beside that is the aquatic village that was paid for with donations from ’s cross-country charity motorcycle ride. At the center of the pool, which is accessible from every angle by a wheelchair because there are no edges, is a monstrous front end of a purple motorcycle that has a water slide in the middle and water spewing out of all sides. Listen carefully and you can hear the revving of a Harley-son. “All that stuff is over the top,” said with a smile. Over the top continues at the Pit Stop, an ice cream shop and campus store built by Teeter. Next door is the Fab Shop, a full beauty parlor where campers, as Pattie says, come out looking “fabulous.” “They can get their hair done, their nails done or have a pedicure,” Pattie said. “If they don’t have hair we’ll glitter their head or get them a wig, but we’ll do whatever it takes to make them look fabulous.” In the middle of the track is a tower built by Nextel, NASCAR’s new sponsor that on Tuesday donated a $1 million check. Atop it is a Jumbotron donated by NASCAR’s founding family, the Frances. Outside the track is Jessie’s Horsepower Garage, donated by Mark and Suzie Hazelwood, who lost their 16-year-old daughter to a traffic accident. “She loved horses just like Adam loved racecars,” said of Jessie. “It’s one of the most phenomenal horse facilities anywhere.” The camper cabins are decorated with the same beds and nightstands that are found in the hospital. The bedspreads are like checkered flags, only multicolored instead of black and white. There’s also the Soap Box laundry room sponsored by Tide, the fishing dock where you can’t help but catch something and the Boathouse sponsored by Bass Pro Shops with some prodding from . At the camp’s entrance is a water tower in the shape of hot-air balloon thanks to a donation by Pizza Hut. “When you look out across the camp itself what you see is a building and you see what so many people have done and what so many people have believed in,” said. “But when you see the kids here it’s a totally different place. You don’t pay any attention to the buildings. All you see is the kids.” ADAM’S CREW made his way from the main stage to a No. 45 racecar with the Victory Junction paint scheme for the ribbon cutting. His voice began to crack as he asked members of Adam’s former pit crew to come forward to cut the ribbon. He had given them no advance warning, knowing many were shy and might not have come had they known. Tears began to flow as asked one of the crew members to cut the ribbon. “It’s kind of another stepping stone, another rung in the ladder of the healing process,” he said. “That group of guys and the team were so tight ... I don’t see New Hampshire as a tragedy in life. I see it for the positive that it’s brought here.” There will be eight weeklong sessions each year from June to August with room for up to 125 campers for each session. No child or parent will be charged to attend. The camp originally was designed for kids from North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia, but because of overwhelming support across the country that likely will change. One airline already has volunteered to transport children to the camp for free. The camp received 21,000 donations from 15,000 individuals from all 50 states. Bobby Labonte was the first driver to commit, followed by Dale Jarrett. said he couldn’t help but get involved after seeing the passion and Pattie had for the project. He can’t wait to come back when children are roaming the land donated by and Donna. “I don’t like weddings, funerals or going to the hospital, but I think this is something I can handle,” he said. “Knowing this is in Adam’s memory will be the bad part. “But seeing how much fun they’re having at camp doing something that without this camp they never would have a chance to do in their lives is definitely going to outweigh it.” By now the rain had stopped, something that didn’t go unnoticed by Pattie or her guests. “It’s a reminder,” she said as she looked to the sky, “that God is still in control.” Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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