Indianapolis 500Pace Car Crash
At the start of the 1971 Indianapolis 500, Eldon Palmer lost control of the Dodge Challenger pace car after peeling into pit road. The car struck a photographers’ stand at the south end of the pits, injuring people nearby but causing no verified fatalities.
Overview
What Happened
Core Findings
Crash Into the Stand
During the opening pace lap sequence, Eldon Palmer drove the 1971 Dodge Challenger pace car with Tony Hulman, John Glenn, and Chris Schenkel among the passengers. After leading the field away, Palmer turned toward pit road and lost control.
The car struck the photographers’ or camera stand at the end of pit road. Source wording varies slightly — “south end of the pits,” “end of pit road,” and “end of pit row” — but all point to the same operational area.
The strongest consistent finding is that no fatalities were reported. The injury count is not settled: later reports give 29 injured, while an Associated Press preview refers to Dr. Vicente Alvarez and nineteen other injured persons.
View Conflicts →Quick View
Incident Highlights
The crash occurred at the start of the 1971 Indianapolis 500.
Autoweek reports 29 injured, including two serious injuries.
An AP preview refers to one critically injured doctor and nineteen others.
Checked sources do not report deaths from the crash.
Operational Picture
Known Sequence
Race start formation
The pace car led the field at the start of the 1971 Indianapolis 500, carrying race and broadcast passengers.
Pit-road turn
Palmer peeled toward pit road at speed. Later sources describe brake lock-up or loss of control as the key movement into the crash.
Impact with camera stand
The Dodge Challenger struck the photographers’ stand or camera stand at the end of pit road / south end of the pits.
Occupants survived
Sources say the pace-car occupants were not seriously injured, although Schenkel did not continue with the broadcast.
Injury reports diverged
Later accounts reported several injured cameramen, 29 injured, or an implied total of 20 from a newspaper preview.
Date Corrected
Checked sources support 29 May 1971, not 30 May.
Venue Strong
Indianapolis Motor Speedway is well supported by official IMS material and incident sources.
Crash Mechanism Strong
Sources consistently describe the pace car hitting the photographers’ stand.
Injury Total Weak
The final official injury count was not verified in the checked source set.
The crash itself is well evidenced. The casualty total is not. Treat “29 injured” and the lower AP-derived count as competing reported figures unless a final official injury list is found.
Conflicting Information
What Does Not Fully Line Up
Number of injured
Sources differ on how many people were hurt when the pace car struck the photographers’ stand.
Reports 29 injured, including two seriously.
States Dr. Vicente Alvarez was critically injured and refers to nineteen other injured persons, implying 20 in that report.
The checked source set does not resolve this conflict conclusively.
Condition of pace-car occupants
Some wording could be read broadly, while more specific sources separate occupants from people struck at the stand.
Says none of the pace-car occupants were seriously injured.
Says everyone survived and “some were seriously hurt,” without clearly limiting that wording to stand victims.
The more specific reading is that the serious injuries were among people outside the car.
Incident date supplied vs checked
The user-supplied date was 30 May 1971, but the checked race and incident sources place the crash on Saturday, 29 May 1971.
30/05/1971.
Supports 29/05/1971.
The page uses the checked source date: 29 May 1971.
Unverified Details
References
Source Cards
RACER
INDYCAR: Palmer, driver in '71 pace car crash, dies
04/07/2016
Retrospective obituary-style report stating Eldon Palmer crashed the orange 1971 Dodge Challenger pace car into the photographers stand at the start of the 1971 Indianapolis 500. It says the brakes locked, the car hit the three-tiered camera stand at the end of pit road, no one in the car was hurt, and there were no fatalities though several cameramen were injured.
Visit Source →WRTV Indianapolis
Road to 100: 1971
2016
Retrospective on the 1971 race stating that the Dodge Challenger pace car driven by Eldon Palmer veered out of control and slammed into the base of the photographers’ stand. It says everyone survived, though some were seriously hurt.
Visit Source →Newspapers.com / The Daily Journal
The Daily Journal from Franklin, Indiana • Page 1
21/01/1974
Paywalled preview tied to later court proceedings over the same incident. The snippet states testimony about the pace car accident in the 1971 race and identifies Harold Barnhart, a safety patrol guard, as plaintiff in the suit.
Visit Source →Newspapers.com / The Indianapolis Star
1971 Indy 500 Pace Car Crash
08/02/1974
Paywalled preview of later follow-up coverage connected to litigation over the same incident. The snippet identifies Harold Barnhart and his wife as plaintiffs in a damages suit arising from the pace-car crash into the photographers’ stand.
Visit Source →Newspapers.com / Rushville Republican
Rushville Republican from Rushville, Indiana • Page 3
23/07/1971
Associated Press preview stating Dr. Vicente Alvarez of Buenos Aires was critically injured when the pace car slammed into a photographers’ stand on 29 May. It refers to nineteen other injured persons, supporting a lower injury-count variant.
Visit Source →Newspapers.com / The Flint Journal
The Flint Journal from Flint, Michigan • Page 1
1971
Preview tied to immediate or near-immediate reporting on the crash. It states astronaut John Glenn was in the back seat on the pace run and that no one in the pace car was injured.
Visit Source →Newspapers.com / The Birmingham News
The Birmingham News from Birmingham, Alabama • Page 11
1971
Associated Press preview quoting Eldon Palmer as saying nobody in the car seemed to be injured and naming Chris Schenkel as an ABC-TV commentator in the pace car.
Visit Source →Autoweek
Throttle Back Thursday: Near-tragic 1971 Indy 500 pace car crash
06/06/2018
Retrospective article stating Eldon Palmer crashed the Dodge Challenger pace car into a photographers’ stand at the end of pit row after entering pit lane at an estimated 125 mph. It reports 29 injured, two seriously, and identifies John Glenn, Tony Hulman, and Chris Schenkel as passengers.
Visit Source →Doctorindy.com
Indy 500 on Television – Part 3 (1971-1985)
25/12/2023
Detailed retrospective on the 1971 ABC broadcast. It states Eldon Palmer drove the pace car with Tony Hulman, John Glenn, and Chris Schenkel as passengers; says the car crashed into a photography stand at the south end of the pits; and says none of the occupants were seriously injured.
Visit Source →Indianapolis Motor Speedway
1971 Indianapolis 500
01/01/1971 page record
Official Indianapolis Motor Speedway page for the 1971 Indianapolis 500. It confirms the event identity and links the race to IMS historical records. The fetched text did not surface crash details, so this is used for event confirmation rather than casualty detail.
Visit Source →Indianapolis Motor Speedway
1971 Indianapolis 500 race results
Date not surfaced
Official IMS historical race-results page confirming the 1971 Indianapolis 500 event and date context. Used for race verification, not for crash casualty detail.
Visit Source →Indianapolis Motor Speedway
About the Track
Date not surfaced
Official IMS background page confirming Indianapolis Motor Speedway as the venue. Used for venue verification.
Visit Source →Indianapolis Motor Speedway
PR Preference Center
Date not surfaced
Official IMS page describing Indianapolis Motor Speedway as a 2.5-mile oval located in Speedway, Indiana. Used for town and location verification.
Visit Source →Open Evidence
Source Links
RACER
INDYCAR: Palmer, driver in '71 pace car crash, dies
04/07/2016
Retrospective obituary-style report stating Eldon Palmer crashed the orange 1971 Dodge Challenger pace car into the photographers stand at the start of the 1971 Indianapolis 500. It says the brakes locked, the car hit the three-tiered camera stand at the end of pit road, no one in the car was hurt, and there were no fatalities though several cameramen were injured.
Open →WRTV Indianapolis
Road to 100: 1971
2016
Retrospective on the 1971 race stating that the Dodge Challenger pace car driven by Eldon Palmer veered out of control and slammed into the base of the photographers’ stand. It says everyone survived, though some were seriously hurt.
Open →Newspapers.com / The Daily Journal
The Daily Journal from Franklin, Indiana • Page 1
21/01/1974
Paywalled preview tied to later court proceedings over the same incident. The snippet states testimony about the pace car accident in the 1971 race and identifies Harold Barnhart, a safety patrol guard, as plaintiff in the suit.
Open →Newspapers.com / The Indianapolis Star
1971 Indy 500 Pace Car Crash
08/02/1974
Paywalled preview of later follow-up coverage connected to litigation over the same incident. The snippet identifies Harold Barnhart and his wife as plaintiffs in a damages suit arising from the pace-car crash into the photographers’ stand.
Open →Newspapers.com / Rushville Republican
Rushville Republican from Rushville, Indiana • Page 3
23/07/1971
Associated Press preview stating Dr. Vicente Alvarez of Buenos Aires was critically injured when the pace car slammed into a photographers’ stand on 29 May. It refers to nineteen other injured persons, supporting a lower injury-count variant.
Open →Newspapers.com / The Flint Journal
The Flint Journal from Flint, Michigan • Page 1
1971
Preview tied to immediate or near-immediate reporting on the crash. It states astronaut John Glenn was in the back seat on the pace run and that no one in the pace car was injured.
Open →Newspapers.com / The Birmingham News
The Birmingham News from Birmingham, Alabama • Page 11
1971
Associated Press preview quoting Eldon Palmer as saying nobody in the car seemed to be injured and naming Chris Schenkel as an ABC-TV commentator in the pace car.
Open →Autoweek
Throttle Back Thursday: Near-tragic 1971 Indy 500 pace car crash
06/06/2018
Retrospective article stating Eldon Palmer crashed the Dodge Challenger pace car into a photographers’ stand at the end of pit row after entering pit lane at an estimated 125 mph. It reports 29 injured, two seriously, and identifies John Glenn, Tony Hulman, and Chris Schenkel as passengers.
Open →Doctorindy.com
Indy 500 on Television – Part 3 (1971-1985)
25/12/2023
Detailed retrospective on the 1971 ABC broadcast. It states Eldon Palmer drove the pace car with Tony Hulman, John Glenn, and Chris Schenkel as passengers; says the car crashed into a photography stand at the south end of the pits; and says none of the occupants were seriously injured.
Open →Indianapolis Motor Speedway
1971 Indianapolis 500
01/01/1971 page record
Official Indianapolis Motor Speedway page for the 1971 Indianapolis 500. It confirms the event identity and links the race to IMS historical records. The fetched text did not surface crash details, so this is used for event confirmation rather than casualty detail.
Open →Indianapolis Motor Speedway
1971 Indianapolis 500 race results
Date not surfaced
Official IMS historical race-results page confirming the 1971 Indianapolis 500 event and date context. Used for race verification, not for crash casualty detail.
Open →Indianapolis Motor Speedway
About the Track
Date not surfaced
Official IMS background page confirming Indianapolis Motor Speedway as the venue. Used for venue verification.
Open →Indianapolis Motor Speedway
PR Preference Center
Date not surfaced
Official IMS page describing Indianapolis Motor Speedway as a 2.5-mile oval located in Speedway, Indiana. Used for town and location verification.
Open →