Grenzlandring


The Grenzlandring, sometimes written Grenzland-Ring, is a former high-speed oval race track in the Lower Rhine area of Germany, around the town of Wegberg, located close to Mönchengladbach and the Dutch town of Roermond.
The Grenzlandring, to many foreigners also known as Wegbergring or Wegberg-Ring, is told to be "discovered" nearly undamaged after World War II when during one dark night in 1947, Dr. Carl Marcus, town mayor of nearby Rheydt, drove along a more or less straight looking country road. When he passed a bicycle rider more than once, he suddenly realised that this road must be a full circle. In fact, a long and wide egg-shaped concrete ring road had been built prior to World War II around Wegberg and the neighboring village of Beeck and completed in 1938 or 1939, at total costof about 3.3 million Reichsmark. As it was intended for military purposes, the construction had not made been public nor was the road shown on maps. This story today is considered part of a marketing strategy, since parts of the ring had been used by US and British military immediately after the war and had in no way been unknown.
Initiated and organised by the silk weaving mill owner and keen racing driver Emil "Teddy" Vorster and his Rheydter Club für Motorsport the first race was held on September 19, 1948, in front of about 250,000 spectators, although "just" 100,000 people had been expected to show up. The all-time lap record was set in September 1949 by Bavarian Georg "Schorsch" Meier on a supercharged BMW 500 motorbike at while Toni Ulmen in September 1951 set the all-time record for cars, driving his Veritas 2000 RS to .
On August 31, 1952, Helmut Niedermayr from Berlin crashed his Formula Two Reif/Veritas-Meteor at the exit of the Roermonder Kurve at nearly, for reasons never completely explained, killing at least 13 spectators and injuring another 42. Although the actual event was not stopped to avert panic among the crowds racing was subsequently banned from the venue by the government, after a total of four anti-clockwise and only one clockwise driven competitions that had been attended by up to 300,000 people.