-40%
Junior Johnson Likker Days Rumfelt boys Signed poster Print Moonshiners #86/1250
$ 842.16
- Description
- Size Guide
Description
Junior Johnson Likker Poster Print ( Junior and the Rumfelt Boys running Moonshine )JEFF JAKUB (artist) titled " THE LIKKER DAYS "
fair well used condition.
bottom / left penciled # 86 / 1250. rare print.
very bottom / left corner , printed on poster (C) Jeff Jakub.
small tears to edges around the white borders see scan examples.
a number of creases where it was rolled / storage issues , see picture scan examples.
framed & matted , will display nicer than shown.
Measurements are aprox 19" x 29"
six authentic autographs in BLACK sharpie ( includes - Junior Johnson ) + the following that I am guessing at the names;
Cecil Rumfelt , Terry Rumfelt , Ves Rumfelt , Ray Hidpelt & Dwight Case
NOTE:
Junior Johnson also signed in pencil in the bottom/right corner border.
also there is a facsimile signature printed on poster , at bottom / right corner , in the art work area.
This makes a total of SEVEN authentic real autographs on this well used print.
no credit card on local pickup in Salisbury or Spencer NC.
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Johnson was born in Ronda, North Carolina, the fourth of seven children of Lora Belle (Money) and Robert Glenn Johnson, Sr. His family is of Ulster Scots descent, and settled in the foothills of North Carolina in the early 1600s. The Johnson family was involved in the whiskey business before he was born. His maternal great-grandfather served as the second highest ranking Confederate general in North Carolina.
His father, a lifelong bootlegger, spent nearly twenty of his sixty-three years in prison, as their house was frequently raided by revenue agents. His family experienced the largest alcohol raid in United States history, seizing 400 gallons of moonshine from the house. Junior was arrested and spent one year in prison in Ohio in 1956-57 for having an illegal still, although he was never caught in his many years of transporting bootleg liquor at high speed.
In 1955, Johnson began his career as a NASCAR driver. In his first full season, he won five races and finished sixth in the 1955 NASCAR Grand National points standings.
In 1958 Johnson won six races.
In 1959, Johnson won five more NASCAR Grand National races (including a win from the pole position at the 1959 Hickory 250); by this time he was regarded as one of the best short-track racers in the sport.
In the mid 1960s, writer Tom Wolfe researched and wrote an article about Johnson, published in March 1965 in Esquire, and reprinted in Wolfe's The Kandy-Kolored Tangerine Flake Streamline Baby. This was eventually reprinted in The Best American Sports Writing of the Century, ed. David Halberstam [1999]. The article, originally entitled "Great Balls of Fire", turned Johnson into a national celebrity and led to fame beyond the circle of NASCAR fans. In turn, the article was made into a 1973 movie based on Johnson's career as a driver and moonshiner. The movie was entitled The Last American Hero (a.k.a. Hard Driver). Jeff Bridges starred as the somewhat fictionalized version of Johnson, and Johnson himself served as technical advisor for the film. The movie was critically acclaimed and featured the Jim Croce hit song, "I Got A Name".