Growing up in Brooklyn, New York, he earned money-delivering groceries and soon had the money to buy a bicycle. As a teenager he tried his hand at bicycle racing but found that he lacked the stamina that the sport required. Motorcycle racing held more promise and he competed for approximately three years winning several minor events but it was in racing on four wheels that he would make his name.
Soon there was no looking back as DePalma began to win races in the Allen-Kingston. This brought him to the attention of the Fiat factory, one of the if not the leading team of the day. After establishing himself as a topflight driver he left Fiat for Mercedes. One of his most famous races was the 1912 Indianapolis 500. Leading by five laps with only 4 laps to the finish a connecting rod in his big gray Mercedes failed. Nursing the stricken car the remainder of the race, its big engine making terrible noises, the specter of the second place National driven by Joe Dawson bore down on them. The lead, which had been 5 laps, became miles and the miles became yards. With the checkered flag now in sight the Mercedes gave one last blast before turning silent. The crowd cheered DePalma when he and his mechanic got out to push but this day would belong to Dawson as he flashed by to take the victory.
Playing a waiting game he watched as the leading cars including Oldfield wore out their tires. Ten laps from the end he saw his chance and sprinted into the lead. In front of him was Oldfield but as soon as he passed his rival he made signals to his pit that he was coming in. Seeing this Oldfield decided to make a pitstop also to replace worn tires. As Oldfields Mercer was having his tires replaced he glanced onto the track just as DePalma was driving by. It dawned on Oldfield in a second, he had been tricked, DePalma never planned to stop. In a rage the Mercer leapt out of the pits. Oldfield, for all his braggadocio was not without talent or courage. For the last 6 laps he gave everything that he had to close the gap but fell 200 yards short as DePalma took the flag. It took two years but in 1915 DePalma had his 500 but with America entering the war he enlisted in the Army Air Service. After the Armistice DePalma continued to race and placed 2nd to Jimmy Murphy in the 1921 French Grand Prix. DePalma finally retired in the early 1930s and continued to work in the automotive field as a consultant. He died at the age of seventy-two in 1956. |
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