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Hubert Platt -- 2005 Honoree -- NHRA National Hot Rod Renunion

Home > Articles & Stories > Hubert Platt -- 2005 Honoree -- NHRA National Hot Rod Renunion

Hubert Platt -- 2005 Honoree
NHRA National Hot Rod Renunion

by Ed Miles

From his early days as a struggling drag racer, through the factory years and into the present days, one thing is constant about Hubert Platt -- his magnetic and genuinely engaging personality. He is a person who makes everyone he meets feel very important, and he always has time to help others.

He has always been an upfront kind of guy. If he liked you, you knew it because he would do anything for you. If he didn't like something about you, you also knew that. He would tell you, not behind your back, but face to face. Even in those rare moments, the people involved also admired him for being so upfront and honest with them.

Another consistent trait Hubert has always displayed is his appearance -- both himself and his cars. We all know the sterotypical image of the drag racer with grease under his fingernails, dirty jeans and tee shirt, and unkept hair. Contrast that with Hubert's appearance: clean and well groomed with starched shirts, shiny boots and pressed jeans, even with a "crease".

I think these traits, along with Hubert's "gift of gab," were the very elements that attracted Ford Motor Company to choose him to be their spokesman to tour the country talking with the public and showcasing Ford's products.

Hubert made the trip from the early days of curving, winding roads in the Carolinas and Georgia, to the straight line of the drag strips, and straight into the boardrooms in the heart of the automotive industry in Detroit and Dearborn. He was a perfect fit at every stop along the way.

But far from being "all show and no go," Hubert's on-track preformances were ledgendary as all his career shows. This is best illustrated by the following story.

Around 1960, a young kid around twelve years of age was fascinated by Hubert and his racing at a rural drag strip in the deep south one hot Saturday night. His attention was drawn to Hubert not only by his on-track preformance but by Hubert's massive gold ring cast in the initials "HP."

So, he looked up at Hubert and asked, "Does the HP mean horse power or Hubert Platt?"

Hubert looked down and placed his hand on the kid's shoulder and replied, "Well son, I think it means both!"

See, also, the photos in 2005 National Hot Rod Reunion Album 1, 2005 National Hot Rod Reunion Album 2, 2005 National Hot Rod Reunion Album 3, Platt & Payne 2005 Ford Mustang