

*** Gabelich’s new record is 622.407 miles per hour. His record of 600.601 miles per hour, set on November 15, 1965, was finally broken on October 23, 1970, by Gary Gabelich. *** Craig Breedlove holds the honor of being the first man to go faster than 400, 500, and 600 miles per hour.

*** The first world land-speed record on the Bonneville Salt Flats was set on September 3, 1935, by Sir Malcolm Campbell. World land-speed record times represent an electronically-timed average of two runs over the measured mile, within a one hour time period – one run in each direction. *** Timing of world land-speed record runs is under the jurisdiction of the United States Automobile Club. Due to the curvature of the earth, it is impossible to see from one end of the course to the other. *** The total length of the course that includes the measured mile varies from year to year, but for recent runs it has been laid out in a path 80 feet wide and approximately ten miles long, with a black reference stripe down the middle. The elevation along the course is approximately 4,218 feet above sea level. Utah’s famed measured mile is located approximately seven miles beyond this marker, well in front of the mountains you see on the horizon. Historical Marker Text: Photo 2 by John Henderson, January 29, 2022.Īnd Utah’s Famed Measured Mile – Site of World Land-Speed Record Runs Photo 1 by John Henderson, January 29, 2022.
