Dream for speed
David Williams, the executive director of the Hydroplane and Raceboat Museum in Kent, Washington, remembers watching his very first race at 5 years old.
“I just was amazed by the sound and color and excitement and huge rooster tails that the boats threw,” he says. He filled his childhood by making model boats during the day and dreaming about them at night. At 20, Williams raced a 15-foot-long hydroplane with a Ford Pinto engine, getting up to 95 mph.
Then he went on to help build and to drive some of the best raceboats in the world. But after a few years in the top echelons of the sport, Williams quit in 1982 after four of his friends died in separate racing accidents. It wasn’t until 1993 that he was compelled to return to his passion.