The Soap Box Derby is a
youth soapbox car racing program that began throughout
the nation in 1934. Winners from all over the world
come to the Derby Downs each July for the World
Championship finals. Cars competing in this event are
unpowered and rely completely on gravity to move down
the hill.
The first All-American race was
held in Dayton on August 19 1934, after an idea by
Myron Scott, a photographer for the Dayton Daily News.
The following year, the race was moved to Akron
because of its central location and hilly terrain. In
1936, Akron civic leaders recognized the need for a
permanent track site for the youth racing classic and,
through the efforts of the Works Progress
Administration (WPA), Derby Downs became a reality.