Danny Oakes (July 18, 1911, in Santa Barbara, California – January 13, 2007 in Huntington Beach, California) was a midget car hall of fame driver.
He became interested in racing when he delivered morning and evening newspapers in his hometown of Santa Barbara, California. His favorite day was Monday. He viewed Model T cars powered by Frontenac motors parked outside a downtown Santa Barbara restaurant when the professional racecar drivers from San Francisco came to town. Oakes fantasized about the day he would become a race driver.
He began attending races at Legion Ascot Speedway. He built a black roadster with chrome wheels that he drove to the track. The car led to an opportunity to be a mechanic on a bootlegger's racecar. Oakes drove the car at warmups at area racetracks.
Oakes began racing at Legion Ascot Speedway in 1932 at age 21 in the Class C for beginners. Legion Ascot Speedway closed down in 1936, and Oakes switched to midget cars. He won the Pacific Coast championship three times. Oakes was one of the drivers who was unable to race in the prime of his life during the four years of World War II, as all racing halted during the war. Oakes was a flight inspector at Lockheed.
Oakes won the first race after the war at Gilmore Stadium, the 1945 Turkey Night Grand Prix. He won the 1947 Pacific AAA midget car championship. He later won the 1959 Pacific Coast USAC championship. Oakes holds the 40 lap record at Gilmore.
He drove for 25 years in the midget cars and championship cars, but he was unable to qualify for any Indianapolis 500 races as a driver. He attempted from 1952 to 1955. He was bumped from the field in 1954, and he did not complete his attempt in 1952. He stood by as a relief driver for his friend Alberto Ascari, but Ascari's Ferrari was eliminated before his first pit stop.