-40%
"ist Lady of Drag Racing" Shirley Muldowney Hand Signed 10X8 Color Photo COA
$ 21.11
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Up for auction"ist Lady of Drag Racing" Shirley Muldowney Hand Signed 10X8 Color Cardstock Photo. This item is certified authentic by Todd Mueller Autographs and comes with their Certificate of Authenticity.
ES-7554E
Shirley Muldowney
(born June 19, 1940), also known professionally as "Cha Cha" and the "First Lady of
Drag Racing
", is an American auto racer. She was the first woman to receive a license from the
National Hot Rod Association
(NHRA) to drive a
Top Fuel
dragster
. She won the NHRA Top Fuel championship in 1977, 1980, and 1982, becoming the first person to win two and three Top Fuel titles. She won a total of 18 NHRA national events. Born Shirley Ann Roque in
Burlington, Vermont
, on June 19, 1940, Muldowney began street racing in the 1950s in
Schenectady, New York
. "School had no appeal to me. All I wanted was to race up and down the streets in a hot rod," declared Muldowney. When she was 16, she married 19-year-old Jack Muldowney, who built her first dragster. It was Jack Muldowney who first taught me how to drive a car. Jack was the mechanic. He was the guy who tuned the cars that let the girl beat all the boys. I was a kid from upstate New York with no guidance, no direction. I was headed for trouble, nothing going for me. Then I found the sport at a very young age and was able to make something out of it.
In 1958, Muldowney made her debut on the dragstrip of the Fonda Speedway. She obtained her NHRA pro license in 1965. She competed in the 1969 and 1970
U.S. Nationals
in a twin-engined dragster in
Top Gas
. With Top Gas losing popularity, Muldowney switched to
Funny Car
, buying her first car from
Connie Kalitta
.
Around this time, her husband and she drifted apart; they finally divorced in 1972. "He didn't want to go nitro racing and we parted, but we stayed friends all those years until he passed away [in 2007]," she later said.
Muldowney won her first major event, the
International Hot Rod Association
(IHRA) Southern Nationals, in 1971. She stepped up to Top Fuel, getting her license in 1973 (making her the first woman to do it), behind the wheel of
Poncho Rendon
's digger;
Don Garlits
signed her application, one of three signatures she needed to make it official; the other two were
Tommy Ivo
and Connie Kalitta.
[8]
) From 1973 to 1977, she teamed up with Kalitta as the
Bounty Hunter
and
Bounty Huntress
in
match races
, in a pair of
Ford Mustangs
, hers a
Buttera
chassis, and his a
Logghe
. The
Bounty Huntress
Mustang caught fire at Dragway 42 in Ohio in 1973.
At
Columbus, Ohio
, in 1976, Muldowney dominated Top Fuel, qualifying number-one by 0.05 second, setting low elapsed time (ET) and top speed of the meet, having the low ET in every round, breaking her own top speed record in the final, and winning the class. An unprecedented three NHRA Top Fuel Dragster world championships followed, in 1977, 1980, and 1982. Muldowney success met enormous opposition from those who felt drag racing (or any form of motorsport, for that matter) was no place for women. Garlits has said about her: Now, if you ask who do I have the most respect for, I'd say Shirley Muldowney. She went against all odds. They didn't want her to race Top Fuel, the association, the racers, nobody...just Shirley.
Muldowney noted, "NHRA fought me every inch of the way, but when they saw how a girl could fill the stands; they saw I was good for the sport."
A crash in 1984 crushed her hands, pelvis, and legs, necessitating half a dozen operations and 18 months of therapy. Muldowney was sidelined for a long period, but returned to the circuit in the late 1980s. She continued to race, mostly without major sponsorship, throughout the 1990s in IHRA competition, as well as match-racing events. She returned to the NHRA towards the end of her career, running select events until her retirement at the end of 2003.
Muldowney was described by longtime drag racer
Fred Farndon
as the "best 'natural' driver (top fuel or funny car), no question." Her recent activities include the dictation of her memoirs,
Shirley Muldowney's Tales from the Track
, which Bill Stephens transcribed, and which Sports Publishing L.L.C. published in 2005.