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trailblazer dies

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by wazza, Sep 14, 2011.

  1. wazza
    Joined: Apr 10, 2007
    Posts: 15

    wazza
    Member
    from australia

    Betty Skelton Erde,the first woman to set the world land speed record, has died aged 85 in Florida.She became the fastest woman on earth when she reached 508km/h at Bonneville in 1965. She also set a world land speed record of 233km/h in 1956 in Florida.
     
  2. flatheadpete
    Joined: Oct 29, 2003
    Posts: 10,679

    flatheadpete
    Member
    from Burton, MI

    I saw that. A shame that so many pioneers are leaving us.
     
  3. Royalshifter
    Joined: May 29, 2005
    Posts: 16,146

    Royalshifter
    Moderator
    from California

    Definately God Speed for the Lady of Speed.
     
  4. lothiandon1940
    Joined: May 24, 2007
    Posts: 32,580

    lothiandon1940
    Member

    She must have been one very special lady. I read that she could be seen driving her red Corvette around her Florida retirement neighborhood up until the very end. RIP for one of the great ones.
     
  5. Degenerate
    Joined: Aug 5, 2007
    Posts: 240

    Degenerate
    Member
    from Indiana

    I saw this on an aviation board. Her Pitts Special "Lil Stinker" is restored and in the Smithsonian air and space museum. That airplane and her definately had an influence on me as a youngster. Sad news indeed.
     
  6. scrubba
    Joined: Jul 20, 2010
    Posts: 939

    scrubba
    Member

    Had I not seen this post , I would have never known ! Thank You so much for sharing this with us . scrubba
     
  7. Mr48chev
    Joined: Dec 28, 2007
    Posts: 36,067

    Mr48chev
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    Quite the lady and she had a number of accomplishments that are hard to match.

    From the Seattle paper
    THE VILLAGES, Fla. (AP) — Betty Skelton Erde, an aviator and auto racing pioneer once called the fastest woman on Earth, has died. She was 85.
    Erde set female speed records at Daytona Beach and Utah's Bonneville salt flats half a century ago. In 2008, she was inducted into the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America in suburban Detroit.
    Dozens of firsts are attached to her name: the auto industry's first female test driver in 1954; the first to set a female world land speed record in 1956 (145 mph at Daytona Beach); and the world land speed record for women in 1965, hitting 315.72 mph at Bonneville.
    Erde began drawing attention as a female stunt pilot as a teenager in the 1940s.
    "To me, there's hardly any feeling in the world that can equal the feeling of an airplane when the wheels leave the ground," Erde told The ***ociated Press in 2008.
    She mastered dozens of tricks. Her signature move was cutting a ribbon strung between two fishing poles with her propeller, while flying upside down just 10 feet off the ground.
    In 1948, she bought a rare Pitts Special — a lightweight, red-and-white biplane suited for aerobatics. But while Erde was soaring in popularity, she also was a rarity because she was a young, beautiful woman in a male-dominated world of death-defying stunts.
    In 1953, the man who began the NASCAR race circuit asked Erde to fly some auto racers from Pennsylvania to North Carolina. She and Bill France became fast friends.
    In February 1954, France invited Erde to Daytona. She climbed into a Dodge sedan, went 105.88 mph on the beach and set a stock car record. Erde became a Chevrolet employee and set records with Corvettes, owning 10 in all.
    In the 50s, she raced across the South American Andes, down Mexico's rugged Baja Peninsula and also set records at the Chrysler proving grounds in Michigan.
    "I would venture to say there is no other woman in the world with all the attributes of this woman," France once remarked. "The most impressive of them all is her surprising and outstanding ever-present femininity, even when tackling a man's job."
    She flew planes until she was in her mid-70s; when she was 82, she drove around her retirement community in a red Corvette.
    Said Erde in 2008: "It's been quite a ride."
    She died Aug. 31 in The Villages, a retirement community in Central Florida, where she had lived with her husband, Allan Erde.






    Read more: http://www.seattlepi.com/news/artic...ton-Erde-dies-at-85-2168782.php#ixzz1Y1z7fQWt
     
  8. So long! God speed. :(

    [​IMG]
     
  9. Von Rigg Fink
    Joined: Jun 11, 2007
    Posts: 13,401

    Von Rigg Fink
    Member
    from Garage

    what a shame to lose her

    god speed...if he can go fast enough to catch her;)
     
  10. Jalopy Joker
    Joined: Sep 3, 2006
    Posts: 34,212

    Jalopy Joker
    Member

    Wow, what an wonderful example for all of us to follow our dreams and let nothing stop you from doing what others say you can not do-God Bless
     
  11. Canada Jeff
    Joined: Jan 9, 2003
    Posts: 292

    Canada Jeff
    Member

    We're not here for long. Make it count.

    Thanks, Betty.
     
  12. ardyboy
    Joined: Mar 5, 2008
    Posts: 664

    ardyboy

    all of that in such a pretty little bundle
    RIP Betty
     
  13. Not everyone can say that. No one gets out alive, so you might as well kick up some dust while you're here. RIP Betty, you're an inspiration.
     
  14. THE_DUDE
    Joined: Aug 22, 2009
    Posts: 2,601

    THE_DUDE
    Member

    X2 on that one
     
  15. pug man
    Joined: Apr 9, 2007
    Posts: 1,010

    pug man
    Member
    from louisiana

    Wow what a lady, never knew this.....
     

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