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Racer Janet Guthrie: Iowa Time Machine March 7, 1938



Iowa Time Machine ⏰: On March 7, 1938, Janet Guthrie, the first woman to compete in the Indianapolis 500 and the Daytona 500, was born in Iowa City. A glass-ceiling shattering driver, Guthrie still stands as the highest finishing woman in a top-tier NASCAR race.



Born to Jean Ruth Guthrie and Lain Guthrie, both professional pilots, Janet Guthrie earned her pilot’s license at just 17 years old in 1955. By 1963, Guthrie took her talents to ground-bound motorsports as she debuted on the SCCA circuit.



 By 1972, Guthrie was racing full-time. In 1976, a 15th place finish at the World 600 made Guthrie the first woman to compete in a NASCAR Winston Cup race. The following year, she raced to a twelfth-place finish at the Daytona 500. A sixth-place finish at Bristol in 1977 still stands as the best finish by a woman in a top-tier NASCAR race (tie, Danica Patrick, 2014). Guthrie ran the Indianapolis 500 on three occasions and even finished ninth in the 1978 race despite a fractured wrist concealed from race officials. Although her performance merited otherwise, Guthrie struggled to gain sponsorships and was forced into retirement in 1979. 



The glass-ceiling breaking Iowan was elected into the International Women’s Sports Hall of Fame and the International Motorsports Hall of Fame. Her helmet and race suit are held in the Smithsonian Institute's collection. In 2005, Guthrie released an autobiography, Janet Guthrie: Life at Full Throttle. #IowaOTD #IowaHistoryDaily #IowaHistoryCalendar



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© 2025 by Kevin T. Mason & Notes on Iowa

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