History of women at Indy
SportsLine.com wire reports
INDIANAPOLIS -- Chronology of women at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway:
May 1971 -- Speedway for the first time allows women in the pits and garage area.
March 14, 1976 --
Arlene Hiss , the first woman granted a competition license by the U.S. Auto Club, is the first to drive in an Indy-car race, finishing 14th at Phoenix. She does not enter the Indy 500.
March 1976 -- Janet Guthrie is the first woman to enter the Indy 500.
April 1976 -- Guthrie is granted a USAC license.
May 1976 -- Guthrie finishes 15th in her first Indy car race, at Trenton. She is the first woman to practice at Indianapolis and the first to pass the Indy rookie test, but she does not make a qualification attempt.
May 29, 1977 -- Guthrie, the first woman to qualify for the Indy 500, starts 26th and finishes 29th.
October 1977 -- Mary Fendrich Hulman becomes Speedway board chairman after the death of her husband, Tony Hulman.
May 28, 1978 -- Mary Fendrich Hulman first gives "Gentlemen, start your engines" command; Guthrie drives her second Indy 500, starting 15th and finishing ninth.
May 27, 1979 -- Guthrie drives her third and last Indy 500, starting 14th and finishing 34th.
May 1982 -- Desire Wilson is the second woman to enter the Indy 500 and the second to pass the rookie test. She makes one unsuccessful attempt to qualify, but sets a then-record for a woman driver at Indy at 191.042 mph.
May 1983 -- Wilson enters Indy but does not complete a rookie refresher test.
May 1984 -- Wilson passes rookie refresher test but does not make a qualification attempt.
May 1988 -- Mary Fendrich Hulman becomes Speedway board chairman emeritus; her daughter, Mari Hulman George, becomes Speedway board chairman.
November 1990 -- Lyn St. James test drives at Speedway.
April 1992 -- St. James becomes third woman to enter the race and takes part in the Rookie Orientation Program.
May 24, 1992 -- St. James, the second woman to qualify for the race, starts 27th and finishes 11th. She completes 193 laps, the only rookie still running at the end, and is named Rookie of the Year.
May 30, 1993 -- St. James drives in her second Indy 500, completes 176 laps and finishes 25th.
May 14, 1994 -- St. James qualifies at 224.154 mph for a start on the outside of the second row, the best starting position for a woman at Indy.
May 29, 1994 -- St. James drives in her third Indy 500, completes 170 laps and finishes 19th.
May 20, 1995 -- St. James qualifies for her fourth Indy race at 225.346 mph, the fastest in auto racing history by a woman, for a start in the middle of the 10th row.
May 28, 1995 -- St. James drives in her fourth Indy 500 but is involved in a six-car, first-lap crash and finishes 32nd.
May 11, 1996 -- St. James qualifies for her fifth Indy 500 at 224.594 mph.
May 26, 1996 -- St. James drives in her fifth Indy 500, starting 18th and finishing 14th after a crash on her 154th lap.
December 1996 -- Mai Lindstrom, longtime motorsports public relations and marketing representative, is named the director of public relations for the Speedway and the Indy Racing League.
May 10, 1997 -- St. James qualifies for her sixth Indy 500 at 210.145; bumped from the lineup but restored when IRL adds two other drivers to the field.
May 27, 1997 -- St. James drives in her sixth Indy 500, starting 34th and finishing 13th after a crash on her 187th lap.
April 10, 1998 -- Mary Fendrich Hulman, Speedway board chairman emeritus, dies at age 93.
May 17, 1998 -- St. James fails to qualify for the race, ending her streak of six years in the lineup.
May 23, 1999 -- St. James, who qualified for the race a day earlier, is bumped from the lineup.
May 20, 2000 -- Sarah Fisher, 19-year-old rookie, averages 220.237 mph to become the third woman to qualify at Indy; St. James, trying to qualify for her seventh start, crashes on a warmup lap but is not injured.
May 21, 2000 -- St. James, in a team backup car, qualifies at 218.826, putting two women in the starting lineup for the first time.
May 28, 2000 -- St. James takes turn 1 too high and hits the wall after tapping Fisher's car. Fisher attempts to recover, but can't, ending the day for both women in the field. St. James completes 69 laps, while Fisher completes 71 and finishes one spot ahead of St. James at 31st.
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