The Women Who Made Drag Racing's Golden Era Unforgettable
The Women Who Made Drag Racing's Golden Era Unforgettable
Burnout Society
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451 views May 14, 2026
#DragRacing #NHRA #GoldenEraDragRacing
Five women shaped drag racing's golden era in ways the sport has never fully accounted for. Linda Vaughn turned the Hurst Golden Shifter into the most recognizable promotional vehicle in American motorsports. Barbara Roufs stood on the starting line at Orange County International Raceway for two summers in the early seventies and became, twenty-five years after her death, one of the most recognizable faces of the era. Jungle Pam Hardy made the staging lane at a Funny Car match race into a two-person performance that every showman in the class spent the next
fifty years trying to copy. Shirley Muldowney won three NHRA Top Fuel world championships when no woman in any motorsport had ever won one, against an establishment that had rejected her competition license in writing. And Bunny Burkett, a Virginia transmission-shop owner with no factory backing, won the inaugural IHRA Alcohol Funny Car World Championship in 1986 and held the distinction of first woman to win an NHRA Funny Car national event — alone, for twenty-two years. This is the full story of all five, told as five chapters under one roof.
From the introduction line Vaughn gave George Hurst in 1966, to the negatives that sat in Tom West's archive for forty years before Roufs went viral, to the May 1972 sidewalk encounter in West Chester that ended Pam Hardy's college plans, to the inner tube coming out of a left front tire at Sanair on June 29, 1984, to the Labor Day weekend in 1995 when Carl Ruth's car crossed the centerline at Beaver Springs Dragway —
very chapter is built on primary-source research, period publications, and the documented record. No invented dialogue. No dramatic inflation. Just the story, told the way the people who were there in those grandstands at Lions, Indy, OCIR, Bristol, and Maple Grove already know it deserves to be told.