Carroll Shelby: Cobra Creator and American Racing Legend Dead at 89

Ford SportTrac Forum

Help Support Ford SportTrac Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

TrainTrac

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jan 31, 2002
Messages
6,262
Reaction score
36
Location
Mahomet, IL
The race is run, the flag unfurled, the champion now will rest. I'm sure he crossed the finish line wearing his trademark pinstriped bib overalls, and with the pedal to the metal. God speed, Carroll Shelby. Thanks for seven decades of great stories, memories, chili, and cars. You leave behind one helluva legacy through your work in the automotive world, and your philanthropy. Now you and The Deuce can resume your rivalry with Enzo anew.



:sad:

Carroll Shelby: A Life Well Lived



May 11, 2012



Carroll Hall Shelby, the Texan who created the famous Shelby Cobra and uncounted other high-performance machines that turned the auto world on its ear, and made it a whole lot more fun for 50 years, died in Dallas Thursday night at age 89. He had been hospitalized for pneumonia.



While perhaps best known now for his Shelby Cobras and Shelby Mustangs, the racer and car builder's signature accomplishment was the 1-2-3 finish in 1966 in the 24 Hours of Le Mans, ending Ferrari's then-domination of the event. Charged by Ford with making its GT40 racer competitive, he stuffed it with a 427 cu. in. V-8 and ran the table.



But he'd first taken on the Ferraris and Porsches of the world on their own European sports car racing turf early in the 1960s with his original and now-legendary Cobras, mating a Ford V-8 with a light British AC roadster.



Shelby, who affected the aw-shucks demeanor of the chicken farmer he once was, said, "I never made a damn dime until I started doing what I wanted."



What he wanted was, if you will, power for the people, automotively speaking.



"I love horsepower," he said more than once.



Beyond just his efforts in the small world of hot-rodding, Shelby influenced how Detroit automakers thought about high-performance, and he proved that hard work and bit of guile can make a hero.



But to achieve that, he had to jump from chicken-raising his fowl all died of a disease one year and into full-time auto racing, which he'd been doing on the side, in the 1950s. He was a success at first continuing to wear the work overalls that he did as a farmer and parlayed that reputation into a foothold as a car builder.



The litany of significant cars he created is long, running from the original 1962 AC Cobra small British sports car with a big (for the times) Ford engine through a sojourn at Chrysler and a stint with GM via a failed Oldsmobile-powered car, back to Ford. He was involved with development of Ford's GT 500 Mustang, the 2013 version of which is certified as the most-powerful regular-production car in the world.



His love affair put him into the orbit of industry giants of the time, as he more and more successfully showed car companies that powerful engines in lightweight cars was a viable and roadworthy combination on which he and they could make a lot of money.



He became good friends with Lee Iacocca who was president at Ford Motor when Shelby began as a car builder. The relationship continue when Iacocca moved to Chrysler.



Iacocca serendipitously happened upon on a small dinner in a Los Angeles restaurant some years back, intended as an intimate schmooze between Shelby and a journalist. Iacocca plopped down at the table and he and Shelby started telling stories.



Among them, how the two began their relationship.



Iacocca said Shelby was pestering him for money to build the original Cobra, and was so persistent that "I finally gave him the money to get him out of my office."



Much later, in 2010, Shelby was facing two challenging phenomena: Mortality, and the changing nature of the go-fast auto business. At the time, he was taking 25 pills a day, tooling around in a motorized wheelchair and talking about passing the torch at Shelby American, the company he set up to build small numbers of exciting cars, as well as parts.



He noted that extracting the most performance from an engine had become an exercise in computer programming, not tinkering. "I don't have the power to fight all the problems that I used to anymore," he said at the time.



"I've had a good run. I've built a lot of things that work and a lot of things that didn't work." He estimates that of the 165 car projects he tried over his lifetime, seven or eight turned a profit. Big enough, it seems, to keep the enterprise rolling.



His was a bold approach to car crafting that was too in-your-face for mainline car companies to conjure in-house. They let him come up with wild machines under their sponsorship, then refined them into cars the automakers could sell as high-performance halos.



Along the way he came up with a recipe for a mean bowl of chili, sufficiently infamous to spark an annual beat-this chili cookoff in Texas, and later even ventured into fashion timepieces.



He began his car building with subterfuge. Hoping to give the impression he was producing a lot of the original 1962 Cobras, he kept repainting the two he had built so car magazines would show them in a variety of colors.



And he had to fend off another giant, his eventual friend Robert E. Petersen, founder of Motor Trend and Hot Rod magazines, for the affections of a woman.



Petersen saw himself as merely taking advantage of an opportunity. Shelby recalled it as a work of infamy: "He'd tell her, 'You don't want to go around with a chicken farmer. And he'll lose (races), anyway'."



Rumors began circulating about a health problem when the affable auto man failed to appear as scheduled at the New York auto show in early April to promote his latest creations, the 950-horsepower Shelby 1000 and the 1,100-hp Shelby 1000 S/C.



Shelby published an update on his Facebook page in late April to say, in the vein of Mark Twain's "the reports of my death are greatly exaggerated," that he had been hospitalized for pneumonia, but was "resting comfortably with family and working on getting better."



"My heart was a big concern, and I struggled with that until 1990 when I had a transplant," he said. "There are a lot of negatives involved with living with transplantation but it did save my life, so I have to work hard with 30 pills a day. I have for 21 years. They told me I might get five years out of it, but I wouldn't get more than two good years. Here I am, 21 years later, talking to you.



"I'm the luckiest old man in the universe, and I'm doing what I want to do. I couldn't be more thankful for my life, and the way it is."



Shelby is survived by his three children Patrick, Michael and Sharon, his sister, Anne Shelby Ellison of Fort Worth, six grandchildren, four great grandchildren and his wife Cleo. Funeral plans are not immediately available.



In lieu of flowers, the family asks that donations be made in his name to the Carroll Shelby Foundation (<A HREF="http://www.cscf.org/">http://www.cscf.org/</A>)

 
Last edited by a moderator:


Carroll Hall Shelby

January 23, 1923 - May 10, 2012



The race is run, the flag unfurled, the champion now will rest.

God speed, Carroll Shelby, we will never forget you.



LEGENDARY ENTREPRENEUR CARROLL SHELBY PASSES AWAY



LOS ANGELES - May 11, 2012 - Carroll Shelby International, Inc., (OTC: CSBI.PK) announced today that Carroll Hall Shelby, a man whose vision for performance transformed the automobile industry, has died at age 89. Mr. Shelby passed away yesterday at Baylor Hospital in Dallas. The cause of death was not disclosed.



Born on Jan. 11, 1923, Carroll Shelby was one of America's greatest success stories. Championship-winning racecar driver, "flying sergeant" wartime pilot, philanthropist, entrepreneur, car manufacturer and racing team owner, he embodied the ingenuity, tenacity and grit to overcome any obstacle. He is perhaps the only person to have worked at a visible level with all three major American automobile manufacturers.



Carroll Shelby founded Carroll Shelby International, a publicly held corporation involved in many industries. His licensing arm has agreements with industry giants, such as Mattel, Sony, Ford Motor Company and Electronic Arts. His car company, Shelby American, has a thriving parts business as well as a line of muscle cars including the Shelby GT500 Super Snake, Shelby GT350 and Shelby GTS. The Las Vegas-based company also manufactures a limited number of the 1960s Shelby 289 "street," 289 FIA, 427 S/C and Daytona Coupe Cobras.



Shelby considered his greatest achievement to be the establishment of the Carroll Shelby Foundation. Created in 1992 while Shelby was waiting for a heart transplant, the charity is dedicated to providing medical assistance for those in need, including children, educational opportunities for young people through automotive and other training programs and benefitting the Carroll Shelby Automotive Foundation.



Shelby remained active in the management of each of his companies and the Foundation until his death, even though he endured both heart and kidney transplants in the last two decades of his life.



"We are all deeply saddened, and feel a tremendous sense of loss for Carroll's family, ourselves and the entire automotive industry," said Joe Conway, president of Carroll Shelby International, Inc. and board member. "There has been no one like Carroll Shelby and never will be. However, we promised Carroll we would carry on, and he put the team, the products and the vision in place to do just that."



Shelby is survived by his three children Patrick, Michael and Sharon, his sister Anne Shelby Ellison of Fort Worth and his wife Cleo. Funeral plans are not currently available. Information about the Carroll Shelby Foundation is available at www.carrollshelbyfoundation.org.



Donations to the Carroll Shelby Foundation are encouraged in lieu of flowers.



Carroll Shelby Foundation

19021 South Figueroa Street

Gardena, California 90248



 
Loss of a great mind, for the performance world....:sad:

One of the original greats that made performance and horsepower, available to to drive off the lot.
 
Really sad day. One of my favorite American legends.



I was wondering why my pitbull, Shelby, was sad earlier.:sad:
 
Carroll Shelby once sold a custom-built 427 Cobra to Bill Cosby. Here's "Cos" telling the story of that mighty machine:



:driving:

<iframe width="420" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/3-JQksYxgM0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

 

Latest posts

Top