Jeanetta Holder made this special quilt for racecar driver Bobby Unser in 1981 to mark his three Indianapolis 500 wins. ID.THF80400(Inset Image) Jeanetta Holder posed for this studio portrait in the late 1970s. ID.THF78732
May 2010
Fast Cars and Warm Quilts: Auto Racing’s “Quilt Lady”
On May 30, 1932, the day that Jeanetta Pearson Holder was born in Kentucky, racecars sped around the track at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway about 250 miles to the north. The timing of Jeanetta’s birth was certainly a hint of things to come: she would grow up with a passion for auto racing, and as an adult, become that sport’s “Quilt Lady.”
For nearly 35 years, Jeanetta has combined her love of auto racings and her sewing talents to create unique quilts for winners of the Indianapolis 500 and other auto races.
MORE:Fast Cars and Warm Quilts:
Auto Racing’s “Quilt Lady”
Jeanetta Holder presents A.J. Foyt with a quilt as the winner of the 1977 Indianapolis 500.ID.THF78695
Al Unser as the jubilant winner of the Pocono 500 in 1978, with Jeanetta’s quilt at his side. ID.THF78710
Bobby Unser with Jeanetta Holder at Pocono in 1980. ID.THF78752
Dale Earnhardt is wrapped in pride and his quilt after the 1995 Brickyard 400 race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. ID.THF78819
Jeanetta Holder has also made quilts to celebrate other racing milestones. She presented this quilt in 1999 to racing team owner Roger Penske to mark his 30 years of racing at the Indianapolis 500. The Penske team had won the Indianapolis 500 ten times by then; these wins are represented on the quilt. ID.THF78850
A Love for Racing, A Talent for Sewing
As a little girl growing up on a Kentucky farm, Jeanetta made her own small racecars out of tobacco sticks and lard cans which she “raced everywhere [she] went.” Jeanetta’s childhood creative streak soon extended to sewing. She began to make clothes for her doll--and her pet cat. By the time she was 12, Jeanetta began sewing quilts, filling them with cotton batting from cotton she grew herself.
Jeanetta was clearly “driven.” When she didn’t have a car in which to take her driver’s license test, the teenager borrowed a taxicab. About this same time Jeanetta started going to the race track. Soon 20-year-old Jeanetta was speeding around an oval dirt track at the wheel of a 1950 Hudson at Beech Bend Park in Warren County, Kentucky. In the early 1950s, women drivers were uncommon--and so was safety equipment. Jeanetta was dressed in a t-shirt and blue jeans for these regional races.
Listen to Jeanetta Holder talk about her early racing days in this February 2010 interview.
Becoming Racing’s Quilt Lady
Jeanetta soon left behind her experience as an amateur racecar driver for a career as a wife, mother, and decorator. She and her husband moved to Indianapolis in 1953.
Jeanetta--who attended her first Indianapolis 500 race in 1950--remained a racing fan, collecting autographs from drivers whenever she had the chance. In the mid-1970s, a friend suggested that Jeanetta use her sewing talents to create a racing-themed quilt that included these signatures. That same year, Jeanetta presented the finished quilt to 1976 Indianapolis 500 race winner Johnny Rutherford.
In the years since, Jeanetta has looked through her pile of fabric and embroidery thread and cut her own quilt design patterns out of newspaper to create over 75 racing-themed quilts. She has presented them not only to winners of the Indianapolis 500, but also races like the Pocono 500, the California 500 at Ontario, the Norton Michigan 500, and NASCAR’S Brickyard 400.
The winning drivers treasure these quilts. Bobby Unser’s quilts grace the beds in his home. Rick Mears built a room onto his house to accommodate the large size quilts.
Bobby Unser’s Quilt
Jeanetta Holder met and got to know many of the racecar drivers, especially Bobby and Al Unser. It was a special delight for Jeanetta to present quilts to the Unser boys when they won: Al in 1978 and Bobby in 1980 at Pocono; Al at the Indianapolis 500 in 1978 and 1987; and Al Jr. at the Indianapolis 500 in 1992 and 1994.
Bobby Unser’s 1981 Indianapolis 500 win became one of the most controversial finishes in history. Unser won the race, but was stripped of his win the following morning in favor of second place driver Mario Andretti. Since Jeanetta was to present the winning driver with a quilt the day after the race, she gave the 1981 quilt to Andretti. Unser was ultimately awarded the win in October 1981, after a lengthy appeals process. In the wake of this dispute and to mark his three Indianapolis wins (1968, 1975, and 1981), Jeanetta decided to make Bobby Unser the special quilt shown above.