The Hot Cars of Phoenix

While on a recent trip to Phoenix to capture some Cactus League spring training games, I made a visit to the Martin Auto Museum. The Martin Museum is located in an older strip mall, in a building that felt like it was a supermarket or discount store in a previous life. The museum features over 170 vehicles, including classic cars, hot rods, customs, and imports. It also contains a fair amount of auto memorabilia, signage, and a few antique gas pumps. The museum was founded by Mel Martin as a means to share his expanding collection and to ‘pass down his sizeable amount of knowledge to the generations that follow.’

Queen Wilhelmina’s 1933 Buick

The Martin Auto Museum is very focused on education; its website provides automotive history lesson plans for grades one through twelve. Younger grades are encouraged to create personal and family automotive histories through scrapbooking. Automotive history is incorporated into higher grade levels, with topics that include automobile types, automotive safety, the Arsenal of Democracy, the assembly line, as well as the representation of cars in song, film, art, and literature. The focus on education is clearly evident in the automobiles on display, as each is accompanied by a lengthy and often technical description of the car. While this practice allows for the dissemination of automotive knowledge, it lacks the personal stories that often accompany old cars. Consequently, the displays are somewhat sterile, as there is little opportunity for the visitor to connect to the car in a personal way. This focus on the technical rather than the personal eliminates any possibility of recognizing women’s relationship to cars. Without this social connection, the featured women in the Martin Museum exhibits are limited to famous women, women with relationships to famous men, women in motorsports, and unidentified women in photographs and film.

The woman who receives the most attention is Bertha Benz. Benz and her car, an 1886 Benz Motorwagen [replica], are featured in nearly every automotive museum I have visited. The attention is well deserved, as Benz, whose dowry financed the automotive enterprise of her husband Karl, drove the Patent-Motorwagen No. 3 on the first long-distance internal combustion engine [ICE] road trip to demonstrate the automobile’s feasibility and well as to garner publicity for Karl’s growing company. Greta Garbo is featured in two displays, as an owner [along with Mae West] of a 1930 Duesenberg Model J Torpedo Convertible as well as a 1925 Lincoln Model L. As the Lincoln placard reads, the photo ‘captures the elegance and timeless beauty of both the car and the actress.’ The conflation of characteristics of women and cars is a common promotional technique. The 1933 Buick Series 90 Limousine, formerly owned by Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands, is also on display. The description which accompanies the vehicle includes links to further information not only of the car, but also the lovely queen. 

Popular culture connections include the custom car created for the film The Late Show which co-starred Lily Tomlin. The Cars & Stars Trivia video display features stills from famous car movies; unidentified female stars appear in scenes from American GraffitiThe Italian JobThelma and LouiseFast and Furious, and Rebel Without a Cause.

The other category of women on display in the museum are partners of important or famous men. Photos of the founder’s supportive wife Sallie are found on walls and in glass cases. The female partners of rockabilly star Garlin Hackney and American ‘rodder’ Dain Gingerelli are also pictured but not always identified.

While the descriptions that accompany the cars often suffer from TMI [too much information], there were two vehicles that included no information whatsoever. Two midget cars on display had the names of what could be presumed to be the female drivers and/or crew team painted on the sides; however, there was no information about the cars or the women who raced them. Perhaps this was an exhibit in progress; however in its current state it appears as a missed opportunity to include women in the museum’s automotive history offerings.

Midget racer driven by Mary Hall and Carrie Drovo

Unlike the majority of museums, Martin visitors are invited to sit in the most of the cars which provides the opportunity to pose for photos. I found myself behind the wheel of a 1964 Ford Thunderbird convertible doing my best Thelma and Louise impression. This car is sponsored by a woman, but again, there is no information about the particular history of this vehicle so we are left to wonder about the sponsor’s connection to the car.

The vehicles in the Martin Auto Museum are varied and beautifully restored. The museum’s policy of allowing visitors to sit behind the wheel is unique among the museums I have visited. However, the lack of personal stories attached to each car misses the opportunity to connect to museum visitors in nostalgic, engaging, and meaningful ways. And perhaps more significantly, it leaves women out of the driver’s seat.

Me and the T-Bird

Women of the Autosphere

Earlier this month I received an invitation to sit in on a women in motorsports webinar. The online event was hosted by the Motoring Podcast Network and sponsored by the IMRRC [International Motor Racing Research Center]. Although the History of Motorsports Series focuses on all aspects of motor racing, the focus on female racers is part of the Center’s celebration of Women’s History Month. Consequently, there have been weekly Virtual Center Conversations on women involved in various motorsport platforms, including Drag Racing, Trans Am, Short Track, and SIM. The sessions are co-hosted by Crew Chief Eric from Gran Touring Motorsports, and Lauren Goodman from the REVS Institute. I met Lauren at the Argetsinger Racing Symposium a number of years ago when we both served on the Women in Motorsports panel. Eric is the technical genius behind the Argetsinger and a fellow SAH [Society of Automotive Historians] member. Lauren and Eric are co-creators for the Motoring Podcast Network and have extensive backgrounds in motorsports and motorsports History.

The session I observed was focused on Trans Am racing, and featured four women who are active in the sport. As Lauren states in her introduction: ‘Get ready for an electrifying discussion as we bring together four of the most accomplished women in TransAm and Road racing! Cindi Lux, Michele Abbate, Amy Ruman, and special guest Erin Vogel take the stage for an exclusive panel diving into the highs, the challenges, and the evolution of women in motorsports. From the adrenaline filled battles to the precision of road racing, they’ll share their first-hand experiences and their insights on what it takes to compete at the highest levels. Whether you’re a die-hard racing fan or just love hearing inspiring stories from trailblazers, this is a conversation you won’t want to miss!’

Cindi’s Dodge Viper

For those unfamiliar with Trans Am, it is described as a North American sports car racing series sanctioned by the Sports Car Club of America [SCCA]; it competes on a variety of track types including road courses and street circuits. It is a competition for modified production-based cars, primarily focused on driver skill and mechanical parity. As one of the panel members exclaimed, ‘Trans Am is fast, loud, and hot.’

Amy Ruman’s Corvette

The four on the panel, including Amy Ruman, the first woman to win the Trans Am championship title, represented a wide range of racing experience. They each entered motorsports through different avenues; some were raised in racing households, while others defied family members to follow their passion. As one remarked, ‘often you have to challenge those who think you shouldn’t do it.’ Female role models played an important part in each woman’s advancement; consequently, they all recognized the necessity of serving in the same capacity to young women new to the sport. Encouraging girls to come forward, inviting them into the pit, answering their questions, and persuading them to participate on social media were only a few of the many suggestions that were offered. The women collectively emphasized that Trans Am isn’t just about driving; they discussed the many behind-the-scenes opportunities motorsports offers. The obstacles women face were also addressed; most prominent is the difficulty of securing funding and sponsorship. This hour-long conversation among experienced, engaging Trans Am racers was a unique opportunity to discover how women have negotiated membership in the male motorsport arena and serves as a source of inspiration for those – female and male – interested in motorsports as a career or as an exciting, adrenaline driven pastime.

Michelle’s Ford Mustang

The Motorsport Broadcasting Network not only serves women in motorsport through these panels, but its Break/Fix Women of the Autosphere podcasts, hosted by Lauren, provides over 80 interviews and presentations ‘dedicated to celebrating the diverse women in Automotive and Motorsports Industries.’ Videos of Women of the Autosphere are also included on Eric’s Gran Touring Motorsports website. For those interested in all things women in motorsport, I would strongly suggest making an online visit to either of these locations. Through their incredible efforts, Eric and Lauren have brought motorsport women to the mainstream. I invite you to take a look!