January 11, 1923 - Leesburg, Texas. Carroll Hall Shelby is born
to Warren Hall Shelby, a rural mail carrier, and Eloise
Lawrence Shelby. 
November
1941 - Begins training at Lackland
Air Force Base near San Antonio, TX. On training missions,
Carroll corresponds with his fiancee by dropping love letters
placed in his flying boots, onto her farm. As a flight
instructor, he did not leave the U.S. during WW II.
December 18,
1943 - Carroll Shelby marries Jeanne Fields.
September 27,
1944 - Sharon Anne Shelby is born.
August
1945 - Carroll leaves the Air Corps for civilian life
and starts a dump truck business in Dallas, TX.
November 2,
1946 - Michael Hall Shelby is born.
October 23,
1947 - Patrick Bert Shelby is born.
1949 -
Carroll goes into the chicken raising business. His first
batch of broilers nets a $5000 profit, but he goes bankrupt
when his second group of chickens die of Limberneck disease.
January 1952
- Carroll drives in his first race, a quarter-mile drag
meet, behind the wheel of a hot rod fitted with a flathead
Ford V8.
May 1952
- At Norman, Oklahoma, Carroll drives in his first road
race behind the wheel of an MG-TC, taking first place in
competition with other MGs. The same day, against hotter
competition from Jaguar XK 120s, he wins again!
November
1952 - Carroll Shelby pilots a Cad-Allard to first
place in an early SCCA race on a road racing course set up
near the little town of Caddo Mills, TX.
August 1953
- Carroll Shelby realizes he'll have to hurry to the
track to get in any practice and wears his work
clothes-coveralls-from the farm. When his odd racing attire
nets him more laughs and publicity than his racing record,
Carroll sticks with the striped bib coveralls, which become
his trademark.
January
1954 - Shelby attracts the attention of John Wyer,
Aston Martin's team manager and meets International Grand Prix
driving greats Juan Fangio and Peter Collins. On the strength
of Shelby's racing expertise behind the wheel of the
Cad-Allard, Wyer Invites Shelby to co-drive an Aston -Martin
DB3 at Sebring, Florida.
April
1954 - Shelby goes to Europe and drives an Aston-Martin
DBR3 for Wyer, finishing a very respectable second against
C-Type Jags at Aintree, leading to a ride with the
Aston-Martin team at Le Mans in June 1954, co-driving with
Paul Frére. Shelby continues to race Aston-Martins in Europe
for 1954, returning to the States in August.
August
1954 - Donald Healey of Austin-Healey in England,
invites Carroll Shelby to help set 70 new Class D records at
the Bonneville Salt flats in Utah.
November
1954 - Carroll Shelby enters the Carrera Pan Americana
Mexico. At the 175-kilometer marker north of Oaxaca, Shelby
T-bones a large rock and flips his Austin-Healey four times.
Indians find him and offer him strong drinks to ease the pain
of his broken bones, cuts, contusions, and a shattered elbow.
March
1955 - Although Shelby was still undergoing operations
to recover from his racing accident, he continued to race with
his arm in a specially made fiberglass cast and his hand taped
to the steering wheel. At Sebring, Shelby co-drives a
3.0-liter Monza Ferrari with Phil Hill.
July 1955
- Shelby wins the Torrey Pines race with a 4.1-liter Mexico
Ferrari, defeating Phil Hill. Tony Paravano, a building
contractor in Los Angeles takes notice and asks Shelby to
drive a new 4.9-liter 12-cylinder Ferrari. Shelby wins in his
first outing and is then asked to go to Europe to race.
1956 -
Sports Illustrated names Shelby sports car driver of the year.
Early
1957 - Carroll Shelby Sports Cars opens at 5611 Yales
in Dallas, Texas, with backing from Dick Hall, an oilman from
Abilene, Texas, and brother of Jim Hall who built the
Chaparral cars.
March 1957 - Sports Illustrated names Shelby
"Driver Of The Year."
November
1957 - Shelby, driving a double-overhead-camshaft V8
Maserati single-seat racing car, wins a 100-mile race at
Riverside. After spinning out on the first lap, he went to the
back of the field, then lapped everybody in one of the most
amazing feats of his career.
June 1959
- Carroll and Ray Salvadori co-drive an Aston Martin DBR1/300
and win the 24 Hours of LeMans.
January
1960 - Carroll Shelby begins his last racing season in
a Maserati 250F Formula One Grand Prix car formerly driven by
Fangio at Rheims in 1958.
February
1960 - While staying at a friend's apartment in Dallas,
Shelby experiences chest pains and begins slipping
nitroglycerin pills under his tongue for relief. His doctor
incorrectly diagnoses the problem unrelated to the heart.
Carroll moves to La Mirada, California, and separates from his
wife, Jeanne, who stays in Dallas with the three kids. Shelby
opens his Goodyear Racing Tire distributorship.
May 1960
- Doctors diagnose Shelby's chest pains as "angina
pectoralis," in which the coronary arteries are starved for
blood.
June 27,
1960 - Carroll Shelby, driving a Scarab to first place
at Continental Divide Raceways, breaks a course record and
sets his sights on the USAC driving championship.
December 3-4,
1960 - Shelby competes in his last race, the Third
Annual Los Angeles Times-Mirror Grand Prix for sports cars,
driving a Type 61 Birdcage Maserati, and finishing fifth.
Overall, he wins the USAC driving championship for 1960.
1961 -
Out of racing, Shelby pursues another career and opens his
"Shelby School of High Performance Driving." A $90 ad in
Sports Car Graphic returns $1400 in requests for literature.
Pete Brock, a talented automotive designer, stylist, and
driver prepares the curriculum and helps with the teaching
duties.
September
1961 - When AC Cars of Thames Ditton, England, loses
the source for its six-cylinder Bristol engine for its
two-seat roadster, Carroll Shelby airmails a letter of
proposal to the company to keep building the chassis for a
special Shelby sports car to be powered by an American V8. As
yet, he knows nothing of a new lightweight, thinwall-cast,
small-block Ford V8.
October
1961 - Charles Hurlock, owner of AC Cars, returns
Shelby's letter, stating he would be interested in Shelby's
plan as long as a suitable engine replacement could be found
in the States. The same month, Shelby finds out about the new
221-cube Ford small-block and dispatches a letter to Dave
Evans explaining his idea for a sports car and his need for a
V8.
February
1962 - The first 260 Roadster, minus engine and
transmission, is air freighted on February 2, 1962, to
Shelby's shop in Southern California. Carroll has a dream
revealing to him the name Cobra appearing on the front of his
car. In Carroll's words, "I woke up and jotted the name down
on a pad which I kept by my bedside-a sort of ideas pad- and
went back to sleep. Next morning when I looked at the name
'Cobra,' I knew it was right." In less than eight hours, a 260
HiPo and Borg-Warner four-speed are installed and Shelby and
friend Dean Moon test drive the new Cobra, looking to bait
Corvettes, but none are found.
March
1962 - Shelby-American begins operations at a shop on
Princeton Drive in Venice, California, and hires Ray Geddes, a
Ford finance business school graduate who comes aboard at
Shelby-American to coordinate the program with Ford. Among his
first duties are his efforts to keep Ford's involvement at a
low profile due to Ford's liability concerns. Shelby creates the original Cobra Roadster. Fatest
production car ever made at that time; 0-60 in 3.9
seconds.
April
1962 - CSX 2000, the first Cobra, is painted a
pearlescent yellow by Dean Jeffries and shipped to the New
York Auto Show where it appears in the Ford display. Dealers
begin ordering and with deposits in the bank, Shelby-American
formally commits to building its new Cobra.
May 1962
- Shelby promotes his Cobra by offering test drives to the
automotive press, who respond with superlatives. The May 1962
issue of Sports Car Graphic describes its acceleration as
explosive. CSX 2001 (the second Cobra built) is shipped by air
from England (minus engine, transmission, and rear end) to New
York and is prepared by Ed Hugus in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
CSX 2002 is air freighted to Los Angeles and built into the
first competition Cobra.
June 1962
- Production is slow as Shelby-American wrestles with
start-up problems due to the fact that the AC chassis requires
extensive engineering. Meanwhile, CSX 2000 is repainted a
different color each time a different magazine test drives it,
giving the appearance of many cars in production. The Cobra
has a 1-ton advantage over the Corvette.
August
1962 - Shelby-American submits papers to homologate the
Cobra as a GT III car in the eyes of the FIA, the Federation
Internationale de L'Automobile. On August 6, the FIA
homologates the Cobra in the more-than 2-liter class for the
FIA Manufacturers' Championship. At least 100 cars had to be
built within 12 months, but at the time of approval, just
eight Cobras had been completed. According to Carroll, he
contemplated switching the chassis and body to an alternative
due to continued problems.
October 13, 1962
- Shelby-American enters the Cobra in its first race, a
three-hour contest with Bill Krause behind the wheel, opening
the Los Angeles Times Grand Prix. Krause, with a poor start,
falls back, then takes the lead at lap nine, but breaks a rear
hub and does not finish. The Cobra, however, is definitely
lighter and faster than the new Corvette Stingray. Phil
Remington at Shelby-American goes to work building stronger
rear hubs starting with forging blanks from Halibrand.
January
1963 - Dave MacDonald and Ken Miles sign to drive
Cobras for Shelby-American and place first and second at
Riverside, beating the Corvette Stingrays. Miles is so
confident, he pits for a drink of water and relaps the
Corvettes to finish behind MacDonald. Ian Garrad, an
Englishman living Southern California, feels he could imitate
the Cobra with a 260 Ford version of the little four-cylinder
British Sunbeam Alpine roadster. Ken Miles is first hired to
build a prototype "Tiger," a job that is handed over to
Shelby-American.
February
1963 - Shelby-American arrives at Daytona for its first
international competition. The Ferrari GTO triumphs, after
Daytona, Chevrolet drops out of racing.
March
1963 - Shelby-American enters four cars at Sebring,
Florida, an FIA race. Two of the four have the new
rack-and-pinion steering--driven by Dan Gurney and Phil Hill.
Although Hill sets the fastest GT lap, the Ferraris win.
June 1963
- Shelby-American completes its first 125 Cobras.
Because Ford refuses to finance a Cobra Le Mans effort, Shelby
puts together a deal with AC Cars and Ed Hugus, who prepare
one car each. The top Cobra finishes seventh.
September 1963 - Shelby begins the
Daytona Coupe project, for the roadster lacks the aerodynamics
necessary for 200mph down the Mulsanne Straight. Pete Brock is
the designer. Cobra production passes 170. The first Cooper
Monacos -King Cobra- are ordered. Dan Gurney, in winning the
Bridgehampton 500KM in a Cobra, becomes the first American
driver to win an FIA race in an American car.
November
1963 - The Cobra does not beat Ferrari in international
competition in 1963, it dominates the Corvette and wins the
SCCA A-production national championship.
December
1963 - The Cobra wins the USRRC (United States Road
Racing Championship).
February
1964 - Shelby-American completes the first FIA roadster
and the first Daytona Coupe, both enter the Daytona
Continental. Bob Johnson and Dan Gurney finish fourth in an
FIA Cobra roadster, Although the Cobra coupe sets the fastest
lap time, it is a DNF due to a damaged differential and a
fire.
March
1964 - Shelby-American enters a 427-engined leaf-spring
Cobra, CSX 2166, at Sebring in the prototype class. Ken Miles
spins off course in practice and hits the one tree in sight,
but the 427 test mule is fixed for the race the next day. The
Cobras, for the first time, beat the Ferrari GTOs. At Sebring,
Carroll Shelby meets with the Hurlock Brothers from AC Cars
and Ford design engineer Klaus Arning to develop a big-block
Cobra.
April
1964 - After Sebring, Cobra led Ferrari in FIA points
for the GT III championship, and Shelby-American decides to go
to Europe to race. Two months before Le Mans, the Sarthe
circuit is closed off for testing. The Cobras and Ford's new
GT-40 are tested at Le Mans. Later, on April 26, the Cobra
competes at the Targa Floria. Oddly, the new Porsche 904s
triumph over Ferrari, followed by the Cobra.
June 1964
- The Cobras and Shelby-American win the biggest race of all
in Europe, the 24 Hours of Le Mans. The Cobra is fourth
overall and first in GT, defeating Ferrari.
August
1964 - Ford asks Carroll Shelby to develop a
high-performance Mustang fastback for street and track.
Basically, the new car would challenge the Corvette in SCCA
B-production road racing. The Cobras score in Europe at the
Freiburg Hill climb in the Black Forest, at the Tourist Trophy
in Goodwood, England, and at the Sierre-Montana Grand Prix De
La Montagne in the Swiss Alps. 
September
1964 - The first '65 Shelby Mustang GT350 race cars and
street cars are built.
October
1964 - The prototype 427 Cobra, under development, is
tested at Silverstone in England and later in the States.
November
1964 - Shelby-American completes the 427 Cobra
prototype. The 289 Cobra Roadster again wins the SCCA
A-production national championship.
December
1964 - The SCCA accepts the GT350 in the B-production
road racing class, as cars are being completed at the Venice,
California shop of Shelby-American. Enzo Ferrari holds his
annual press conference and announces he will not contest the
GT III championship without his LM Ferrari, in effect, giving
no factory Ferrari competition to the Cobra team for the
upcoming 1965 FIA season.
January
1965 - The 427 Cobra, featuring a tube frame, aluminum
body, and coil spring chassis, is unveiled at a press
introduction at Riverside International Raceway.
Shelby-American begins its move to Los Angeles International
Airport facility. Ford turns its GT-40 project over to
Shelby-American. The 1965 GT350 debuts.
February
1965 - With Shelby handling the racing program, Ford's
GT-40, painted in Shelby Guardsman Blue with two white
stripes, wins its first race, at Daytona. The Shelby Mustang
GT350 also wins its first race, at Green Valley, Texas.
Shelby-American begins production of its Ferrari-beating
missile, the coupe version of the 427 Cobra Roadster. At
Daytona, the Cobra Daytona Coupe, with Jo Schlesser and Harold
Keck driving, is first in the GT class.

March
1965 - Production of the GT350 moves to Los Angeles
International Airport after the first 250 cars are completed.
The GT-40 Mark II (427 big-block) is under development. Jo
Schlesser and Bob Bondurant pilot the Cobra Daytona Coupe to
first overall in the Sebring 12-Hours.
April
1965 - The Cobra team flies to Europe to continue its
winning season. With team Ferrari out of the picture,
Shelby-American is dominating. Bondurant and Grant are first
at Monza, Italy, in the Daytona Coupe. Meanwhile, the FIA
denies the 427 Cobra certification because 100 cars are not
finished. The first 427 street Cobra is finished.
May 1965
- At Oulton Park, England, Sir John Whitmore takes first in
the GT class in a Cobra Daytona Coupe. Bondurant is second in
a Coupe at Spa, Belgium. Back home, the first GT350 drag car
is built.
June 1965
- Shelby-American and Ford stage an assault on Le Mans with
two 427 GT-40 Mark IIs, four 289 GT-40 Mark Is, and five Cobra
Daytona Coupes. The GT-40s all drop out, while one Daytona
Coupe finishes. 
July 4, 1965
- Shelby-American, racing Cobras at the 12 Heures De
Reims in France, scores enough points to assure the FIA World
Championship of GT cars, wrestling the title virtually owned
by Ferrari for more than a decade. The Paxton supercharger
GT350 prototype is completed. Shelby Cobra Daytona Coupe, the
only American car ever to win the FIA World's Manufacturer's
Championship for GT cars, beating Europe's best; Porsche,
Ferrari, Jaguar, and Aston Martin.
August 1965
- Production of the '66 GT350 is underway. The first 15
competition 427 Cobras are delivered to customers for SCCA
A-production racing.
October
1965 - The brand-new '66 GT350 Shelby fastbacks go on
sale, and Shelby-American proposes a special Hertz racer. A
prototype GT350H is built.
November
1965 - Hertz likes the GT350H and gives Shelby-American
a contract for 200 cars. The FIA certifies the 427 for the
1966 racing season, and the '66 GT350 again wins the national
B-production road racing championship in the SCCA.
December
1965 - Hertz ups its contract for GT350H models to 1000
units.
February
1966 - The Ford GT-40 Mark II wins at Daytona.
Shelby-American builds a Mustang notchback prototype for the
brand-new Trans-Am racing series.
June 1966
- Henry Ford II watches proudly as a trio of GT-40 Mark IIs
cross the finish line at Le Mans, 1-2-3. The specifications
for the '67 GT350 and new GT500 are finalized.
August
1966 - Ken Miles is killed at Riverside International
Raceway.
September
1966 - 1967 production begins at LAX (Los Angeles
International Airport). Jerry Titus wins at Riverside and Ford
wins the Trans-Am Manufacturer's title.
November 1966
- The first of the '67 Shelby GT350s and GT500s are
delivered to dealers nationwide.
March
1967 - The last 427 Cobra Roadster is built.
June 1967
- Ford again wins at Le Mans with its Mark IV GT-40.
August
1967 - Shelby-American loses the lease on its LAX
facility.
September
1967 - Production of '68 Shelby Mustang moves to Ionia,
Michigan, and the A.O. Smith Company. The Lone Star, to be the
successor to the Cobra, constructed in England by John Wyer's
JW Automotive Engineering.
October
1967 - Shelby-American takes the '67 Trans-Am
Manufacturer's title for Ford. Shelby-American completes
construction of a Cougar-Cobra Can-Am racing car.
November
1967 - Shelby-American racing moves to Torrance,
California, as '68 Shelby production begins. he '68 Shelby
Mustang convertible joins the lineup. Shelby holds his first
Chill cook-off.
June 1968
- The '69 Shelby GTs are finalized. Again, a GT-40 takes first
place at Le Mans.
August
1968 - The last brand-new 427 Cobra Roadster is sold by
Shelby.
September 1968
- Shelby opens a Ford dealership in Lake Tahoe,
California.
October
1968 - The only Lone Star is offered for sale for
$15,000, the price it was to retail for if it had made
production.
November 1968 - The 1969-model year Shelby
Mustang production begins.
May 1969
- At Lime Rock, in the Trans-Am racing series, Sam
Posey pilots a Shelby team car to the company's last Ford
victory. 
August
1969 - Carroll Shelby begins marketing his famous Chili
mix.
September
1969 - The Shelby Mustang project is ended as sales
slow dramatically. The leftover '69 models are updated to '70
specifications and production ends.
October
1969 - At Riverside, in the Trans-Am, Shelby fields his
last Ford team race car.
December
1969 - Shelby Automotive Racing Company closes.
February
1970 - Ford ends its long-term racing agreement with
Carroll Shelby.
January
1973 - The Shelby-Dowd Wheel Company is started.
September
1975 - The Shelby-American Automobile Club (SAAC) is
started.
August 19-21,
1976 - SAAC-1, the first annual convention of the
Shelby Automobile Club of America is held in Oakland,
California. About 600 people attend. It's the first time since
the Sixties that Carroll Shelby gets together with his team
drivers, such as Lew Spencer and Bob Bondurant.
October
1982 - Carroll Shelby contracts with Chrysler to create
performance cars based on Dodge products.
November 1982 - Prototype Dodge
Shelby Chargers are built and displayed.
July 1986
- Shelby sells his chili company to Kraft.
1987 - Shelby envisions and
begins prototype work on a Dodge sports car which later
becomes the "Viper."
April
1988 - Shelby sues Ford for using GT350 for its '84
Anniversary Mustang.
1989
- Shelby produces the Cobra 427 S/C
Completion Cars. Shelby builds the first Viper chassis
prototype.
January
1989 - The Viper is first shown at the Detroit
Automobile Show. Shelby is there.
November 1989 - Shelby begins
his 427 Cobra S/C project, continuing production of "leftover"
S/C models from 1966.
March
1990 - The lawsuit with Ford is resolved.
June 1990
- Carroll Shelby receives the heart of a 38-year-old gambler
from Las Vegas in a long-awaited and overdue transplant
operation.
May 1991 - Less than a year after
his transplant, a hale and hearty Carroll Shelby paces the
Indy 500 in a Dodge Viper. Shelby takes the physical exam and
doctors say his heart is as strong as the drivers in the front
row of the race.
September
1991 - Carroll Shelby starts the Carroll Shelby
Children's Foundation that funds heart transplants for
indignet children. Shelby inducted into International
MotorSports Hall of Fame.
November
1991 - The Palm Springs Vintage Road Races feature the
cars of Shelby-American and honor Carroll with a dinner
featuring his life long buddies and friends. Proceeds go to
the Shelby Heart Fund.
July 1992
- At SAAC-17 (17th annual convention of the Shelby American
Automobile Club), Carroll Shelby gives club members high-speed
rides around the racetrack in his new 427 S/C Cobra. 
September 1992 - At the Fall
Festival at Lime Rock, Shelby races a '65 Shelby "R" model
GT350 for the first time, a car belonging to SAAC's Rick
Kopec. Shelby, now 69 years old, runs 1:09 lap times, just 0.4
second off the record set in '65 by Bob Johnson in a '65
R-model Shelby.
October
1, 1992 - Carroll Hall Shelby is elected to the Automotive
Hall of Fame in ceremonies at the Westin Hotel in Detroit,
Michigan.
December 30,
1992 - Shelby helps introduce the Viper concept coupe
at the Los Angeles Auto Show.
1995 - Shelby produces CSX4000
Series 427 Cobra S/C Roadsters.
1997 -
Shelby designs and manufacturers the Shelby Series 1 sports
car.
1998 -
Shelby creates the (Super Pursuit) S.P. 360 high performance
sport utility vehicle.
1999 -
Shelby Cobra CSX2000' Motor Trend Magazine's most significant
car of the last 50 years. Shelby teams with Titan to produce
Shelby custom motorcycle; Shelby Series 1 by
Titan.
2000 -
Shelby expands activities. . . details to follow. . .
Timeline provided compliments of carrollshelby.com.
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