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Elizabeth <I>Toomes</I> Petty

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Elizabeth Toomes Petty

Birth
Randolph County, North Carolina, USA
Death
8 Jan 2006 (aged 88)
Level Cross, Randolph County, North Carolina, USA
Burial
Randleman, Randolph County, North Carolina, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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MATRIARCH OF PETTY FAMILY DIES

LEVEL CROSS - Elizabeth Toomes Petty, born in a family of eight children in rural Randolph County, never imagined she and her husband would become part of a world-famous family.

One thing she knew for sure - she loved a young man named Lee Petty, who would become a champion in a new sport called stock car racing. "She and my grandfather loved each other more than any two people I ever knew,'' said granddaughter Rebecca Moffitt, of Trinity.

Elizabeth Petty, 88, who worked behind the scenes to help build the Petty NASCAR dynasty that would become known as the "first family of racing,'' died Sunday morning.

The matriarch of the Petty racing family, who was born May 12, 1917, to Robert and Allie Mary Toombs, had been in declining health for about two years. Husband Lee Petty died in a Greensboro hospital April 5, 2000.

A private funeral service will be held, and burial will be in Level Cross United Methodist Church Cemetery, beside her husband.

In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations be made to Level Cross United Methodist Church, Victory Junction Gang Camp or to Hospice of Randolph County.

Elizabeth Petty was the mother of Richard Petty, who won more NASCAR races than any driver, and Maurice Petty, who also was instrumental in the family founding Petty Enterprises. Her grandson Kyle Petty became a third-generation race driver, and great-grandson Adam Petty, killed in a race car accident May 12, 2000, was the fourth generation of drivers in the family.

Survivors include nine grandchildren, 24 great-grandchildren, one great-great-grandchild, two sisters and two brothers.

Not well-known to the public, Elizabeth Petty was a key part of the early venture of Lee Petty into racing. "She went to all of the races where my grandfather was racing,'' Moffitt said. "She also worked in the business end, doing the payroll and a lot paperwork.''

She bowed out of going to the races on a regular basis after Lee Petty was seriously injured during a 100-mile qualifying race at Daytona Speedway in 1960. He was hospitalized for four months, and his days driving on the track were over. Lee Petty, with the help of his wife and two sons, turned to building Petty Enterprises into the powerful company it would become.

Elizabeth Petty never raised any objections over her family's involvement in stock car racing - something her husband took up at the age of 35.

"It was just a way of life,'' Moffitt said.

Obituary courtesy of Greensboro News & Record (NC) - Tuesday, January 10, 2006
MATRIARCH OF PETTY FAMILY DIES

LEVEL CROSS - Elizabeth Toomes Petty, born in a family of eight children in rural Randolph County, never imagined she and her husband would become part of a world-famous family.

One thing she knew for sure - she loved a young man named Lee Petty, who would become a champion in a new sport called stock car racing. "She and my grandfather loved each other more than any two people I ever knew,'' said granddaughter Rebecca Moffitt, of Trinity.

Elizabeth Petty, 88, who worked behind the scenes to help build the Petty NASCAR dynasty that would become known as the "first family of racing,'' died Sunday morning.

The matriarch of the Petty racing family, who was born May 12, 1917, to Robert and Allie Mary Toombs, had been in declining health for about two years. Husband Lee Petty died in a Greensboro hospital April 5, 2000.

A private funeral service will be held, and burial will be in Level Cross United Methodist Church Cemetery, beside her husband.

In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations be made to Level Cross United Methodist Church, Victory Junction Gang Camp or to Hospice of Randolph County.

Elizabeth Petty was the mother of Richard Petty, who won more NASCAR races than any driver, and Maurice Petty, who also was instrumental in the family founding Petty Enterprises. Her grandson Kyle Petty became a third-generation race driver, and great-grandson Adam Petty, killed in a race car accident May 12, 2000, was the fourth generation of drivers in the family.

Survivors include nine grandchildren, 24 great-grandchildren, one great-great-grandchild, two sisters and two brothers.

Not well-known to the public, Elizabeth Petty was a key part of the early venture of Lee Petty into racing. "She went to all of the races where my grandfather was racing,'' Moffitt said. "She also worked in the business end, doing the payroll and a lot paperwork.''

She bowed out of going to the races on a regular basis after Lee Petty was seriously injured during a 100-mile qualifying race at Daytona Speedway in 1960. He was hospitalized for four months, and his days driving on the track were over. Lee Petty, with the help of his wife and two sons, turned to building Petty Enterprises into the powerful company it would become.

Elizabeth Petty never raised any objections over her family's involvement in stock car racing - something her husband took up at the age of 35.

"It was just a way of life,'' Moffitt said.

Obituary courtesy of Greensboro News & Record (NC) - Tuesday, January 10, 2006


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  • Maintained by: PAllred
  • Originally Created by: G.Photographer
  • Added: May 24, 2006
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/14397450/elizabeth-petty: accessed ), memorial page for Elizabeth Toomes Petty (12 May 1917–8 Jan 2006), Find a Grave Memorial ID 14397450, citing Level Cross United Methodist Church Cemetery, Randleman, Randolph County, North Carolina, USA; Maintained by PAllred (contributor 48048940).