Living to LEARN Yes, There's More — 05 February 2013
At Age 102, Margaret Dunning Drives to College

Feature photo: Margaret Dunning and her 1930 Packard www.nydailynews.com

Post by Debra Eve

Margaret Dunning drives her 1930 Packard 740 Roadster to classic car shows. It’s causing a hoopla across the Interwebs.

She’s twenty years older than her car and just got a scholarship to college!

Margaret was born in 1910 on a dairy farm west of Detroit to Charles and Elizabeth “Bessie” Dunning.

It was a bygone era. Margaret reveled in motoring from a young age. When she was 8, Charles taught her to steer his Model T while he operated the controls. She soon conquered the farm’s truck and tractor.

Having Henry Ford as a neighbor didn’t hurt.

She remembers Ford fondly:

Dad would come in and say, “Well, Henry’s outside and I’ve asked him to stay for dinner.” Mom had made huckleberry pie and offered Henry some.

He said that was his favorite pie — I think he was being polite, but he was marvelous just like that.

But at age 12, she got her driver’s license out of necessity. Charles died and Bessie had arthritic feet. The Model T passed to Margaret.

Mother and daughter eventually gave up the farm. They moved to Plymouth, Michigan, where Bessie built the house where Margaret still lives.

Margaret graduated from Plymouth High School in 1929 and studied two years at the University of Michigan. She dropped out at the Depression’s height because Bessie needed her in the family business.

Margaret Dunning as a Red Cross volunteer, 1943Margaret Dunning as a Red Cross volunteer
70 Years of Service

During World War II, Margaret volunteered in Plymouth’s Red Cross motor pool, driving a truck. After, she spent several decades in banking, starting on the bottom rung as a teller.

In 1947, Margaret purchased Goldstein’s Apparel on Plymouth’s Main Street. She renamed it Dunning’s Department Store and sold it in 1968 for a tidy sum. Her next act, as her community’s greatest philanthropist, began with endowments to the Plymouth District Library and its Historical Museum.

From 1962 to 1984, Margaret served on the board of Community Federal Credit Union, including 19 years as president. During her tenure, the Credit Union increased its assets from $1 million to $40 million. In 1989, the Board established the Margaret Dunning Scholarship Fund to honor her contributions to Plymouth.

Last month, Today.com featured her and her gorgeous Packard. “I love the old cars,” she said. “I love the smell of gasoline. It runs in my veins.” She waxed poetic about changing her own oil and spark plugs all these years.

The FRAM Group, an auto products manufacturer, noticed the article. In a special ceremony at the Plymouth Historical Museum, they presented her with a full scholarship to the University of Michigan, eighty years after she dropped out. She’ll also get free auto parts for life.

I’m very, very pleased about it. I feel that I’ve been granted a few years that other people do not have, and I am really very happy that I have this beautiful old world to live in.

What most versions of the story leave out — Margaret didn’t need that scholarship. She’s one of those “millionaires next door” and could have financed her own education. Clearly, the gesture itself touched her.

I’ll have to figure out just what I’ll study, but it will be in business…I’m still running a business right now. It’s a trust fund.

Back to that Gorgeous Roadster

Margaret bought it in 1949. She’s given it four upholstery jobs and 22 coats of hand-rubbed lacquer. The Classic Car Club of America awarded it 100 points — it’s only perfect score.In addition to the Roadster, she owns a 1966 Cadillac DeVille, a 1975 Cadillac Eldorado convertible, and a 1931 Model A. Her “everyday car” is a 2003 Cadillac DeVille.

Ninety-four years after learning to drive, Margaret still makes special road trips. Just last summer, she motored from Michigan to California at the invitation of Pebble Beach Concours d’Élégance. There, she chatted with Henry Ford III and Edsel Ford II, and shared her personal photos of Henry.

Bertha Benz, the woman who pioneered the world’s first road trip in 1888, would be proud.

Sources

Debra Eve, Los Angeles, California

Debra is a proud late bloomer and possessor of many passions. At 36, she became an archaeologist. At 42, a martial arts instructor. At 46, she married the love of her life! Now she writes about fellow late bloomers while plotting her next grand adventure. Follow her on Twitter, Facebook or read her blog, Later Bloomer

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(6) Readers Comments

  1. LOVE this! Thanks for sharing this story. Cheers! Kaarina

    • Thanks, Kaarina! So glad you liked it. She’s really a firecracker, isn’t she? I’ll have to do an update on her soon. I wonder if she’s actually started college yet…

  2. I just loved reading this. Absolutely inspiring, Debra. Thanks so much. My day just got brighter.

    • You’re welcome, Vidya. Thank you for your kind words. Heaven knows we’ve got enough ugly stuff going on in the world, it’s always wonderful to run across someone like Margaret.

  3. Gary, thank you again for featuring one of my articles here. Love the work you’re doing at A Hopeful Sign!

    • You’re most welcome Debra. Your work is both inspiring and entertaining.