Bill Austin Pearson was born on May 19, 1920 in
Chicago,
Illinois, and moved to
Pasadena, California when he was five years old. During the depression, he quit school and joined the
Civilian Conservation Corps, where he became a flyweight boxer. Due to his dismal record, the director of the Corps informed him; "try something else kid, before you get killed, you're about the right size for a jockey". Pearson took the advice and got a job at the Le Mar Stock Farm at
Santa Anita as a stable boy and
hot walker. By 1941, Pearson had become an accomplished rider but during a race at the
Hollywood Park Racetrack, his horse crashed through a fence. As a result, Pearson was hospitalized for nine months to recover from a concussion and multiple broken ribs and other fractured bones. A fellow rider,
Jackie Westrope gave him a book on quilts, telling him; "because it looks like you're going to spend the rest of your life sewing". The book actually triggered a fascination with quilts for him, and he later bought a quilt at a Goodwill store for $8 USD that turned out be worth $2,000. He ended up donating it to the Smithsonian who valued it at $20,000. Pearson recalls that he began to really study "the design, the needlework, the stitches", and he became an expert, which forged a path to his interest in other art objects. Noted film director
John Huston taught him about
pre-Columbian and
African art. In France, while racing for Baron
Philippe de Rothschild, the Baron introduced him to classical and modern art. During this period, Pearson also continued to ride and is credited with 826 victories overall. ==Post-racing==