The Pinet de Borde des Forest family, from
Nivernais, is descended from Jean Pinet de Borde des Forest (1688–1758), a French military officer. Another family member, Jean Daniel Pinet de Borde-Desforêts (1742–1801) was a brigadier general and knight. Des Forest was born in
Royan in 1910, to wealthy parents. Her father was a
cavalry captain and she spent the first part of her life at the
Château de Fontorte, near
Gannat, in south-east
Allier. She obtained her driving license in 1929, at the age of 19 years, from the first French driving school specifically for women, founded in Versailles a year earlier by Suzanne Amélie Meyer. This made her one of the first French women to obtain a license (previously, a certificate of capacity for driving vehicles was required and was awarded to many women, including the
Duchess of Uzès in 1898, and
Marie Curie in 1916). A year after her license, she took part in her first motorsports event, the
La Baraque hill climb near
Clermont-Ferrand. She then began a career as a professional racing driver participating in numerous car races and
rallies until 1957, without having a single accident during her career. In 1931, she participated in the Paris-Vichy race, for which her mother was her co-driver. In 1934, she competed in the
Monte-Carlo Rally with her friend
Fernande Hustinx at the wheel of a
Peugeot 301. Starting from
Bucharest, Romania, the two women reached
Monaco after a journey of and many adventures, recounted in a travel diary kept and illustrated by des Forest. The two women won the Ladies' Cup. In the 1935 Monte-Carlo Rally, in partnership with
Odette Siko, she finished third in the Ladies' Cup at the wheel of a
Triumph (36th overall with a small engine: 1.232 L compared to more than 3 L for the first two in the Ladies' Cup). Driving again with Siko in 1937, as well as with
Hellé Nice and
Claire Descollas, she carried out speed tests from 19 to 29 May on the
Autodrome de Montlhéry, with motor oils as sponsor. Under the leadership of Odette Siko, and despite the reported hostility of des Forest and Descollas towards Nice, the quartet broke 25 world records, some of which still stand today. During the
Second World War, she drove trucks for the
Red Cross. Subsequently, she participated in the French truck championship, which she finished in 10th place. Admired by the greatest—including, it seems,
Fangio himself—she later devoted herself to
civil aviation. She was also one of the first women to open a driving school in 1950, where she taught for 25 years. ==Personal life==