BLACK EXCELLENCE!! MEET THE FIRST BLACK WOMAN TO OWN A NASCAR TEAM.
Melissa Harville-Lebron is the first African American woman team owner of a developmental racing team in NASCAR’s Whelen All-American Series, Division 1. The multicultural racing team is the first ever to consist of two brothers from two different ethnicities and minority classes, hailing from the North East and under the age of 21. Melissa is an African American, a single mother of 7; 3 biological children from a prior 16-year marriage and legal guardian of 4 additional children from younger siblings. Known as “Captain Lebron” for the last 5 years of her career in the Mental Observation Unit in New York City’s Department of Correction Rikers Island Anna M. Kross Center, Melissa was forced to retire after 19 years of service due to a work-related injury. A chronic asthma sufferer, it was after another severe attack that she had an epiphany, never be able to say “I wish I had”, be able to say “I’m glad I did.”The pursuit of her passion was born, W.M.Stone Enterprises was created and named after her business savvy late grandmother. The name serves as a constant reminder of strength, honor, and perseverance.


Her father was consistently influential in her life, as she remained “Daddy’s little girl” while he suffered from Sarcoidosis of the brain. The drug epidemic of the early 1980’s that consumed and damaged most families during that era showed no exception to Melissa and her family. While battling her own personal demons, Melissa’s mother remained ever so committed to her breaking the negative cycle that society had already proclaimed her destiny to ensure that she became a positive product of her environment. First mentored by lifetime friend and legendary hip-hop DJ Red Alert, she
always had his support and admiration in her pursuit of the entertainment industry on her own terms. Being asked to accompany a friend to a video in the Bronx would prove to be two “firsts” for Melissa, one being the first industry connections that she would make on her own, and the other being her first time in the Bronx. Completely intrigued by the chaos behind the camera she landed her first position as a Production Assistant. After being introduced to producer Jay Ellis and being able to view the music industry from a different perspective, she knew that she did not want to be an artist, but knew immediately that she wanted his job. Mr. Ellis’s influence would solidify her drive to one day be a boss. She landed what she believed to be the opportunity of a lifetime, an internship at Sony Music where she quickly assessed, “All that glitters is not gold”.