United States Harness Writers Association
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| Abbreviation | USHWA |
|---|---|
| Founded | 1947 |
| Field | Sportswriting |
President | Heather Vitale |
First vice-president | Derick Giwner |
The United States Harness Writers Association (USHWA) is a professional association for journalists covering harness racing in the United States. The organization was formed in 1947 and has an annual dinner-awards banquet where it names various award recipients.
The USHWA was founded on 8 May 1947. Twelve beat reporters covering Roosevelt Raceway organized the United States Harness Writers Association after the races that day in Westbury, New York. Mike Lee, sports editor of the Long Island Press, was the founding president of the organization who would serve in his role for 13 years.[1] The newly organized U.S. Harness Writers Association began to gather at a semi-monthly session in the raceway's clubhouse.[2]
In October 1947, the Nassau Trotting Association established the first U.S. Harness Writers' Cup, a classified pace of one mile. It became an annual fixture on the track's program. The inaugural race was won by His Lady, driven by Joe Hylan.[3]
By 1949, the Harness Writers' group included scribes from all sections of the country.[4] As regional groups of harness racing writers emerged, the United States Harness Writers Association instituted chapters in 1953.[1] In 1980, the chapters included Ohio, Monticello-Goshen, Metropolitan New York-New Jersey, Vernon, Blue Grass, New England, Western New York, Illinois, Saratoga, Florida, and Northern California.[5] There are 12 active chapters, along with an "At-Large" category for individuals not affiliated with a specific chapter as of 2022.[1]