from the
American Paint Horse Association Press Room:
Dedicated APHA member earns
breed association’s top honor
FORT WORTH, Texas—Earnest
Wilson of Tolar, Texas, has received the American Paint
Horse Association’s highest honor, its Distinguished
Service Award. The well-known trainer and long-time APHA
supporter received the award recently at the
association’s annual convention in Atlanta, Georgia.
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Earnest
Wilson, left, receives the APHA Distinguished
Service Award from APHA President Carl Parker. |
Legendary
Paint Horse trainer Earnest Wilson is renowned
for his ability to produce all-around horses and
World champions. He is shown here with Calico
Dolly Dee, one of the many horses he has trained
in his over 30 years in the industry.
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Wilson has had remarkable success during his more
than 30 years of training champion Paint Horses. He is
the only person to have trained and shown 24 APHA
Superior All-Around horses, in addition to earning two
Supreme Champion awards, 131 APHA Champion awards and
117 World, National and Reserve Championships with Paint
Horses.
Wilson has served the association as a member of
the Regional Club, General Show and Contest Rules,
Progress, Occupation and Human Resources, Professional
Horseman’s, Breed Improvement and Amateur Committees. He
has also been an APHA national director, an approved
judge and West Texas–New Mexico Paint Horse Club
president for 11 years.
In the show ring, Wilson was the first to ride
horses to the APHA World Show’s High-Point All-Around
Horse Award three years in a row, and High-Point Western
Horse honors for four consecutive years. The All-Around
title is given to the horse that excels in multiple
events at APHA’s World Show, and the High-Point Western
Horse accumulates the most points in the Western
classes. In addition, Wilson is a three-time winner of
the Oscar Crigler Cattle Award (Oscar
Crigler Cattle Award is presented to the horse
earning the most points in cattle events at each World
Show).
Wilson has also created competition programs for
other Paint enthusiasts who own versatile horses. One is
the Texas Saddle series, a new collection of Amateur and
Youth events that awarded saddles, scholarships and U.
S. Savings Bonds to the champions. He also developed the
annual Paint Performance Horse Super Stakes, which is
the championship event of a series of shows. The Super
Stakes incorporates the Greatest American Paint Horseman
contest, which involves one horse-and-rider team
competing in five events.
When he accepted the award, Wilson said that he
has worked hard for APHA because he believes in the
association, its horses and its programs.
“I have served the APHA to promote the breed, not
for an award, “ said Wilson. “I feel privileged that
others have recognized my accomplishments.”
Currently, Wilson operates Wilson Training Stables
in Tolar, where he has specialized in training and
breeding all-around horses since the early 1980s. |