Twenty-six years ago a group of men with vision convened at the Standarbred Horse Sales at Harrisburg and emerged with an idea to resurrect amateur racing which, during harness racings’ infancy, was a viable part of the sport. Led by Hall of Fame horseman Delvin Miller and Phil Pines, who at that time was the curator of the Harness Racing Hall of Fame, along with racing secretary Jerry Monahan, racing official Vincent Bergamo, and others, they devised a plan for a national amateur driving series which they would name after Cornelius Kingsley Garrison Billings, a wealthy industrialist, noted horseman, and an outstanding gentleman driver from Memphis, Tenn. during the early part of the 20th century.
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