Higgins Named Fourth Squier-Hall Award Recipient
Charlotte Observer Stalwart Was First NASCAR Newspaper Beat Writer
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (July 4, 2014)
— Longtime The Charlotte Observer reporter Tom Higgins has been
named the recipient of the 2015 Squier-Hall Award for NASCAR Media
Excellence. Higgins was the first beat writer to cover every race on the
NASCAR schedule, a role he held from 1980 until
his retirement in 1997.
He will be honored during NASCAR Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony festivities on Jan. 30, 2015 and featured in
an exhibit in the NASCAR Hall of Fame in Charlotte, North Carolina.
Higgins’ professional newspaper career started in 1957 at the weekly Canton Enterprise in North Carolina. While
at the Asheville Times in North Carolina, he covered racing for the first time. Higgins joined the sports staff at
The Observer in 1964 as an outdoors writer and soon began
covering stock car racing as well. He has continued to write motorsports
nostalgia columns for the newspaper and its website ThatsRacin.com
since his retirement.
“Tom
Higgins helped establish what it means to be a NASCAR beat reporter,”
said NASCAR Chairman and CEO Brian
France. “For more than five decades, his words have told the story of
NASCAR, and the people and emotions that define the sport. He has been
much more than a reporter to those in the NASCAR industry – serving as
friend and confidant to competitors, administrators
and his fellow journalists.”
Higgins,
affectionately known as “Pappy,” won the International Motorsports Hall
of Fame Henry T. McLemore Award
for lifetime achievement in motorsports journalism in 1980, the NMPA
George Cunningham Award as writer of the year in 1987 and was named the
NASCAR Bill France Award of Excellence winner in 1996. He was inducted
into the NMPA Hall of Fame in 2011. He is also
a member of the NASCAR Hall of Fame Voting Panel.
Higgins
was among eight nominees voted upon by a panel comprised of NASCAR and
NASCAR Hall of Fame executives,
journalists, public relations representatives and former drivers. The
Squier-Hall Award was created in 2012 to honor the contributions of
media to the success of the sport. Legendary broadcasters Ken Squier
and Barney Hall, for whom the award is named, were
its initial recipients.
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