Betsy Alison, who has a long bowing shelf of sailing trophies and a large wall of yachting honors, has made my major goal as NWSA’s president closer to realization. With the belief in the value of women teaching women to help achieve equity, I dreamed of helping more women become sailing instructors. NWSA asked Betsy’s assistance to offer skilled women sailors a leg up for assessment as US Sailing keelboat instructors, the aim being to enable a group of women who reflect the diversity of our nation. With Betsy’s help we are close to achiving the goal of adding women and women of color keelboat instructors. NWSA is lucky to have a great relationship with her and US Sailing. Betsy is a stalwart supporter of equity in sailing.

Betsy started sailing at age seven, because her father insisted. Grumpy at first, soon Betsy was singing with her pals as they slipped happily over Barnegat Bay. In 1977 she found herself at Tufts University, which just happened to have the best sailing team in the country. When her father died during her freshman year, a friend persuaded her to go sailing on Upper Mystic Lake. For the first time Alison realized her natural aptitude for the sport.
A self-described seat-of-the-pants sailor, she learned the technical side from talented Tuft’s teammates. She credits numerous mentors, like Dave Perry who told her to buy a Laser, then told her how to sail it in heavy air: “pull everything tight and hike” (she did, winning her first, full-rig Laser regatta); her coach Joe Duplin, who pushed her to do more than she thought possible; and fellow collegians like Ken Read, Tommy Lihan, Morgan Reeser, and Lynn Jewell Shore.

An Honorable Mention for All-American at Tufts in 1981, Alison has a unique ability to quickly apply what she learns. Ken Read told her how to sail a J-24 over lunch, after which she won the first of her five Women’s Keelboat Championships.

Voted Rolex Yachtswoman of the Year a record five times, Alison says she never felt discriminated against on the water. “You have to prove yourself. When you get the job done on the race course, you develop respect.”

In 1998, Allison was asked to coach the USA team in the World Disabled Sailing Championship. Today she is the US Sailing Team Sperry Top-Sider Paralympic Coach. Alison is the 2000 BoatUS/National Women’s Sailing Association Leadership in Women’s Sailing honoree and a member of the Women’s Sailing Foundation Advisory Board.

Thank you Betsy!