Lendon Gray Receives US Equestrian Lifetime Achievement Award

Edited Press Release

Lexington, Ky. – U.S. Equestrian is proud to announce the recipient of the 2024 Lifetime Achievement Award, which was awarded at the Pegasus Awards Dinner at the 2025 U.S. Equestrian Annual Meeting. Dressage trainer and educator Lendon Gray received the Lifetime Achievement Award. Gray is an A Eventing alum of the Penobscot Pony Club in the Northeast Region, along with a USPC National Instruction Legend Award winner and a 2000 USPC Academy of Achievement inductee.

Lifetime Achievement Award: Lendon Gray

Lendon Gray’s influence on American dressage cannot be overstated. Her record as an athlete is remarkable, having represented the U.S. at the 1980 Alternate Olympics competition, the 1988 Olympic Games in Seoul, and the 1991 FEI World Cup Final in Paris. But her impact on the sport is most evident through her decades-long commitment to youth-focused dressage education and programming.

A lifelong equestrian, Gray, of Bedford, N.Y., enjoyed riding all types of horses and ponies in her home in Old Town, Maine. She was a devoted Pony Club member, earning her A-rating at age 16. It wasn’t until age 27 that Gray decided to focus on dressage, leading to her competitive successes from the late 1970s into the 1990s. She was noted for taking non-traditional equines—ponies in particular—to the top of the sport. One of her most famous partners was Seldom Seen, a Connemara/Thoroughbred cross who stood just 14.2 hands but bested his larger competition up through Grand Prix level.

Seeking to foster the development of good all-around horsemanship in the younger generations of equestrians, Gray created the Youth Dressage Festival in 1999. In addition to a traditional dressage test, competitors at the Festival are also tasked with completing a written test on riding theory and stable management and a group equitation test. In line with Gray’s mission, all three sections carry equal weight for the overall results.

The Festival marked the beginning of Gray’s Dressage4Kids (D4K), an organization that provides dressage athletes, coaches, and officials with a wide range of opportunities and support as they advance in the sport. Despite the name, D4K has grown over the years and now encompasses educational programs and professional development for instructors and other adults in the industry in addition to the youth-focused training and mentoring opportunities. Through its scholarship program, D4K provides financial assistance for youth and amateur riders as well as new professionals to access training, competition, and educational resources.

D4K’s Horse Donation Program matches competitive dressage horse and ponies with dedicated young athletes who have committed to the lifelong care of their horse. Horses and riders are carefully matched, ensuring positive outcomes for both. Horses leased through the program can be seen competing across the country at all levels, including at championship events like the FEI North American Youth Championships and U.S. Dressage Festival of Champions.

Gray’s selfless sharing of her knowledge and enthusiasm for the sport of dressage and good horsemanship has created a ripple effect that has raised the bar for equestrianism across the country.

Watch the video below, including how Gray explains how Pony Club was her life when she was younger.

The United States Pony Clubs, Inc. (USPC or Pony Club) is the largest equestrian educational organization in North America. Started in 1954, the organization has developed curriculum that teaches safe riding skills and the care of horses through mounted and unmounted lessons. Through Pony Club, members have fun with horses and make lifelong friends while they develop skills, habits, and values that extend well beyond the barn and last a lifetime. Many members apply what they have learned in the USPC program successfully in their careers, educational and volunteer opportunities, and other life pursuits.

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