Women's International Motorcycle Association
Abbreviation | WIMA |
---|---|
Founded | 1950 |
Founded at | United States |
Type | Association |
Region | Worldwide |
International President | Zara Strange (2020) |
Key people | Louise Scherbyn - Founder |
Website | www.wimaworld.com |
The Women's International Motorcycle Association (WIMA) is a motorcycle club established by Louise Scherbyn[1] in 1950 in the United States.[2] Branches began in many countries, including Great Britain (Theresa Wallach was the first international vice president)[3] and Australia[4] where the branch was started by Hazel Mayes.[5] It was the first organization to recognize all women in the sport.[6] Currently spanning 39 countries,[7] it is purportedly the largest motorcycle association for women in the world.[8] The group is known for organising annual "Pink Ribbon Rides" to raise awareness for breast cancer.[9]
National Divisions
The national divisions in October 2020:
°AUSTRALIA °AUSTRIA °BANGLADESH °BELGIUM °BULGARIA °CANADA °CURAÇAO °DENMARK °ESTONIA °FINLAND °FRANCE °GERMANY °GREAT BRITAIN °GREECE °HUNGARY °INDIA °ITALY °JAPAN °KOREA °LITHUANIA °LUXEMBOURG °MEXICO °MALAYSIA °MOROCCO °NETHERLANDS °NEPAL °NEW ZEALAND °NORWAY °PAKISTAN °POLAND °ROMANIA °SWEDEN °SWITZERLAND °THAILAND °UKRAINE °UNITED ARAB EMIRATES °USA
Bibliography
- Easy Motorcycle Riding. Wallach, Theresa. New York, Sterling, 1970. ISBN 978-0806977126
- The Rugged Road. Theresa Wallach, Panther Publications, 2010 ISBN 978-0956497529
References
- ^ some history at wimaworld.com
- ^ some more history at wimagb.co.uk
- ^ Theresa Wallach page at motorcyclemuseum.org
- ^ True Pioneers, American Motorcyclist Jun 2006 (Vol 60 No 6, P52) ISSN 0277-9358
- ^ Hazel Mayes page at wimaworld.com
- ^ Making Her Mark: Firsts and Milestones in Women's Sports. Ernestine G. Miller. McGraw-Hill Professional, 29 May 2002 ISBN 978-0071390538
- ^ List of international groups at wimaworld.com
- ^ Motorcycle. Steven E. Alford, Suzanne Ferriss. Reaktion Books, 3 Jan 2008 ISBN 9781861893451
- ^ "'Pinked out' motorbike convoy raises breast cancer awareness". Stuff. 15 October 2017.
External links