John Harris III
A member of the National Wrestling Hall of Fame Board of Governors since 2015, John Harris has served as secretary since 2018.
Harris was a three-year starter on the wrestling team and had a career record of 59-20 from 1969-72 at Battle Creek Central High School in Battle Creek, Michigan. After receiving the Most Improved Wrestler award as a junior, he was co-captain as a senior and qualified for the state tournament while helping Battle Creek to a runner-up finish.
He was a four-year starter with a career record of 117-19-5 from 1973-77 while helping Grand Valley State University to a 45-4 dual meet record. Harris was a three-time Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletics Conference champion and two-time NAIA All-American, reaching the national finals in 1976 and 1977 when he helped GVSU to a runner-up finish. He won multiple tournament and invitational titles, including twice winning the Michigan Open that included all Michigan colleges. He received the Suggitt Award, presented to the team member who was most “brutally aggressive while being uninhibited by adversity,” in 1976 and the Most Valuable Wrestler award as a senior in 1977. Harris qualified for the 1973 United States Junior World Final Trials and the 1976 Olympic Trials, and had a 5-1 record while wrestling on an NAIA Cultural Exchange team that competed in Japan and South Korea. He was inducted into the Grand Valley State University Athletic Hall of Fame in 1988, the second class inducted.
A substantial $3 million gift by John, his wife, Diane, and the Harris family — Thomas Harris, his wife, Tammi, and John and Diane’s children, John and Meredith — helped the return of the men’s varsity program and the formation of a future women’s varsity program at Grand Valley State. Their generosity includes the new home of the Grand Valley wrestling program, the Harris Family Athletic Complex. The facility is named in honor of Jack and Dorcas Harris, parents of John and his brother, Thomas. The Harrises became key supporters of the Lakers' wrestling program when John joined the team in 1972.
Overcoming a childhood learning disability, Harris became an outstanding student who received his bachelor’s degree from Grand Valley State University and his master’s degree in education from the University of Toledo.
He served as an assistant wrestling coach at the University of Toledo in 1977-78 and was head coach of the St. Josephs of Sylvania (Ohio) grade school and junior high wrestling program from 1994-2006.
Harris established the first wellness program at Owens-Illinois during the late 1970s and early 1980s. He founded Harris HealthTrends in 1987, which grew to have over 400 employees, working in all 50 states, and in six other countries, on three different continents. Harris merged Harris HealthTrends with four other companies to become Axia Health Management in 2005, and sold Axia to Healthways.
Harris is a partner in Performance pH, which utilizes a variety of people-oriented strategies to help employers improve business performance, and serves as the chairman of HERO. He has over 40 years of experience in the health management field in both the corporate and private sectors. He served as Chief Well-Being Officer and Vice President Innovations for Healthways, Inc., after being an executive vice president of Axia Health Management, which was acquired by Healthways. Harris was previously the co-founder and Chief Executive Officer of Harris HealthTrends, an entrepreneurial corporation specializing in the prevention of disease and the reduction of health care costs. Harris HealthTrends developed a base of over 100 clients and helped shape the prevention industry into what it is today.
Harris speaks internationally and has authored numerous publications on employee health while also serving on the boards of Lourdes University, HERO, Mercy Health Partners, the Mercy Health Foundation, Health Promotion Advocates, and a number of for-profit businesses.
Serving on five profit and/or not-for-profit boards, both in the health industry and in other areas of interest, and several more advisory board or groups, he also is the founder and chairman of the Ohio Governor’s Council on Physical Fitness and Sports
He and his wife, Diane, have a daughter, Meredith, and a son, John Harris IV.
Awards:
Year
2021
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Award
Outstanding American
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Chapter/Region
Michigan
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