| Marathon Feature Report R. Free Mag. |
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| Written by Eric Hardwick |
| Monday, 05 January 2009 15:10 |
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WE RUNÖ HASTINGS 100th ANNIVERSARY MARATHON THEN & NOW 100 years ago, on a cold 14th December 1908, 51 runners took part in the first Hastings marathon. On the very same date in 2008 Running Free’s Julia Buckley went along to do the same. Well, it was the same, but different… Words by Julia Buckley Contrasting Fields 1908: 1908 had been a busy year for Britain,we elected a new Prime Minister, Herbert Henry Asquith (amid protests from women who were beginning to demand the right to vote) and for six months throughout the summer we’d hosted the Olympic games - the marathon being the most talked about event. So it was, with marathon fever in full swing that Hastings, on the 16th of December 1908 hosted a 25 mile race through the town and surrounding villages. 51 athletes, all men, took part. Shoulders were covered and drawers were knee-length. They gathered at the start line by the Central Cricket Ground and the locals came out in droves to cheer them off. 2008: 100 years later, on the 16th ofDecember 2008 history repeated itself when a marathon took place over an almost identical course. There were a few differences however… Perhaps the fact that several hundred female runners, of which I was one, took part was the most striking change, it would certainly have been unthinkable for a woman to run in the 1908 event. Equally unimaginable would have been my race number, 1171. The organisers of the 2008 run had at first thought interest would only amount to a few hundred runners, but the event captured the imagination of many more and in the end they capped the numbers at 1908 – a massive 1867 runners more than in 1908. We lined up to start at the same spot as the 1908 runners, however the Central Cricket Ground has been replaced by a shopping centre. As before though, supporters were in abundance and seemed as excited about the event as their predecessors. The Off 1908: Hastings MP Mr. Arthur du Cros fired thestarting pistol and the runners were off, each was accompanied by a cyclist, whilst a number of motor cars supervised the race. The first mile consisted of three laps of the cricket ground and an early lead was taken by Billy Clarke of Sefton Harriers. As the first British runner to finish the Olympic marathon earlier in the year, this was no big surprise. The runners then veered off onto Queens Road and up the first of the many hills along the course, which drew them inland, away from the coast. By the time he reached the crowds at The Harrow pub, shortly before the 5 mile mark, Clarke had a lead of some 400 yards. 2008: I was huddled among the crowdof runners waiting for the off when Michael Foster, today’s MP for Hastings, fired the pistol. A whoop went up from the runners around me and then - as usual for a 5 hour marathon runner - nothing happened. A couple of minutes later though the crowd in front of me began to disperse and I trotted over the start line. We ran a couple of laps of the town centre and, about half way up that first hill, I began to find my pace and felt like my marathon had really started. Supporters were dotted alongside the route, many with banners wishing their loved ones well, ordinary folks up for the challenge and out to put their all into the miles ahead. We passed the Harrow pub and, just a bit further along, came upon the welcome sight of the Lucozade drinks station. Stimulating Company 1908: 100 years ago, there were no waterstations. Instead, OXO, the event’s sponsor, had vans accompanying the runners carrying OXO, rice pudding, raisins, bananas, soda, milk, stimulants(!), and ‘Eau de Cologne’ with sponges in case of collapse. I guess it’s always good to smell nice when you’re out cold. After eight miles they reached Battle and found the entire town out to cheer them on, even the inmates of the workhouse had been allowed out to watch the spectacle and had hung out flags. In these pre-television days, they’d never seen anything like it. (Remarkably, the starting and finishing point was actually at the birthplace of TV, opposite where John Logie Baird broadcast the first pictures in 1925.) Now the runners dispersed into two separate groups with an ever widening gap between the top 20 and the rest. 2008: Reaching Battle, Icould hardly believe we’d already covered eight miles. I felt much better than I done in my training runs and started to think maybe I could manage a 4hr 30min time. The route was interesting and pretty, which probably helped, and the company of the other runners certainly did. I covered a couple of miles chatting to Paul Garner, who had useful advice on pacing the route as he’d already ran it once that day! Paul was in training for the 150 mile Marathon des Sables in the Sahara Desert in March and had set off at 4.30am for his first lap of the course, before joining a friend at the start line to do the whole thing all over again with the rest of us. I also chatted to a blind runner who’d racked up over a hundred marathons, and many other runners whose achievements and anecdotes from races they’d completed over the years reminded me how pleased I was to have taken up running and how fortunate I am to participate in such events. Chilly Finish 1908: The runners arrived at Sidley and weregreeted by more cheering crowds which erupted into a roar as they passed. Clarke’s lead was diminishing, as the eager spectators at the start/finish line were informed by pigeon post. The other runners continued to gain ground on him across the final six seafront miles but none were able to pass. Clarke crossed the line in a spectacular time of 2hrs 37mins 16secs and immediately tucked in to a warming cup of OXO which, to the promoters delight, he gave a ringing endorsement to the drink that had helped him achieve his win. 2008: The winner, Julian Rendall, finishedin 2hrs 36mins. As for me, I had a thoroughly enjoyable run and was on track to achieve my hardly-dared-dream-of 4hr 30min time up until about mile twenty. Runners today have access to brilliant gear that ought to help us complete long distances in relative comfort. However, it’s useless if you forget to bring it and, by mile 21, as I began the long final seafront leg of the marathon, I realised what a big mistake forgetting my baselayer and running in just a t-shirt had been. I have never been so cold. My legs stiffened, my face stung, and my hands swelled and went completely numb. When they took on a blue colour I actually started to worry about frostbite and decided to stop running and walk with my hands thrust down the sides my tights. Probably not the most ladylike thing I’ve ever done in public, and very likely the sort of thing I could’ve been arrested for in 1908 – so yet another reason I was glad to be in the 2008 race! In this way I ran-walked the final few miles and crossed the line at 4hrs 44mins. All things considered, I’m very proud of what I did that day. RF With thanks to John Hodges for the 1908 pictures, and Rick Peters and Ian Hammond for the 2008 photos. 24 n Running Free Running Free n 25 1908 Finishers times (25 miles): 1st: William T Clarke, Sefton Harriers - 2:37:16.82 2nd: Fred T Lord, Wibsey Park AC - 2:38:13.23 3rd: Harry F Barrett, Polytechnic Harriers - 2:38:39.44 4th: Edmund Catt, Eastbourne AC - 2:38:58.85 5th: Jack Price, Small Heath Harriers - 2:40:33.06 6th: George White, Eastbourne AC - 2:50:09.8 2008 Finishers times (26.2 miles): Men 1st - Julian Rendall, Tonbridge A.C. 2:36:51 2nd - Daniel Anderson, Hastings A.C. 3rd - Henry Mountcastle, Hastings A.C. Women 1st Annabelle Stearns, Gravesend 3:04:40 2nd - Fiona Powell, B & H.A.C. 3rd - Sandra Bowers, Winchester Going the distance Paul Garner - Lap 1: 3:58 Lap 2: 4:14 Final finisher: Patricia Lelliott from Bexhill, who ran in memory of her grandaughter, Chloe: 7:35 There were 1178 finishers, with no reports of bad injuries. (A group of runners who pulled out at the 16 mile point at Sidley, were later discovered still in their running kit at the New Inn pub where they’d been all afternoon.) RF editor Julia with medal |
| Last Updated ( Monday, 05 January 2009 15:14 ) |