[On April 19th, 1897, the first Boston Marathon was run. So for the 125th anniversary of this iconic road race, this week I’ll AmericanStudy a handful of Marathon histories and contexts, leading up to a special Guest Post from my favorite RunningStudier!]
On three layers
to the histories of that first 1897 Boston Marathon.
1)
The B.A.A.: The
Marathon was far from the starting point for organized athletics in the city.
Ten years earlier, in 1887,
the Boston Athletic Association had been founded, reflecting the rising
national interest in both amateur and professional
sports in the late 19th century. The BAA built an impressive clubhouse
in the city’s Back Bay neighborhood, with facilities for numerous sports
including boxing, tennis, and water polo; and it began hosting track and field
competitions and other athletic events, including an annual Spring competition
known as the BAA Games. In 1897, perhaps in part to commemorate the BAA’s 10th
anniversary and inspired by the marathon at the 1896 Summer Olympics
in Athens, the Association’s leadership decided to conclude those Spring
games with a marathon of their own. BAA member and Olympic
Team Manager John Graham worked with local businessman
Herbert Holton to choose and design the 24.5-mile course.
2)
Patriots’
Day: That overall Spring timing was to coincide with the end of the BAA
Games, but the specific timing of April 19th was due to another
factor: the newly-created holiday of Patriots’ Day. The
then-Massachusetts-specific holiday was just three years old at the time,
having been first celebrated
in 1894 after the Lexington
Historical Society petitioned the MA Legislature to create a holiday
honoring the 1775 Revolutionary War Battles of Lexington and Concord. And
running the Marathon on that date was even more specific than that, as the BAA sought to link
the American Revolutionary effort and spirit to that displayed by the Athenian
soldiers at the 490
BC Battle of Marathon for which the race had been initially named. A bit of
a stretch, perhaps, but the Boston Marathon has never been anything less than
grandiose!
3)
JJ “Little Mac” McDermott:
The winner of that first Boston Marathon (known then as the B.A.A. Road Race)
was quite a grandiose figure himself. Not in size, as the Irish American
lithographer and amateur runner John J. “J.J.” or “Little Mac” McDermott was
just 5’6” and 124 pounds when measured before the race. But as that hyperlinked
article puts it, this was America’s first great marathoner, and I would argue
one of the 19th century’s greatest American athletes: he won the first
marathon run in the U.S., in New York in September 1896; and won the first
Boston Marathon just seven months later, quite possibly while running with the
tuberculosis that would kill
him less than a decade later. It’s not clear whether McDermott definitely
had TB when he won in Boston, but when it comes to the first iteration of such
a legendary race, I’m going to print the legend.
Next Marathon
split tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other Boston Marathon histories or stories you’d highlight?
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