Polytechnic Marathon

{{Short description|British athletics event}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2025}}

{{Use British English|date=April 2025}}

{{Infobox athletics race

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| image = File:Polystart1967.jpg

| caption = Start of the 1967 Polytechnic Marathon at Windsor Castle

| date =

| location = London

| type =

| iaaf_category =

| distance = marathon

| sponsor =

| beneficiary =

| est = 1909

| last = 1996

| record =

| homepage =

| participants =

}}

The Polytechnic Marathon, often called the Poly, was a marathon held annually between 1909 and 1996, over various courses in or near London. It was the first marathon to be run regularly over the distance of 26 miles, 385 yards which is now the global standard. A total of eight world marathon bests were set in the Poly, including the first authenticated time under 2 hours, 20 minutes which had been regarded as the marathon equivalent of the four-minute mile. At the time of its demise in 1996, the Poly was Europe's oldest regular marathon. It had seen more world records and had been run over {{convert|42.195|km|mi}} more often than any other marathon.

Origin

The Polytechnic Marathon had its origins in the marathon of the 1908 Summer Olympics, held in London. This race was organised by the Polytechnic Harriers, the athletics club of the London Polytechnic at Regent Street (now the University of Westminster). In those days, there was no set distance for the marathon; it was simply a long race, around {{convert|40|km|mi|abbr=on}} in length. The Polytechnic Harriers decided to start the Olympic marathon in front of the Royal apartments at Windsor Castle and end it on the track at White City Stadium in front of the Royal Box, a distance that turned out to be 26 miles, 385 yards.

There was immense public interest in the 1908 Olympic race, with its dramatic finish in which Dorando Pietri of Italy entered the stadium well clear of the field and staggered around the last lap to the finish line—only to be disqualified for receiving assistance. Building on this interest, The Sporting Life newspaper offered a magnificent trophy{{cite web |url=http://www.ianridpath.com/polymarathon/trophy.htm |title=The (sometimes) vexed history of the Sporting Life marathon trophy |access-date=28 September 2018}} for an annual international marathon that would be second in importance only to the Olympic event itself. The Polytechnic Harriers were again asked to organise the event, and the Polytechnic Marathon was born.

Early races

The first Polytechnic Marathon was held on 8 May 1909.{{cite book |last1=Lambie |first1=James |title=The Story of Your Life: A History of the Sporting Life Newspaper (1859–1998 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bJcbd-7pYlkC |accessdate=29 September 2011 |publisher=Troubadour Publishing Ltd. |location=Leicester, UK |isbn= 978-1-84876-291-6 |pages=276–278 |chapter=A Marathon Trophy |year=2010 }} Henry Barrett won, followed by Fred Lord, and Harry Green.

As with the Olympic race, the start was at Windsor Castle and the course was 26 miles, 385 yards; this distance was adopted as the international standard for marathons in 1924. (The older Boston Marathon, founded in 1897, adopted the {{convert|42.195|km|mi|adj=on}} distance in 1924, but was slightly short for the first three years and was shorter still from 1951 to 1956.{{cite web |url=http://www.bostonmarathon.org/BostonMarathon/Records.asp?records=permanent |title=Permanent Course Records |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040803142931/http://www.bostonmarathon.org/BostonMarathon/Records.asp?records=permanent |archive-date=3 Aug 2004}})

Over the years, the route of the Poly Marathon varied. From 1909 until 1932, it ended at Stamford Bridge in west London; then in 1933, it moved back to the White City stadium, where the 1908 Olympic marathon had finished. From 1938, the race ended at the new Polytechnic Harriers stadium in Chiswick, west London. It was on this course that Jim Peters, the greatest marathoner of his day, broke the 2 hours and 20 minutes barrier in 1953. Even more remarkably, remeasurement showed the course to have been about 150 yards too long.

In 1961, The Sporting Life withdrew its sponsorship, having ceased to report on athletics. A new sponsor was found in the form of confectionery company Callard and Bowser; and in the next few years, the race went from strength to strength, with a succession of world records (see table).

Decline and fall

By 1970, the Polytechnic Harriers and the Poly Marathon were in decline. Traffic problems made it difficult to continue with the Windsor-to-Chiswick route, and from 1973 until 1992, the race was restricted to the Windsor area. Performances declined, and so did the status of the Poly Marathon. With the introduction of mass marathons and big-money events elsewhere, the Poly Marathon could not compete.

There were organizational changes, too. In 1985, the Polytechnic Harriers merged with Kingston AC and moved in with them at Kingsmeadow Stadium in Kingston, Surrey. Some ex-Polytechnic Harriers remained at the Polytechnic sports ground in Hartington Road, Chiswick, where they formed a new club—West 4 Harriers—which was to become involved with the Polytechnic Marathon some years later.

Management of the race passed to the London Road Runners Club (LRRC) for 1986 and 1987, but the LRRC then folded. After a four-year gap, the race was revived in 1992 by Capital Road Runners (an even shorter-lived successor to LRRC) in conjunction with West 4 Harriers. A revised route was introduced, from Windsor to the Polytechnic stadium at Chiswick, recalling the event's former glory days.

From 1993 to 1995, the Poly Marathon was organised by a group from West 4 Harriers. In 1996, responsibility passed to a commercial events organiser, but increased traffic and other difficulties made it impossible to keep the race going beyond 1996.

World records

World records set in the Polytechnic Marathon.[http://www.ianridpath.com/polymarathon/history.htm The Polytechnic Marathon 1909–1996] by Ian Ridpath

class="wikitable"
Date

! Athlete

! Time

1909 May 8 (see note 1)

| Henry Barrett (GBR)

| 2:42:31.0

1913 May 31

| Alexis Ahlgren (SWE)

| 2:36:06.6

1952 June 14

| Jim Peters (GBR)

| 2:20:42.2

1953 June 13

| Jim Peters (GBR)

| 2:18:40.2 (see note 2)

1954 June 26

| Jim Peters (GBR )

| 2:17:39.4

1963 June 15

| Leonard "Buddy" Edelen (USA)

| 2:14:28

1964 June 13

| Basil Heatley (GBR)

| 2:13:55.0

1965 June 12

| Morio Shigematsu (JPN)

| 2:12:00.0

Note 1: Date wrongly given as 26 May in some sources.

Note 2: Distance measured as 42.337 km.

Past winners

= Men =

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
width=50|Year

!width=200|Winner

!width=250|Club

!width=150|Time

!width=150|Notes

1909Henry BarrettPolytechnic Harriers2.42.31WR
colspan=5|1910 No race owing to the death of HM The King
1911Harry GreenHerne Hill Harriers2.46.29 & 4/5ths
1912{{flagicon|CAN|1868}} Jim CorkeryCanada2.36.55 & 2/5ths
1913{{flagicon|SWE}} Alexis AhlgrenSweden2.36.06 & 3/5thsWR
1914{{flagicon|FRA}} Ahmed DjebelliaFrance2.46.30 & 4/5ths
colspan=5 |1915-1918 No races during World War I
1919Edward WoolstonMachine Gun Corps2.52.30 & 1/5th
1920Bobby MillsLeicester H2.37.40 & 2/5ths
1921Bobby MillsLeicester H2.51.00 & 2/5ths
1922Bobby MillsLeicester H2.47.30 & 2/5ths
1923{{flagicon|DEN}} Axel JensenDenmark2.40.46 & 4/5ths
1924{{flagicon|SCO}} Dunky WrightScotland2.53.17 & 2/5ths
1925{{flagicon|NIR}} Sam FerrisRoyal Air Force2.35.58 & 1/5th
1926{{flagicon|NIR}} Sam FerrisRoyal Air Force| 2.42.24 & 1/5th
1927{{flagicon|NIR}} Sam FerrisRoyal Air Force2.40.32 & 1/5th
1928{{flagicon|NIR}} Sam FerrisRoyal Air Force2.41.02 & 1/5th
1929{{flagicon|NIR}} Sam FerrisRoyal Air Force2.40.47 & 2/5ths
1930Stanley SmithBirchfield Harriers2.41.55
1931{{flagicon|NIR}} Sam FerrisRoyal Air Force2.35.31 & 4/5ths
1932{{flagicon|NIR}} Sam FerrisRoyal Air Force2.36.32 & 2/5ths
1933{{flagicon|NIR}} Sam FerrisRoyal Air Force2.42.24
1934{{flagicon|SCO}} Dunky WrightScotland2.56.30
1935Bert NorrisPolytechnic Harriers2.48.37
1936Bert NorrisPolytechnic Harriers2.35.20
1937Bert NorrisPolytechnic Harriers2.48.40
1938{{flagicon|SWE}} Henri PalmeSweden2.42.00
1939{{flagicon|SWE}} Henri PalmeSweden2.36.56
1940Leslie GriffithsHerne Hill Harriers2.53.41
1941Gerry HumphreysWoodford Green AC3.12.36
1942Leslie GriffithsReading AC2.53.56
1943Leslie GriffithsReading AC2.53.14
1944{{flagicon|WAL}} Tom RichardsMitcham AC2.48.45
1945{{flagicon|WAL}} Tom RichardsMitcham AC2.56.39
1946Harry OliverReading AC2.38.12
1947Cecil BallardSurrey AC2.36.52
1948Jack HoldenTipton Harriers2.36.44
1949Jack HoldenTipton Harriers2.42.52
1950Jack HoldenTipton Harriers2.33.07
1951Jim PetersEssex Beagles2.29.24
1952Jim PetersEssex Beagles2.20.42WR
1953Jim PetersEssex Beagles2.18.40WR
1954Jim PetersEssex Beagles2.17.39WR
1955Bill McMinnisRoyal Air Force2.36.23
1956Ron ClarkHerne Hill Harriers2.20.16
1957Eddie KirkupRotherham H2.37.04.4
1958Colin KemballWolverhampton H2.22.27
1959{{flagicon|IRE}} Denis O'GormanSt Albans AC2.25.11
1960Arthur KeilyDerby & County AC2.19.06
1961Peter WilkinsonDerby & County AC2.20.25
1962Ron HillBolton United AC2.20.59
1963{{flagicon|USA}} Buddy EdelenHadleigh Olympiads AC & USA2.14.28WR
1964Basil HeatleyCoventry Godiva Harriers2.13.55WR
1965{{flagicon|JPN}} Morio ShigematsuJapan2.12.00WR
1966Graham TaylorCambridge Harriers2.19.04
1967{{flagicon|SCO}} Fergus MurrayOxford University AC2.19.06
1968{{flagicon|JPN}} Kenji KimiharaJapan2.15.15
1969Phil HamptonRoyal Navy AC South2.25.22
1970Don FairclothCroydon Harriers2.18.15
1971Phil HamptonRoyal Navy AC South2.18.31
1972Don FairclothCroydon Harriers2.31.52
1973Robert SercombeNewport H2.19.48
1974{{flagicon|JPN}} Akio UsamiJapan2.15.16
colspan=5|No race in 1975
1976Bernie PlainCardiff AAC2.15.43
1977Ian ThompsonLuton AC2.14.32
1978David FrancisWestbury H2.19.05
1979Mike GrattonInvicta AC2.19.53
1980Tony ByrneSalford Harriers2.22.23
1981Bernie PlainCardiff AAC2.24.07
1982Graham EllisHolmfirth H2.23.28
1983Alan McGeeSouthampton & Eastleigh AAC2.22.55
1984David CatlowCheltenham H2.26.02
1985Terry DonaghyLondon Road Runners2.33.02
1986{{flagicon|WAL}} Hugh JonesRanelagh H2.26.11
1987Mick McGeochLes Croupiers2.28.49
colspan=5|No races from 1988 to 1991
1992{{flagicon|WAL}} Hugh JonesRanelagh H2.22.58
1993Jonathan HooperBridgend AC2.25.55
1994Chris BuckleyWestbury H2.21.57
1995{{flagicon|RUS}} Valery ZolotkovRussia2.20.46
1996{{flagicon|BEL}} Marc VerrdyttBelgium2.23.43

= Women =

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
width=50|Year

!width=200|Winner

!width=250|Club

!width=150|Time

!width=150|Notes

1978Gillian AdamsAldershot, Farnham & District AC2.54.11
1979Jane DaviesEpsom & Ewell H3.21.23
1980Gillian AdamsAldershot, Farnham & District AC2.45.11
1981Caroline RodgersHighgate Harriers2.51.03
1982Kath BinnsSale Harriers2.36.12
|

|1983

Val HoweBracknell AC3.05.39
1984Sarah FosterWoking AC2.50.00
1985Pamela DaviesBelgrave Harriers3.22.28
1986Frances GuyBelgrave Harriers2.51.15
1987Christine GrayPortsmouth J3.18.50
colspan=5|No races from 1988 to 1991
1992Karen BowlerHailsham H3.08.28
1993Elaine FlatherSouthampton RRC2.51.21
1994Elaine FlatherSouthampton RRC2.51.51
1995Eryl DaviesBridgend AC2.49.23
1996Helen GrimshawHounslow AC2.57.56

References

{{Reflist}}