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1897
John J. McDermott, representing the Pastime Athletic Club of New York City,
captured the first running of the Boston Marathon - then known as the B.A.A.
Road Race. Fifteen runners started the first race with 10 finishing the 24.5
mile trek from Metcalf's Mill in Ashland, Mass., to the finish line at the
Oval on Irvington Street, in downtown Boston. McDermott, who had won the only
other marathon on U.S. soil the previous October in New York, took the lead from
Harvard athlete Dick Grant over the hills in Newton. Although McDermott walked
several times during the final miles, he still won by a comfortable six-minute,
fifty-two-second margin in 2:55:10.
1898
The second running of the B.A.A.'s Road Race attracted 25 starters and
witnessed 15 runners successfully complete the distance. Canadian Ronald
MacDonald, a 22-year-old Boston College student, who donned bicycle shoes
for his first marathon attempt, overhauled New York cross-country champion
Hamilton Gray with just over two miles remaining, before crossing the line
in a triumphant 2:42. His time was considered a world-best performance for
the marathon at the time. Defending champion John J. McDermott was fourth
(in 2:54:17), while pre-race favorite Louis Liebgold of Gotham, New Jersey,
wearing bib No. 1, was forced to drop out of the race.
1899
At 173 pounds, Cambridge blacksmith Lawrence Brignolia is the heaviest
runner ever to win the Boston Marathon. Brignolia, who seemed quite suited
to tackle the strong gale-like winds that hampered runners the entire way,
caught Harvard alumnus Dick Grant on the Newton hills, and finished in 2:54:38.
The strength of the winds reportedly caused Brignolia to step on a loose stone
and fall during his approach to Kenmore Square. Stopping to regain his
composure, Brignolia walked and ran the remaining distance to the new finish
line on Exeter Street, in front of the B.A.A. clubhouse.
1900
Influenced by MacDonald's victory in 1898, Canadian runners began to establish
themselves in the marathon. Led by John P. Caffery of Hamilton, Ontario,
the Canadian runners finished 1-2-3 as fellow countrymen Bill Sherring and
Frank Hughson followed Caffery across the finish line. Caffery finished in
2:39:44 after overtaking Sherring in Auburndale, 16 miles into the race.
The race was marked by the only false start in the race's history as Canadian
John Barnard "jumped the gun" and the runners had to be reassembled at the start.
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