- Tom Longboat
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Tom Longboat
Tom Longboat with the Ward Marathon TrophyPersonal information Full name Thomas Charles Longboat Nationality Canada Born June 4, 1887
Six Nations Reserve
Brantford, OntarioDied January 9, 1949 (aged 61)
Six Nations Reserve
Brantford, OntarioHeight 1.75 metres (5 ft 9 in) Weight 66 kilograms (150 lb) Sport Sport Running Event(s) Long-distance Club Brantford Cogwagee (Thomas Charles Longboat) (June 4, 1887 – January 9, 1949) was an Onondaga distance runner from the Six Nations of the Grand River First Nation Indian reserve near Brantford, Ontario, and for much of his career the dominant long distance runner of the time. When he was a child a Mohawk resident of the reserve, Bill Davis, who in 1901 finished second in the Boston Marathon, interested him in running races.
Contents
History
He began racing in 1905, finishing second in the Victoria Day race at Caledonia, Ontario. His first important victory was in the Around the Bay Road Race in Hamilton, Ontario in 1906, which he won by three minutes. In 1907 he won the Boston Marathon in a record time of 2:24:24 over the old 24-1/2 mile course, four minutes and 59 seconds faster than any of the previous ten winners of the event. He collapsed, however, in the 1908 Olympic marathon, along with several other leading runners, and a rematch was organized the same year at Madison Square Garden in New York City. Longboat won this race, turned professional, and in 1909 at the same venue won the title of Professional Champion of the World in another marathon.
His coaches did not approve of his alternation of hard workouts with “active rest” such as long walks. When he was a professional, these recovery periods annoyed his promoters and the sports press often labelled him “lazy,” although the practice of incorporating "hard", "easy", and "recovery" days into training is normal today. Because of this and other disputes with his managers Longboat bought out his contract, after which his times improved.
Longboat's chief rival was Alfred Shrubb, whom he raced ten times, winning all the races at 20 miles or more and losing all those at shorter distances.
He served as a dispatch runner in France in World War I while maintaining a professional career. He retired following the war.
Private life
In 1908 he married Lauretta Maracle. After he was mistakenly declared dead during World War I, Lauretta remarried in 1918. He later married Martha Silversmith, with whom he had four children. After the war Longboat settled in Toronto where he worked until 1944. He retired to the Six Nations Reserve and died of pneumonia on January 9, 1949.
Legacy
In 1951 the Tom Longboat Awards were instituted by Jan Eisenhardt. This program, administered since 1999 by the Aboriginal Sport Circle, annually honours outstanding First Nations athletes and sportsmen in each province; national male and female winners are selected from the provincial winners. Longboat was inducted into both the Canadian Sports Hall of Fame and the Indian Hall of Fame.[1]
Longboat is also commemorated annually by the Toronto Island 10 km race.
See also
- Notable Aboriginal people of Canada
- List of winners of the Boston Marathon
General references
- Jack Batten. The Man Who Ran Faster Than Everyone. Tundra Books, 2002.
- Bruce Kidd. Tom Longboat. Fitzhenry & Whiteside, 1992.
- David Blaikie. Boston, the Canadian Story. Seneca House Books, 1984 ISBN 0920598048
References
- ^ "Runner: Tom Longboat - Veterans Affairs Canada". Canada Remembers » History » Other Stories » Native Soldiers. Government of Canada. 2005-06-30. http://www.vac-acc.gc.ca/remembers/sub.cfm?source=history/other/native/longboat. Retrieved 2009-10-03.
External links
- Louise Cuthand, Tom Longboat... A Notable Indian Athlete
- Cheryl Petten, Tom Longboat: Athlete continues to inspire
- Alfred Shrubb, Thomas Charles Longboat World Championship Iroquois Marathoner 1887-1949
- John G. Lyng, Meeting Tom Longboat's Daughter
- Tom Longboat (Ed Dixon)
Boston Men's Marathon Winners 1897: John McDermott (USA) · 1898: Ronald MacDonald (CAN) · 1899: Lawrence Brignolia (USA) · 1900-1: Jack Caffery (CAN) · 1902: Sammy Mellor (USA) · 1903: John Lorden (USA) · 1904: Michael Spring (USA) · 1905: Frederick Lorz (USA) · 1906: Tim Ford (USA) · 1907: Thomas Longboat (CAN) · 1908: Thomas Morrissey (USA) · 1909: Henri Renaud (USA) · 1910: Fred Cameron (CAN) · 1911: Clarence DeMar (USA) · 1912: Michael Ryan (USA) · 1913: Fritz Carlson (USA) · 1914: James Duffy (CAN) · 1915: Édouard Fabre (CAN) · 1916: Arthur Roth (USA) · 1917: Bill Kennedy (USA) · 1918: (Military Relay) · 1919: Carl Linder (USA) · 1920: Peter Trivoulides (USA) · 1921: Frank Zuna (USA) · 1922-4: Clarence DeMar (USA) · 1925: Charles Mellor (USA) · 1926: John C. Miles (CAN) · 1927-8: Clarence DeMar (USA) · 1929: John C. Miles (CAN) · 1930: Clarence DeMar (USA) · 1931: James P. Henigan (USA) · 1932: Paul de Bruyn (GER) · 1933: Leslie S. Pawson (USA) · 1934: Dave Komonen (CAN) · 1935: John A. Kelley (USA) · 1936: Ellison Brown (USA) · 1937: Walter Young (CAN) · 1938: Leslie S. Pawson (USA) · 1939: Ellison Brown (USA) · 1940: Gérard Côté (CAN) · 1941: Leslie S. Pawson (USA) · 1942: Joe Smith (USA) · 1943-4: Gérard Côté (CAN) · 1945: John A. Kelley (USA) · 1946: Stylianos Kyriakides (GRE) · 1947: Suh Yun-bok (KOR) · 1948: Gérard Côté (CAN) · 1949: Karl Leandersson (SWE) · 1950: Ham Kee-Yong (KOR) · 1951: Shigeki Tanaka (JPN) · 1952: Mateo Flores (GTM) · 1953: Keizo Yamada (JPN) · 1954: Veikko Karvonen (FIN) · 1955: Hideo Hamamura (JPN) · 1956: Antti Viskari (FIN) · 1957: John J. Kelley (USA) · 1958: Franjo Mihalić (YUG) · 1959: Eino Oksanen (FIN) · 1960: Paavo Kotila (FIN) · 1961-2: Eino Oksanen (FIN) · 1963-4: Aurèle Vandendriessche (BEL) · 1965: Morio Shigematsu (JPN) · 1966: Kenji Kimihara (JPN) · 1967: David McKenzie (NZL) · 1968: Amby Burfoot (USA) · 1969: Yoshiaki Unetani (JPN) · 1970: Ron Hill (GBR) · 1971: Álvaro Mejía (COL) · 1972: Olavi Suomalainen (FIN) · 1973: Jon Anderson (USA) · 1974: Neil Cusack (IRE) · 1975: Bill Rodgers (USA) · 1976: Jack Fultz (USA) · 1977: Jerome Drayton (CAN) · 1978-80: Bill Rodgers (USA) · 1981: Toshihiko Seko (JPN) · 1982: Alberto Salazar (USA) · 1983: Greg Meyer (USA) · 1984-5: Geoff Smith (GBR) · 1986: Robert de Castella (AUS) · 1987: Toshihiko Seko (JPN) · 1988: Ibrahim Hussein (KEN) · 1989: Abebe Mekonnen (ETH) · 1990: Gelindo Bordin (ITA) · 1991-2: Ibrahim Hussein (KEN) · 1993-5: Cosmas Ndeti (KEN) · 1996: Moses Tanui (KEN) · 1997: Lameck Aguta (KEN) · 1998: Moses Tanui (KEN) · 1999: Joseph Chebet (KEN) · 2000: Elijah Lagat (KEN) · 2001: Lee Bong-Ju (KOR) · 2002: Rodgers Rop (KEN) · 2003: Robert Kipkoech Cheruiyot (KEN) · 2004: Timothy Cherigat (KEN) · 2005: Hailu Negussie (ETH) · 2006-8: Robert Kipkoech Cheruiyot (KEN) · 2009: Deriba Merga (ETH) · 2010: Robert Kiprono Cheruiyot (KEN) · 2011: Geoffrey Mutai (KEN)
World Marathon Majors: Berlin Marathon - List (M/W) · Boston Marathon - List (M/W) · Chicago Marathon - List (M/W) · London Marathon - List (M/W) · New York City Marathon - List (M/W) Categories:- 1887 births
- 1949 deaths
- Canadian male middle distance runners
- Canadian male long-distance runners
- Sportspeople from Ontario
- Canada's Sports Hall of Fame inductees
- Iroquois people
- Olympic track and field athletes of Canada
- Athletes (track and field) at the 1908 Summer Olympics
- Onondaga
- First Nations sportspeople
- National Historic Persons of Canada
- Boston Marathon winners
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