How a group of non-runners launched P.E.I.'s 1st marathon 45 years ago - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 01:13 AM | Calgary | -16.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
PEI

How a group of non-runners launched P.E.I.'s 1st marathon 45 years ago

What we know as the P.E.I. Marathon is celebrating its 20th anniversary this weekend but did you know the marathon is actually much older than that?

This running business became a passion, recalls Parker Lund

Several men in running gear and race numbers posed in a row in a 1970's photo.
Island runners at the Johnny Miles Marathon in Nova Scotia in May 1978 included, from left, Don Harley and Eddie Fraser flanking Johnny Miles, then Ken Campbell, Parker Lund, Freeman Churchill, Don Pridmore and front, Ewen Stewart. (Submitted by Parker Lund)

What we know as theP.E.I. Marathon is celebrating its 20th anniversary this weekend but did you know the marathon is actually much older than that?

The first marathon was held 45 years ago, in 1979, and grew out of the P.E.I. Roadrunners running club.

"It's exciting. In my life, I've had other passions, but this running business became a passion, primarily the promotion of running," Parker Lund told CBC Radio: Mainstreet host Matt Rainnie.

Lund was the first president of the P.E.I. Roadrunners Club in 1977. Back then, running or jogging wasn't the popular pastime it is now.

'A crazy move'

The club was born that year out of a fundraising run Lund and a handful of others did to raise money for playground improvements at St. Jean Elementary School, where Lund worked as the principal. He gathered a few friends and ran from Moncton to Charlottetown over three days.

Moustached man in sweaty t-shirt, visor, shorts runs along paved road.
'Im almost sure its helped prolong my life,' says Parker Lund, shown here running in 1978. He is now 86. (Prince Edward Island Marathon/Facebook)

"It was a crazy move," he said, noting that none of the men had actually done much running except for him.

"We were all just learning the game From then on, we started the club idea and then we expanded and expanded it was a lot of fun."

A group of Roadrunners then travelled to New Glasgow, N.S., in 1978 to run the Johnny Miles Marathon and meet its founder. Johnny Miles, from Cape Breton, came to fame after shocking the running world in the 1920s by winning two Boston Marathons.

Meeting Miles was "the highlight of my life," Lund said. "He was a super man."

'Pretty incredible'

In September 1979, the Roadrunners, led by Lund, organized P.E.I.'s first marathon"which is pretty incredible in a two-year span, to go from basically nothing to running a marathon and organizing a marathon."

Seventy-eight people from both on- and off-Island participated in that first marathon, starting in Cavendish and finishing at the Cenotaph in Charlottetown. Lund said there was lots of public support along the route, with people in North Rustico gathered at the roadside banging pots and pans to encourage the runners.

Newspaper page from 1979 listing sponsors for the first P.E.I. marathon
This page from the local newspaper advertises the first-ever marathon on P.E.I. (Submitted by Parker Lund)

The next few years, Lund said the marathon locked down a group of key people to organize the annual race, and excitement grew. Local businessman Frank Johnston provided his boardroom for meetings. Sponsors were found: CBC even sponsored the race in years three and four.

"It's never one person this running game was always a group of people," Lund said.

Lund and a group of fellow Roadrunners participated in the Boston Marathon in 1979, one of the highlights of his racing career.

The Boston Globe had a photo the next day that included the P.E.I. runners, which was a big thrill. "That memory pretty cool," Lund said.

I'm almost sure it's helped prolong my life.Parker Lund, now 86

Lund, 86, now lives in Halifaxand is on the Island to present an award at the 2024 P.E.I. Marathon weekend. He also plans to participate in the 5K walk with two of his daughters.

"I'm almost sure it's helped prolong my life," Lund said.

The marathon eventually became the P.E.I. Marathon and attracts more than 2,000 participants. It's now a weekend-long event that begins Saturday, Oct. 18, andis one of the qualifying races for the Boston Marathon.

Shorter running and walking races will be held Saturday, and the marathon and half-marathon will be runSunday. The route, through Charlottetown,remains the same as last year.

Map of the route of the 2024 marathon.
This year's marathon will follow the same route that it has for the last two years, starting and finishing in front of Province House in downtown Charlottetown. Drivers can expect traffic delays. (P.E.I. Marathon/Facebook)

With files from Mainstreet P.E.I.