Ultrarunning History

80: The Comrades Marathon


Listen Later

By Davy Crockett 
You can read, listen, or watch
The Comrades Marathon (about 55 miles), held in South Africa, is the world’s largest and oldest ultramarathon race that is still held today with fields that have topped 23,000 runners.
The year 2021, marked the 100th anniversary of Comrades Marathon “The Ultimate Human Race.” Comrades today is one of the most paramount ultrarunning events on the international calendar. It has a rich 100-year history packed with amazing accomplishments by more than 400,000 finishers through the years. How did it start and what kept it going for a century? This episode will cover the first two years of the race in 1921 and 1922.
New Book!  Classic Ultramarathon Beginnings Read about the early history of Comrades and other classic Ultramarathons.  Available on Amazon.
Vic Clapham
Vic Clapham (1886-1962) was a train engineer from Durban, South Africa and became the founder of the Comrades Marathon. He was born in London and went to South Africa with his parents when he was 13 years old in 1899 while the Anglo-Boer War was taking place between the British Empire and two Boer states who were fighting against British rule. Diamonds and gold had been discovered in those states. As a boy during the war, Clapham enrolled as an ambulance man in the Cardock Town Guard. Thousands died on both side of the conflict, especially women and children Boers.
As a youth, Clapham attended Wynberg Boy’s High School, one of the best academic schools in Cape Town, and second oldest in South Africa. He would often walk about eight kilometers to school each day from his home. Usually he was given a three-penny “tickey” each day to pay for a train ride home so he could help in his father’s grocery store. Once he spent the money on sweets and instead walked back home. That resulted in a beating from his grandmother, and he never repeated that offence.
He married Nellie in 1912 and they eventually had six sons. World War I broke out in 1914 when Clapham was age 28. As South Africa entered the bloody conflict, Clapham signed up with the 8th South African Infantry and was sent to German East Africa, now Tanzania. During his service he went on a 1,700-mile march in East Africa. He came down with blackwater fever, dysentery, malaria, and was close to death because of the diseases. In 1917 when he was mostly recovered, he travelled home by wagon and on a hospital ship where he was deemed medically unfit. Once home he worked for the local government railway as a fireman.
The Idea for Comrades Marathon
Returning British soldiers formed the “League of Comrades of the Great War” to represent the rights of veterans of the war.  Clapham was interested in establishing a memorial to the suffering and deaths of his comrades during the war. Instead of creating a statue, he wanted a living memorial that would grow and embody the spirit of fortitude, endurance and bravery that typified his fallen comrades. He produced an idea to organize an event on foot from his hometown in Pietermarizburg to the coastal city of Durban, a distance of about 56 miles.
Clapham was inspired by the London to Brighton walking races that were held before World War I (see episode 58) and wanted to create a similar race in South Africa. It was reported, “He felt that if infantrymen, drafted into the armed forces from sedentary jobs, could endure forced marches over great distances, trained athletes could cover the distance between the two cities without great difficulty.”
Clapham approached the League of Comrades about the idea in 1918 but received no support. They thought that the idea was crazy, far too strenuous for even trained runners. But he did not give up over the next several years, and eventually received approval for the event to be held in 1921. The League wanted their name associated with the event and sponsored it by lending Clapham one pound sterling which needed to be repaid.
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Ultrarunning HistoryBy Davy Crockett

  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9

4.9

87 ratings


More shows like Ultrarunning History

View all
Trail Runner Nation by Trail Runner Nation

Trail Runner Nation

1,178 Listeners

Bedtime History: Inspirational Stories for Kids and Families by Bedtime History

Bedtime History: Inspirational Stories for Kids and Families

2,817 Listeners

FKT Podcast by Fastest Known

FKT Podcast

171 Listeners

The Freetrail Podcast with Dylan Bowman by Dylan Bowman

The Freetrail Podcast with Dylan Bowman

779 Listeners

Some Work, All Play by David Roche and Megan Roche

Some Work, All Play

1,828 Listeners

Singletrack by Finn Melanson

Singletrack

923 Listeners

MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories by Ballen Studios

MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories

28,647 Listeners

The Trailhead by UltraSignup

The Trailhead

106 Listeners