Legend has it that, on this day in
the year 490 B.C., a trained runner by the name of Pheidippides (or
Phidippides or Philippides) of Athens, was dispatched to seek help
against the invading Persian army. He ran for two days and two
nights to the city of Sparta, about 125 miles away. Because of a
religious festival, he could not get the needed help until after the
next full moon, so he ran back without reinforcements.
Fortunately, they won the battle against the Persians at Marathon.
After the battle and victory, Pheidippides ran 26 miles from
Marathon to Athens to carry the news of the victory. His last words
before he collapsed and died, were something like, "We have won."
In honor of Pheidippides, the 26-mile marathon became part of the
Olympic Games held in Athens in 1896. Seventeen runners began, but
only nine finished the race. Hamilton Ontario’s 30k Around the Bay
Road Race is the oldest long-distance race in North America. It was
first run in 1894 – two years before the first Olympics and three
years before Boston.
At the Olympic games in London in 1908, King Edward VII asked to
have the race begin near Queen Victoria’s statue at Windsor Castle.
The revised distance of 26 miles to the stadium, plus a 385-yard lap
of the track was established. This is the distance each race honors
today.