In 1976 the entrance fee for the New York City Marathon was
five dollars. But it took years for the New York City marathon to gain enough
popularity to require an entrance fee. This is just one awesome fact I absorbed
while listening to the Bowery Boys podcast
on The New York City Marathon. The NYC marathon is one of the most popular
marathons. Over 30 thousand runners run the marathon that lays tracks through
all five burros, starting and finishing in Manhattan. There is so much history
behind the New York City Marathon. Fred Lebo, an orthodox Jew who survived the
holocaust and immigrated to New York City, started the New York Road Runners
Club in 1958. He wanted to make marathon running popular. It took a lot of
dreaming and hard work to reach this goal. The Road Runner’s Club ran in Queens
and the Bronx and used Yankee stadium locker room to change and bathe after
their running workouts. Not many people thought marathon running would gain
popularity but Fred had a dream, which he was not going to easily let go of. The
first official New York City Marathon took place in Central Park on September
17, 1970 and consisted of 4 laps around the hill filled and only semi-pathed
park. In 1976 the Road Runner’s club gained more popularity by advertising and
word of mouth. The 1976 marathon was
significant because it had a five dollar entrance fee, was held in the bi-centennial
anniversary year and the course was changed to conquer all five burros. It’s a
logistical nightmare to organize a marathon even on a large budget. The 1976
marathon had the smallest budget the New York City marathon has ever had and they
ran through all five burros with little police coverage or awareness. Anything
could have happened, but good luck was on Lebo and the road runner club
members’ side. The race raised money for the city, gained popularity and truly
united people from all different backgrounds in a time when there was a need
for lifted spirits. After the New York City Marathon gained so much popularity
other states hosted marathons. Presently the New York City marathon is the most
well known marathon and it makes itself available for all sorts of people. The
Bowery Boys explained the historical part of the marathon and their guest speaker,
a NYC marathon finisher, explained why it is so diverse and popular today. She
explained that there are many ways to get an entrance number, which is
basically your ticket to run the marathon. One way, that I was unaware of, is
to raise over $1,500 for a charity on a list that the Road Runner’s Club post
each year before the race. My favorite part of the podcast was when the guest
speaker explained just how wonderful and diverse the crowd is who cheer the
runners on. She said she encountered all sorts of tri-state area fans and her
favorite moment was when she ran through a polish neighborhood where women and
children were slicing fresh oranges and handing them out to runners, like
herself. My mother has been a member of the Central Park track team as well as
the New York Road Runner’s club since she weas fresh out college and I think
she would agree with the Bowery Boy’s podcast claim that the New York City
Marathon is magical.
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