ATHLETICS
Middlesex ranks first of all the counties of
England in this branch of sport, containing, as
it does, some of the oldest and most important
athletic clubs in the country; many clubs
in the county indeed are able to boast of an
unbroken existence of nearly half a century.
Foremost among athletic clubs in Middlesex
is the London Athletic Club. Founded in 1863
under the title of the Mincing Lane Athletic
Club, it took its present name in the spring
of 1866. It held its first athletic meeting at
the Beaufort House grounds at Brompton on
9 April 1864, and a second on 21 May of
the same year. It continued to meet there
until 1869, having in 1867 had sports at the
Old Deer Park, Richmond, and at Beaufort
House, Walham Green. After it moved its
head quarters to Lillie Bridge in 1869
meetings were held there until 1876. In
1877 it again moved, this time to its own
grounds at Stamford Bridge, Fulham. These
grounds of six and a half acres were closed
after the last meeting on 24 September 1904,
and a new and larger track was made, partly
on the same site, with a banked track for
cycling and seating accommodation for 10,000
people. The new area of seventeen acres
was still known as Stamford Bridge, and the
L.A.C. opened with a meeting on 10 May
1905. During the winter months the ground
is used by the Chelsea Football Club.
The L.A.C. has been fortunate in securing
the support of many prominent men in the
management of its affairs, such names as
those of Lord Alverstone and the Earl of
Jersey (both famous athletes of a bygone day)
appearing, among others as famous, on its list
of officers. Its present president is Mr.
Montague Shearman, K.C., a well-known
runner at Oxford University, who afterwards
won the amateur championship both at 100
and 440 yards. The L.A.C. now holds four
afternoon and two evening meetings a year
at which races open to all amateurs, approved
by the committee, are included as well as races
for challenge cups and other events open to
members. In addition the club holds an
extra meeting in the spring, chiefly confined
to contests at various distances for the Public
Schools Championships. The club also competes annually against Oxford and Cambridge
Universities, on the lines of the interUniversity sports, and these meetings act as an
interesting and useful trial for the teams
about to compete in the more important
event at Queen's Club. The membership of
the L.A.C. now totals about 400, a number
far exceeded in the early years of the last
quarter of the nineteenth century, when
athletics were more popular than they are at
the present time. The club, however, has
done yeoman service in the past in the cause
of athletics.
Another old and still prominent club holding its meetings at Stamford Bridge is the
Civil Service Athletic Club, whose members
are drawn from the various branches of his
Majesty's Civil Service. This club held its
first meeting in 1864 at Brompton and, like
the L.A.C., moved to Lillie Bridge in 1869,
and finally to Stamford Bridge, where it held
its forty-fourth meeting in June 1907. The
Civil Service Athletic Club includes several
open events in its programme which always
attract good entries from the best athletes of
the day.
The United Hospitals Athletic Club,
founded in 1867, also holds its meetings at
Stamford Bridge. Its chief attraction is a
competition for a challenge shield between
members of the various London hospitals.
Many notable performances have been done
both at Lillie Bridge and Stamford Bridge
from time to time, and though all the old
amateur records made at Lillie Bridge have
now been beaten, the following records,
accomplished at Stamford Bridge, still stand
to-day:—
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W. P. Phillips, 120 yds. in 114/5 sec |
on 25 Mar. 1882 |
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C. A. Bradley, 120 yds. in 114/5 sec |
28 Apr. 1894 |
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A. R. Downer, 120 yds. in 114/5 sec |
,, 11 May 1895 |
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J. W. Morton, 120 yds. in 114/5 sec |
" 24 Sept. 1904 |
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C. G. Wood, 150 yds. in 144/5 sec |
" 21 July 1887 |
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E. H. Pelling, 200 yds. in 194/5 sec |
" 28 Sept. 1889 |
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A. R. Downer, 200 yds. in 194/5 sec |
" 14 May 1895 |
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C. H. Jupp, 200 yds. in 194/5 sec. |
" 4 June 1904 |
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C. G. Wood, 220 yds. in 214/5 sec |
" 25 June 1887 |
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E. H. Pelling, 250 yds. in 244/5 sec |
" 22 Sept. 1888 |
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C. G. Wood, 300 yds. in 312/5 sec |
" 27 July 1887 |
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H. C. L. Tindall, 440 yds. in 48½ sec |
" 29 June 1889 |
|
(At A.A.A. Championship Meeting.) |
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E. C. Bredin, 440 yds. in 48½ sec |
on 22 June 1895 |
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W. E. Lutyens, 1,000 yds. in 2 min. 144/5 sec |
on 5 July 1898 |
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J. Binks, 1 mile in 4 min. 164/5 sec |
" 5 July 1902 |
|
(At A.A.A. Championships, Lieut. H.C. Hawtrey only being beaten by a yard in this race.) |
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A. Shrubb, 3 miles in 14 min. 173/5 sec |
on 21 May 1900 |
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F. Appleby, 15 miles in 1 hr. 20 min. 43/5 sec |
" 21 July 1902 |
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W. G. George ran 11 miles 932¼ yds. in 1 hr |
" 28 July 1884 |
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G. Crossland ran 20 miles 440 yds. in 2 hrs |
" 22 Sept. 1894 |
After W. G. George became a professional
runner he ran a mile in a match with W.
Cummings on 23 August 1886, at Lillie
Bridge, in 4 min. 12¾ sec., which stands as a
world's record to this day. As an amateur he
had twice beaten the mile record, once at
Stamford Bridge and again at Lillie Bridge.
The Universities of Oxford and Cambridge have held their sports in London since
1867; but, when the Lillie Bridge grounds
were closed, they founded the Queen's Club at
West Kensington in 1877. Here is a splendid
cinder track of rather over three laps to the
mile, and this ground has since been the
venue of the University Sports, which are
always looked upon as one of the chief athletic
attractions of the year.
The following are the inter-University
records at the present date:—
100 yds. by J. P. Tennant, J. G. Wilson, and
G. H. Urmson, all of Oxford, 10 sec.
120 yds. (hurdles), K. Powell, Cambridge, 153/5 sec.
440 yds. W. Fitzherbert, Cambridge, 493/5 sec.
880 yds. K. Cornwallis, Oxford, 1 min. 544/5 sec.
1 mile, C.C. Henderson-Hamilton, Oxford, 4 min.
174/5 sec.
3 miles, F. S. Horan, Cambridge, 14 min. 443/5 sec.
High jump, M. J. Brooks, Oxford, 6ft. 2½ in.
Long jump, C. B. Fry, Oxford, 23 ft. 5 in.
Putting the weight (16 lb.), W. W. Coe, Oxford,
43 ft. 10 in.
Throwing the hammer (16 lb.), R. H. LindsayWatson, Oxford, 148 ft. 10 in.
An athletic meeting between Oxford and
Yale Universities was held at Queen's Club
on 16 July 1894, Oxford winning by five
and a half events to three and a half. Oxford
and Cambridge met the combined Universities
of Yale and Harvard on the same ground on
22 July 1899, when the Englishmen won by
five events to four. Yale and Harvard wiped
out this defeat at Berkeley Oval, New York,
on 25 September 1901, by six events to three,
and repeated their victory at Queen's Club on
23 July 1904, again winning by six events
to three. At the latter meeting W. A.
Schick, of Harvard, won the 100 yds. race in
94/5 sec., which is a record for an English
track.
The Amateur Championships prior to 1879
were controlled by the Amateur Athletic
Club, which was formed in 1866. It held
its first championship meeting in London in
that year and continued to do so until the
management was taken over by the Amateur
Athletic Association in 1880. The Amateur
Athletic Club held its championships at Lillie
Bridge immediately after the Oxford and
Cambridge Sports, and they were chiefly
patronized by the runners from those Universities. Owing to the growth of the
L.A.C. and provincial clubs it was felt that
the general body of athletes would be able
to compete on more equal terms if the
championships were held in the summer.
With this end in view, the L.A.C. held
an extra championship meeting in the summer of 1879 at Stamford Bridge. On
4 April 1880, a meeting of representatives
of the chief athletic clubs in the country was
held at Oxford, and the Amateur Athletic
Association was then formed, with its head
quarters in London. The A.A.A. is now
the governing body for all amateur athletic
clubs in England. All athletic clubs of
any standing are affiliated to the Association
and hold their meetings under its laws. It
has branches in the North and Midlands,
and controls the championships which are
held alternately in London, the North and
Midlands.
Middlesex also contains some important
cross-country clubs. The Highgate Harriers,
founded in 1879, held the National Championship in 1899, 1902, 1904 and 1905, and
won the Southern Counties Championship in
1899, 1900, and from 1903 to 1907 without a break. The Finchley Harriers, also
founded in 1879, won the National Championship in 1900, and were Southern Counties
Champions in 1887, 1888, 1891, 1892, and
from 1895 to 1897. The Hampstead
Harriers, founded in 1890, the Polytechnic
Harriers, whose head quarters are in Regent
Street, and the St. Bride's Institute Athletic
Club also run across country.