On this day … 17 September 1881

The Preston Chronicle carried a report of a meeting at the White Horse Inn, Friargate, to promote cross country running as a healthier and safer alternative to football. It was headlined ‘Hare and Hounds Club for Preston’, and reported that:

‘It is proposed to have runs across country every Saturday, instead of playing football, the promoters believing that it is attended with less danger and more exercise.’

It was at that meeting that in seeking a name for the new club it was decided to call it the Preston Harriers, the club that is still going strong in the town today.

It was a rather hesitant start for the club, with only a ‘moderate attendance’ at the meeting. But it soon established itself in the town, with one of its first captains being singled out by the Chronicle as a model for ‘young men who want to get on in life’.

This was a J. W. Dickson, who in the first year of the club’s existence carried off prizes for long distance running worth £100. Mr Dickson, who lived in Frenchwood Street with his sister, was also captain of the Lancaster Road Cricket Club. He went on to train to become a Congregational minister.

The distinctive feature of the new club seems to have been its concentration on cross country running. Long distance running was already a very popular sport in Preston, and the Preston Athletic Association had featured long distance races in its annual sports events at which ‘some of the best Men in England will Compete’. The first of these was held in 1874.

In fact, long distance running had been extremely popular since the late eighteenth century, but these races were a far cry from the pastime for ‘young men who want to get on in life’ of the later nineteenth century.

They involved much drinking and betting and were frequently held along the new turnpike roads, with their milestones providing perfect distance markers. One recent writer noted:

‘Far from the polite and supportive crowds that clap every competitor at road running events today, the masses who lined the turnpikes two hundred years ago were partisan, invested, possibly drunk and potentially violent. As the stifling moral climate of the Victorian Age descended, this volatile but colourful cocktail of running, roads, betting and alcohol was deemed a problem that needed to be fixed.’

This sort of race was common in Preston in the middle of the nineteenth century, as the ‘On this day …’ post for 19 February recalled. One race in particular offended because of the state of undress of one of the competitors, who ran with just ‘a handkerchief fastened round his loins’.

An early Preston Harriers team
‘Preston Harriers 1905. Taken at Ashton Park’: https://www.flickr.com/photos/rpsmithbarney/4057248864/
An unknown Preston Harriers runner
‘Portraits from Preston. Sitter: unknown runner Preston Harriers’: https://www.flickr.com/photos/rpsmithbarney/41295735491/
Preston Harriers member at 1952 Guild ceremony
‘1952 Preston Guild.. Two carved scroll emblems were produced for the 1952 guild and were sent abroad in 1951. They arrived back at Liverpool aboard the Empress of Canada on Friday August 29th. That evening the scrolls were kept in safe keeping by the Lord Mayor of Liverpool, Alderman A. Morrow. The next morning Preston Harriers took turns in relay running non stop from Liverpool to Preston. The honor of carrying the first scroll into the town along Fishergate was given to the Harrier’s Chairman Harry Harwood. Here he is presenting the scroll to the Mayor John Ward at the Town Hall’: https://www.flickr.com/photos/rpsmithbarney/46782740031/

Sources
The Preston Chronicle, available for free on line to members of Lancashire County Library, is a superb source for the history of nineteenth-century Preston: https://www.lancashire.gov.uk/libraries-and-archives/libraries/digital-library/newspapers-old-and-new/
http://runningstudies.co.uk/a-short-history-of-running-on-the-roads


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