Running as tradition

Running as tradition
Harvard conference focuses on achievements of Native Americans, long dominant in the sport
April 14, 2016 | Editor’s Pick    Popular

Video: Producer and editor, Joe Sherman; production assistant, Catherine Seraphin
By Patrick L. Kennedy, Harvard Correspondent
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It happened 80 years ago this Patriots Day. Ellison Brown, a Narragansett from Rhode Island, began to lose steam as he raced up Newton’s hills — the leg of the Boston Marathon course that dashes so many hopes. Back in second place, Johnny Kelley had trailed the frontrunner for three miles, but now he smelled blood. Kelley closed a half-mile gap down to a few yards. At the top of the last and highest hill, Kelley passed Brown, giving him a pat on the back as he did so.
Kelley later said the gesture was intended to be friendly, but Brown bristled. “Maybe he thought he was going to go by, but I didn’t,” Brown would say. Rather than fading further, Brown, whose nickname was “Tarzan,” regained his strength and sailed past Kelley, the latter’s hard-fought gains all in vain. After that, sportswriters nicknamed that stretch of Commonwealth Avenue “Heartbreak Hill.”
Brown held on for the victory that day in 1936. “It delighted the crowd thronging the sidewalks,” wrote the Boston Globe, “to see a copper-skinned, 100 percent American [win] the race. He triumphed in the very oldest sport, and he did it in a way to bring credit on the original proprietors of New England.”
Though Brown was one of the best — he also competed in that year’s Olympics and won the Boston Marathon again in 1939, in the then-record time of 2:28:51 — he was far from the only Native American to stand out in the early annals of competitive running.
Indeed, distance running has a rich tradition in Native American cultures, one that predates the modern marathon movement by many millennia, said Daniel Lieberman, Harvard University’s Edwin M. Lerner II Professor of Biological Sciences.
To honor and perpetuate that tradition, Harvard’s Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology is joining forces with the Boston Athletic Association (BAA) this weekend for “Native American Running: Culture, Health, Sport.” Beginning Friday at 1:30 p.m. at the Science Center, the conference gathers athletes and experts such as Billy Mills, the Oglala Lakota Sioux who won the 1964 Olympic gold medal in the 10,000-meter event, for discussions on the past, present, and future of Native American running.
Pride of the Penobscot
In recent years, the Tarahumara of Mexico’s Copper Canyons region have received attention for their running prowess, and rightly so. The tribe’s Arnulfo Quimare, winner of many ultramarathons, will speak at the conference, as will Harvard alumnus Christopher McDougall ’85, whose book about the Tarahumara, “Born to Run,” helped spread awareness of their feats and inspired readers to run.
Yet there is so much more to the story of indigenous runners, Lieberman said in an interview. Running-centered traditions abound, he said, “from the Arctic all the way down to the tip of South America.”
To take one example close to home, 1912 Olympian Andrew Sockalexis came from the Penobscot Nation in Maine. His reservation encompassed a portion of the tribe’s ancestral lands along the Penobscot River, where his father once hunted in the traditional manner, said Dale Lolar, a Penobscot and a relative of Sockalexis. “He would run down game, deer. That was his job. He would run them down, disable them, kill them, and somebody else would deal with the carcass.” That meat would feed the tribe throughout the winter.
Local doctors used the extract to treat patients for such diseases as malaria, heart disease, stomach canadian cheap viagra disorders and even psychological problems for years. There is no doubt how the coward attitude of your general public stimulates crimes. order cialis online I have come up with a set of neurological exercises cialis properien appalachianmagazine.com to rehabilitate the cerebellum. Side effects In some cases, pfizer viagra 50mg can cause headaches and dyspepsia (in 11% and 7% cases respectively). Inheriting his father’s strong legs and lungs, the young Sockalexis won Penobscot foot races and entered his first Boston Marathon in 1911, finishing 17th. He joined the prestigious North Dorchester (Mass.) Athletic Association, which counted the great Clarence DeMar as a member. In 1912, he ran Boston again. This time, he led the pack for eight miles before being passed by Mike Ryan, who — pushed until the finish by the persistent Sockalexis — won in the record time of 2:21:18. (The course then was about 25 miles, not to be standardized at 26.2 miles until the 1920s.) Sockalexis finished 34 seconds later. Both men went on to compete in that summer’s Olympics at Stockholm — along with Lewis Tewanima of the Hopi Nation.
Sockalexis finished a close second at Boston again in 1913. Sadly, he died of tuberculosis in 1919, at age 27. Lolar will run the marathon on Monday in his honor. Another relative, Chris Sockalexis, the Penobscot tribal historic-preservation officer (and a onetime Junior Olympics cross-country runner), will speak at the Harvard conference.
Running together
It’s no surprise that an elite Native American runner would come from a hunting heritage. Lieberman’s research suggests that we humans evolved our unique endurance running ability millions of years ago, in order to race prey to exhaustion, just as Sockalexis’ father did in the 19th century.
The same trait allowed a young Tom Longboat, an Onondaga from the Six Nations Reserve in Ontario, to beat horses in races of more than two miles. (He would have lost shorter races, because horses are natural sprinters.) Longboat went on to win the Boston Marathon in 1907 in 2:24:24, smashing the previous record by more than five minutes, and to compete in the Olympics at London in 1908.
However, Lieberman stressed that the significance of running goes beyond hunting in native cultures. Footraces have long been featured in ceremonies, he said, “important to cementing ties, to redistributing crops and goods, to celebrating important events. … The diversity of traditions is staggering. The common theme, though, is the role of running in community events.”
In a sense, said Lieberman, the Boston Marathon, while a newer community event (run annually since 1897), is part of a long and ancient tradition of communal celebration — and cooperation. Runners raise millions of dollars a year for charities through their participation in the race. “Why are people running 26.2 miles for charity?” Lieberman said. “I think it’s because we’ve always run to help each other. Back in the old days, people ran to hunt, for security, to ensure the rains, for ritual. But running has always been a communal activity about helping each other, and I don’t think that today’s marathon movement is any different.”
Getting out there and running
Lolar, for example, has run marathons to raise funds for the Penobscot River Restoration Project. He has also helped people more directly. In his work as a substance abuse counselor, he’s been involved in efforts to encourage Penobscot youth to take up running and other sports.
That need to boost young Native Americans’ self-esteem and get them outdoors and moving is a raison d’être for this weekend’s conference. “We didn’t have to compete against Xbox and PlayStation in the ’70s and ’80s,” said Chris Sockalexis, about being a young runner in the Andrew Sockalexis Track Club. “The heartbeat of the ASTC is still there,” added Sockalexis, whose former teammates are coaching kids in running, basketball, hockey, canoeing — “whatever they want to achieve in.”
He said those of his own generation often point to Andrew Sockalexis’ achievements when telling teens, “Don’t give up.”
“A lot of youth today seem to try something new and give up on it. We’re challenging them to keep going, to be inspired by Andrew as well as our traditional basket-makers, our singers, our dancers. They should know that running is a part of our culture, and it always has been.”
Presented by the Peabody in collaboration with the BAA, the Harvard University Native American Program, the Office of the Provost, and the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, the conference continues on Saturday at the John Hancock Sports & Fitness Expo at the Hynes Convention Center. All events are free and open to the public.

From
Michael Zielinski

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About Jerry Schaver

Personal History of Jerry Group Director of the 50 and DC Marathon Group from 2002 to 2011 Jerry was born and raised in a small community in Albany, Illinois along the muddy Mississippi river. Jerry still resides in Albany today. He is the youngest son of three boys. He graduated from Fulton High school in 1977. He has one daughter, Nichole and grandsons, Hunter and Nolan. Jerry works for Alcoa Mill Products in Bettendorf, Iowa. Jerry also does volunteer work for the Special Olympics, YWCA, and local races in the community. His life lessons were learned from his grandfather on how to be compassionate with others and to make life simple. Jerry enjoys many hobbies. Hiking in the woods, enjoying the nature and wildlife, or viewing the mountains, and maybe climbing a few too! Motorcycle riding has became his new passion, along with bicycle riding. Jerry bikes either to help recover from injuries, or for an alternative to training. Recently he has got his grandson involved in bike riding with a trail along bike. The two of them enjoy riding on the local bike path. Weight-lifting is an important hobby but also a great tool for marathon training. Jerry was a heavy smoker and overweight when he decided to take up running to get back into shape in 1994. He first tried out small races but went on to do his first marathon in 1995 in Chicago. He had no experience and no one to give him advice and learned that day he had a lot to learn yet. Jerry became determined that running marathons was something he wanted to continue to do. Jerry became a member of the 50 and DC Marathon Group in 1999 after completing 20 states as in the old rules. After being in the group a few years he felt there was a need to have a website to help with the growing number of members. Jerry with the help of his web-designer friend Bob developed a website for the group in 2001. He also is the web host of the website, taking care of all the members’ stats and etc. Jerry was the Group Director of the 50 and DC Marathon Group since December 1, 2002. Through his travels on marathons, he has developed many friendships around the world. Jerry has traveled twice to Cuba with World T.E.A.M. Sports to run marathons, but the main goal of the trips was to help the disabled Cuban athletes with hand-cycles and medical injury prevention. His compassion for helping the disabled has enabled him to help them with their goals of doing marathons by allowing them to join the 50 and DC Group under special rules. Long term goals for Jerry include running marathons in Russia and Ireland. And hopefully in the future have his two grandsons by his side running a marathon with him. Jerry lives by his motto of “I can, I will, I’ll try, I do.”