Jim Peters
Olympic athlete
1918 – 1999
Who was Jim Peters?
Jim Peters was a long-distance runner from England. He broke the world record for the men's marathon four times in the 1950s. He was the first runner to complete a marathon under 2 hours 20 minutes – an achievement which was equated to the breaking of the four-minute mile. He achieved this at the Polytechnic Marathon of 1953, a point-to-point race from Windsor to Chiswick, West-London.
Later that same year Peters set the first sub-2:20 clocking on an out-and-back course, at the Enschede Marathon, the Netherlands.
At the 1954 Vancouver Commonwealth Games he reached the stadium in first place, 17 minutes ahead of the next runner, but collapsed repeatedly and failed to finish. After covering just 200 metres in 11 minutes, he was stretchered away and never raced again. "I was lucky not to have died that day", he later said. His Games kit, including plimsolls and the special medal which following the games the Duke of Edinburgh sent to Jim inscribed "To a most gallant marathon runner." were given to The Sports Hall of Fame, Vancouver in 1967 for exhibition.
He served as president of the then recently formed Road Runners Club from 1955 - 1956.
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- Born
- Oct 24, 1918
London Borough of Hackney - Lived in
- London
- London Borough of Hackney
- Died
- Jan 9, 1999
Thorpe Bay
Submitted
on July 23, 2013
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