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African American Running History in November - Summary Edition

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  • African American Running History in November - Summary Edition

    African American Running History in November
    Summary Edition

    1921: 11/19 R. Earl Johnson –Edgar Thompson Steel AA wins AAU National Cross Country in Pittsburgh.

    1922: 11/30 R. Earl Johnson finishes second to Ville Ritola – Finland in the Berwick Marathon (9 miles).

    1928: 11/18 Gus Moore- Brooklyn Harriers wins AAU National Cross-Country title at Van Cortlandt Park.

    1929: 11/28 Gus Moore becomes the only African American to win the Berwick Marathon.

    1940: 11/28 Ellison “Tarzan” Brown the Narragansett Indian wins Berwick Marathon.

    1942: 11/1 Frank Dixon-New York University wins IC4A Cross-Country Championship at Van Cortlandt Park.

    1942: 11/29 Frank Dixon-NYU wins AAU National Cross-Country title at Newark NJ.

    1949: 11/28 Bill Lucas – Manhattan College places 4th at NCAA Cross Country Championship.

    1955: 11/28 Charles Deacon Jones-Iowa wins the NCAA Cross-Country Championship at East Lansing.

    1958: 11/17 Ron Gregory-Notre Dame takes second place in the IC4A Cross Country Championship at Van Cortlandt Park. .

    1961: 11/21-61 Steven Machooka-Cornell the first great Kenyan U.S. college champion wins the IC4A Cross-Country Championship at Van Cortlandt Park.

    1962: 11/26 San Jose State wins the NCAA Cross-Country team championship with an integrated team.
    Top African American finishers in the 1962 NCAA race:
    6th Ron Davis – San Jose State
    11th Harry McCalla – Stanford
    18th Ben Tucker – San Jose State
    30th Horace Whitehead – San Jose State

    1964: 11/23 Elmore Banton – Ohio University wins NCAA Cross Country title in 20:07.5 at East Lansing.

    1966: 11/21 Oscar Moore – Southern Illinois places 10th in NCAA Cross Country Championship

    1968: 11/28 Ted Corbitt age 49 became the oldest American to win a U.S. running title with a win at 50 miles.

    For more running history go to the following:
    He often worked through asthmatic stress, spent extra hours and days off helping colleagues and clients, and continues to do the same.

    Like – Ted Corbitt Pioneer on Facebook
    @corbittg on Twitter
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