Billy Sherring
![]() William Sherring | |||||||||||||
Personal information | |||||||||||||
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Birth name | William John Sherring | ||||||||||||
Nationality | Canadian | ||||||||||||
Born |
Hamilton, Ontario, Canada | September 18, 1877||||||||||||
Died |
September 5, 1964 86) Hamilton, Ontario, Canada | (aged||||||||||||
Height | 5 ft 5 in (1.65 m) | ||||||||||||
Weight | 119 lb (54 kg) | ||||||||||||
Sport | |||||||||||||
Sport | Marathon | ||||||||||||
Retired | 1906 | ||||||||||||
Achievements and titles | |||||||||||||
Olympic finals |
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Medal record
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Billy Sherring (William John Sherring; September 18, 1877 – September 5, 1964) was a Canadian athlete of English and Irish descent, winner of the marathon race at the 1906 Intercalated Games (or 1906 Olympic Games, as they were at the time considered to be).
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In the early 1900s (decade), Billy Sherring from Hamilton, Ontario[1] was acknowledged to be a world class marathoner. He had won a second place behind a fellow countryman Jack Caffery at the Boston Marathon in 1900. He also had won the Hamilton Around the Bay Road Race on two occasions.
In 1906, Sherring – an athlete of St. Patrick's Athletic Club – was chosen to represent Canada in the Athens Olympic Games. However, it was left up to him, a working man with meager resources (he was a brakeman at the Grand Trunk Railway), to finance his journey to Athens. Sherring managed to collect an amount claimed to be between $45 and $90 (a clearly insufficient amount to travel to Athens), which he then bet on a horse named Cicely which won with good odds.[2] He arrived to Athens seven weeks before the Olympic Games and started to work as a porter at the Athens railway station.
At the marathon race, the 45 kg (99 lb) Sherring proceeded at a steady pace, at one point a half-mile behind the leaders, before taking the lead at about the fifteen mile mark and finishing seven minutes before the next runner.[3] Prince George of Greece[4] ran the last 50 metres of the marathon alongside Sherring. Sherring received a live lamb and a statue of Athena as a reward. When he returned to Canada, Hamilton City Council awarded him $5000 and the City of Toronto awarded him a further $400. Baron Pierre de Coubertin wrote a letter to the Governor General of Canada, Albert Grey, protesting the gifts as inconsistent with the Olympic ideal of "sport for sport's sake."[5] So far as is known, Sherring got to keep his money.
Upon his triumphant return from the marathon, Sherring quit athletics and worked as a customs officer in Hamilton until his retirement in 1942.
After his death, his original claim-to-fame, the Around the Bay Road Race was renamed to the Billy Sherring Memorial Road Race, and Hamilton has since built a Billy Sherring Park to commemorate their most famous athlete.
Sherring is thought he might have inspired the founders of Panathinaikos to adopt the shamrock as the Greek multi-sport club's official emblem.[6]
References
- ↑ "Tigertown Triumphs" (Press release). The Hamilton Spectator-Memory Project (Souvenir edition). 2006-06-10. p. MP56.
- ↑ The story, while often cited, is open to dispute. Glynn Leyshon quotes an unnamed relative of Sherring's as stating that Sherring was a notoriously poor gambler and “never won anything in his life.” Leyshon, Glynn, “2nd International Olympic Games in Athens 1906: The Participating Countries – Canada,” Journal of Olympic History 14(3) Dec 2006, 30-33.
- ↑ Martin, David E.; Gynn, Roger W.H. (2000). The Olympic Marathon. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics. p. 59. ISBN 0-88011-969-1.
- ↑ "The Olympic games at Athens, 1906". James E. Sullivan, American commissioner to the Olympic games. Published 1906.
- ↑ "PROTEST ON MARATHON GIFTS. Restorer of Olympic Games Objects to Presents of Money to Sherring, Winner of Famous Race." Chicago Daily Tribune, July 29, 1906, p. 2.
- ↑ "Five claims to fame: Panathinaikos". uefa.com.
External links
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