Events of the day in History
10-year-old Mary Boitano is 1st woman to win 6.8-mile Dipsea Race
(AZADI KE PANKH CREATIONS )
26th Aug. 1963
10-year-old Mary Boitano is 1st woman to win 6.8-mile Dipsea Race in Marin County, California, beating a field of 1,500 runners.
Mary Etta, a contemporary of Mary Decker
from the San Francisco Bay Area, is the youngest child from the running Boitano
family.
Her father, John, and mother, Mary Lucille, were also running road races. John was instrumental in starting the Dolphin South End Runners with Walt Stack as well as the Pamakids with Grant Newland in San Francisco. The Pamakids name standing for Pa, Ma Kids, which evolved from so many people seeing the family running around Lake Merced. Some of those people became recruits to the Running boom of the 1970's, running races that included the family.
Her father, John, and mother, Mary Lucille, were also running road races. John was instrumental in starting the Dolphin South End Runners with Walt Stack as well as the Pamakids with Grant Newland in San Francisco. The Pamakids name standing for Pa, Ma Kids, which evolved from so many people seeing the family running around Lake Merced. Some of those people became recruits to the Running boom of the 1970's, running races that included the family.
Mary Etta earned an appearance in the
Sports Illustrated Faces in the Crowd as the first female finisher in the 6.8
mile Dipsea Race at the age of 5. Five years later she became the first female
to win the race overall, at the age of 10, beating her brother Mike who had won
the previous two years. (Dipsea participants' times are adjusted with an age
and gender-based handicapping system.) It is still the fastest time run by a
woman. She also received the Sports Illustrated Award of Merit recognition in
October 1970.
At the age of 5 she started running
marathons, running 3:46:21 at the West Valley Marathon as an 8 year old, which set
a world age record. She won the Avenue of the Giants Marathon at the age of 10.
Still at the age of 10, she ran a 3:01.15 marathon which ranked her #13 in the
world and 4th in the nation for the year 1974 ahead of Kathrine Switzer and
Gabriela Andersen-Schiess who were decades her senior. Such was the Marathon
world record progression for women at that time, had she run that time only
three years earlier, it would have been the world record. From ages 6 to 13 she
logged in well over 40 marathons with the 3:01:15 being her personal best.
She was on the cover of Runners World April
1974.
At the age of 11 she began a string of
three straight victories in the famous Bay to Breakers race. She is the
youngest winner in the history of the race. She also set the fastest women's
finishing time at 43:22 for the 7.86 mile course, a record which stood for 5
years. She went on to win the Women's Division again in 1975 and 1976. In 1983,
the course was shortened to an official 12K (7.46 miles). She later ran cross
country and track for San Francisco State University and graduated with a
bachelor's degree in nursing.
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