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Kathrine Switzer

American Marathon Runner and Author
Date of Birth : 05 Jan, 1947
Place of Birth : Amberg, Germany
Profession : Marathon Runner, Author
Nationality : American
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Kathrine Virginia Switzer is an American marathon runner, author, and television commentator. In the year 1967 she became the first woman to run the Boston Marathon as an officially registered competitor.

Life and career

Switzer was born in Amberg, American-occupied zone of Germany, the daughter of a major in the United States Army. Her family returned to the United States in 1949. She graduated from George C. Marshall High School in Fairfax County, Virginia, then attended Lynchburg College. She transferred to Syracuse University in 1967, where she studied journalism and English literature. She earned a bachelor's degree there in 1968 and a master's degree in 1972.

1967 training

After transferring from Lynchburg to Syracuse, Switzer sought permission to train with the men's cross-country running program. Permission was granted, and cross-country assistant coach Arnie Briggs began training with her. Briggs insisted a marathon was too far for a "fragile woman" to run, but he conceded to Switzer: "If any woman could do it, you could, but you would have to prove it to me. If you ran the distance in practice, I’d be the first to take you to Boston." By the winter of 1967, Switzer was training for the upcoming Boston Marathon, tackling courses in Syracuse and on the roads between Syracuse and Cazenovia, New York, 20 miles away.

1967 Boston Marathon

The rule book for the Boston Marathon made no mention of gender. The AAU, which governed the Marathon, declared that women could not compete in AAU-sanctioned races over a mile and a half.

This exclusion of women from a premier athletic event was already drawing high-profile challenges. In 1966, Bobbi Gibb had tried to enter the race officially but had been rejected by BAA Director Will Cloney who claimed women were physiologically incapable of running 26 miles. Gibb completed the 1966 race ahead of two-thirds of the runners with a time of 3:21:40, having entered the course near the starting pen in the middle of the pack. But Gibb was not an official entrant.

Personal life

In 1968, Switzer married Tom Miller, the man who had put an end to Semple's attack in 1967. They divorced in 1973. Switzer subsequently married and divorced public relations executive Philip Schaub. She then married British-born New Zealand runner and author Roger Robinson in 1987.

Switzer eventually made amends with Semple after he changed his mind with regard to women in sports. The two became close friends, and she last visited him shortly before Semple's death in 1988.

Quotes

Total 25 Quotes
All you need is the courage to believe in yourself and put one foot in front of the other.
If you are losing faith in human nature, go out and watch a marathon.
Life is for participating, not for spectating.
When I was first running marathons, we were sailing on a flat earth. We were afraid we'd get big legs, grow mustaches, not get boyfriends, not be able to have babies. Women thought that something would happen to them, that they'd break down or turn into men, something shadowy, when they were only limited by their own society's sense of limitations.
If you feel positive, you have a sense of hope. If you have hope, you can have courage.
I always say that talent and capability is everywhere, all it needs is opportunity.
I said that there's going to come a day in our lives when women's running is as popular and as men's. Looking back, I obviously had a great sense of vision. And I was right.
Talent is everywhere, it only needs the opportunity.
There is an expression among even the most advanced runners that getting your shoes on is the hardest part of any workout
Triumph over adversity that's what the marathon is all about. Nothing in life can't triumph after that