Cross Country History
The term
"cross-country", when used by itself, can refer to:
- Cross-country running,
a sport in which teams of runners compete to complete a course over
open or rough terrain
- Cross-country skiing, a
winter sport for skiing
- Cross-country
equestrianism
- Cross-country mountain
biking
- Cross-country flying
- Fell running also known
as hill running and mountain running
- Virgin Cross-Country is
a rail franchise in the
United Kingdom
- A Cross-country jump, a
parachute jump
Click on picture for video
Cross-country
running as an organized sport originates from England. In
the early 1800s cross-country was practiced in public schools,
especially Rugby.
In 1850, undergraduates at Exeter College,
Oxford organized a foot grind. This was an analogy with steeple chasing
on horse where a race would be held towards the nearest church steeple,
forcing riders to clear rural obstacles such as hedges, fences, and
ditches. A two-mile cross-country steeplechase formed part of the
Oxford
University sports (in which many
of the modern athletics events were founded) in 1860, but replaced in
1865 by an event over barriers on a flat fields, which became the
modern steeplechase
in athletics.
In 1868, members
of Thames
Rowing Club looking for winter exercise (when rowing did not
take place then) formed Thames Hare and Hounds in Roehampton on
the south-west fringes of London and adjoining Wimbledon Common
on which cross-country races were staged. They were joined by Peckham Hare
and Hounds in 1869 (which became Blackheath Harriers in
1880), Cheshire Tally Ho Hare and Hounds in 1872, Birchfield
Harriers 1877, Cambridge
University Hare and Hounds in 1880, and Ranelagh Harriers in
1881. The English Cross Country Union followed in 1883 which introduced
the National Championships. Most of these early clubs continue to
thrive to this day. The reason for the names associated with hunting is
that in many of the early matches, the course was set by paper chasing:
a few runners (the hares) would have a start on the bulk of the field
(the hounds), and lay a 'scent' by scattering a paper trail behind them
which the hounds would follow. Racing would take place between the
hares and the hounds and within the hounds themselves. Because of the
obvious nuisance this can generate, this form of racing was largely
discontinued quite early on. Occasional matches still take place, by
Cheshire Tally Ho and the popular Hash House Harriers,
for example. However, from an early date steeplechases and championship
races also took place over fixed courses, as today.
In 1878, the
sport was introduced into the United States
by William C. Vosburgh. At first, the sport served mainly as training
for summer track
and field athletics. Nine years later, cross-country running
became a formal sport in the
United States. Despite the
international popularity of cross-country, the sport was dropped from
the Olympic
Games after 1924 due to it being an inappropriate summer sport.
In the 1960s, the International
Amateur Athletic Federation, which regulates cross-country
running, allowed women to run for the first time.
The sport is
still popular in temperate countries. Internationally, the IAAF
organizes the World
Cross Country Championships, which is perhaps the best quality
distance race that takes place as it attracts runners who normally
specialize in only one or two track or road distances. In recent years
the type of course at this event has changed, moving from the
traditional form to faster, drier courses.
|