Nothing Special   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

Jump to content

1897 AAA Championships

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1897 AAA Championships
Dates3 July 1897
Host cityManchester, England
VenueFallowfield Stadium
LevelSenior
TypeOutdoor
Events14
1896
1898


The 1897 AAA Championships was an outdoor track and field competition organised by the Amateur Athletic Association (AAA), held on Saturday 3 July 1897 at the Fallowfield Stadium in Manchester, England, in front of 3,000 spectators.[1][2]

The 14 events were the same number as in the previous year and all 14 event disciplines remained the same.

Alfred Tysoe won the mile and 10 miles events

Results

[edit]

[3]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 yards J. H. Palmer 10.8 Henry Woodyatt 1 ft Jimmy Tremeer ½ yd
440 yards Samuel Elliott 53.2 E. Harrison Kenyon 1 ft J. Donaldson 1½ yd
880 yards Albert Relf 2:00.4 Leinster Cyril Dickinson 1½ yd D. Wentworth ½ yd
1 mile Alfred Tysoe 4:27.0 Robert Wellin 1 yd Henry Cullum 10 yd
4 miles Charles Bennett 20:27.4 C. E. Haydon 1½ yd Edward Barlow
10 miles Alfred Tysoe 55:59.6 Henry Harrison 55:59.8 Edward Barlow 4 yd
steeplechase George Lee 12:15.4 H. Evans 60 yd only 2 finished
120yd hurdles Alfred Trafford 17.4 Leinster I. A. E. Mulligan 3 yd Henry Coltart
4 miles walk William Sturgess 28:24.8 E. J. Topple 29:40.0 M. K. Forrester 29:47.0
high jump Claude Leggatt 1.753 Robert Perry 1.740 John MacFarlane & Charles Adams 1.702
pole jump James Poole 3.01 Edwin Newby 2.93 Leinster Denis Carey 2.89
long jump Claude Leggatt 6.50 Leinster R. D. Barbour 6.31 Leinster Tom Donovan 5.97
shot put Leinster Denis Horgan 13.82 United States Richard Sheldon 13.54 only 2 competitors
hammer throw Leinster Tom Kiely 43.42 Leinster Denis Horgan 38.62 United States Richard Sheldon 31.14

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Amateur Athletic Championships". Nottingham Guardian. 5 July 1897. Retrieved 6 July 2024 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  2. ^ "Amateur Athletic Championships". London Evening Standard. 5 July 1897. Retrieved 6 July 2024 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  3. ^ "AAA, WAAA and National Championships Medallists". National Union of Track Statisticians. Retrieved 6 July 2024.