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A 'foot running' history as Torbay AC celebrates
its 40th anniversary

WE ARE TEN years into the 21st Century, and still no council in South Devon has provided anything more for its athletes than a grass running track — a telling comment on the level of commitment to their young people.

Yet this year Torbay Athletic Club celebrates its 40th anniversary.

And the occasion has prompted much longer memories of athletics in Torbay, going back well into the 19th Century.

'Foot racing', as it was known then, took place regularly in the 1870s.

Clubs were established in Torquay, Paignton, Newton Abbot and Exmouth, with meetings between local athletes, who also travelled further afield.

If there was a 'senior' club in the bay, it was almost certainly Paignton AC, which was formed in 1894.

In Torquay, athletics took second place to rugby, cricket and football, until St, Marychurch Harriers were formed in 1909.

Meetings were held for many years at 'Pollards Field' at Watcombe, Coombe Pafford and Plainmoor football ground, as well as the streets around St. Marychurch and Babbacombe.

Before World War I races from five to 15 miles were popular, drawing large crowds especially for evening events.

More than 40 members of the Harriers trained regularly and vied for places in the team.

The Devon County AAA had already been formed and, in 1923, the Harriers' F. Lord won the one mile race at the county championships.

Paignton AC had their headquarters at Queen's Park, home to the town's cricket and rugby clubs.

And when Torquay Amateur Athletic Club was formed in 1946, they were also invited to share the Recreation Ground with the Torquay CC and Torquay Athletic RFC.

Through the 1950s and 1960s Paignton forged on to become one of the strongest road, distance and cross-country clubs in England.

Stars like Millie Gilbert, who ran 400 metres for England, the remarkable Dennis Crook, who was competitive nationally from a mile upwards, and club stalwart Trevor Honeychurch kept Paignton AC in the headlines.

At the end of the 1960s Paignton was ranked seventh in the country for distance running.

They even had a full-time professional administrator at one time.

Paignton was able to field half-a-dozen different teams in Devon County cross-country championships.

Honeychurch, whose enormous contribution spanned Paignton and Torbay ACs, recalled: "The great ambition for every distance club in those days was to get into the London-to-Brighton Relay race, restricted to only 15 clubs.

"One of the qualifying races was the Bristol-Weston super Mare-Bristol race, when teams from all over the country would turn up, with busloads of supporters.

"It was quite an occasion, and Paignton did get into the London-Brighton."

Unable to compete with Paignton over distances and cross-country, Torquay tended to concentrate on track athletes.

But during the 1960s there was a growing trend towards club amalgamation.

It was partly because of a desire to be competitive in the new league competitions, partly to tackle a decline in club numbers and, in Torbay, to strengthen the sport's hopes for a proper track.

So, on the stroke of midnight April 28, 1970, Torbay Athletic Club was born, after a sub-committee of eight members from the Paignton and Torquay clubs had thrashed out the details.

Over the last 40 years the Torbay club — still with only the grass track at Torre Valley North to work with — has managed to produce a steady stream of talented athletes.

Some moved across from Paignton, and among the newer names have been pole vaulter John White, sprinter Steve Morrall, who went on to play professional football for Torquay United, cross country and road specialist Barry Knight, discus thrower Lesley Mallin, middle-distance runners Martin Wilson and Helen Myers and long distance champion Andrea Wallace.

Mallin became British women's discus champion and team captain.

Knight represented his country and conducted successful campaigns on the highly competitive European cross-country circuit.

And, of course, Wallace reached the pinnacle of the sport, running in the women's 10,000 metres at the 1992 Olympic Games in Barcelona.

In recent years runners like Martin Lake, Helen Dyke, who became world quadrathlon champion, Kairn Stone, Wendy Urban, Steve Waldron and Daniel Hyde have carried the flag for Torbay AC.

The club, which continues to nurture a group of juniors under coach Steve Cottle, also organises the popular Torbay Half Marathon, which will resume in 2011 after a one-year break.

It's been a long, enjoyable but not always easy journey since those early days on the streets of St. Marychurch in the 1870s.

A hundred and 40 years on, the athletes of South Devon still have no proper running track to call their own.

If they want to progress in the sport, they have to move up the A380 to Exeter Arena.

So in many ways it's quite an achievement in itself that Torbay Athletic Club is still going strong — and celebrating its 40th birthday this summer.

Footnote: The club is holding a 40-mile Fun Track Relay at Torre Valley North on July 25 to raise money for Rowcroft Hospice.

1947 Torquay Athletic Club

Birth of Torbay Athletic Club

On the stroke of midnight on the 28th April 1970. Torbay Athletic Club was born.  Towards the end of the sixties, there had been a trend towards amalgamating smaller clubs for survival as athletics began to lose popularity.

In 1969, at the AGM's of Paignton AC and Torquay AC, a resolution was passed that the two clubs should merge.   Power was given to a sub committee consisting of four members from each club to agree terms, rules, conditions and procedure for amalgamation.  Those matters were agreed and presented to the full committees of both clubs and were passed without objection.   

The final procedure required that both clubs hold an Extraordinary General Meeting solely for members to endorse their Committee's recommendations and to dissolve the present clubs.   This duly took place and the inaugural AGM of Torbay AC took place on the 2nd of March 1970 at the SWGB Showrooms in Torquay.

Torbay Athletic Club First Meeting

The Annual General Meeting of the Torbay Athletic Club was opened by Marc Watts and Harry Drake, the Secretaries of the Paignton and Torquay clubs on the 2nd March 1970

Mr R K Cousins, (Paignton) was nominated unopposed as Chairman and duly elected.

The Committee was elected and comprised seven Paignton and Seven Torquay former members.

Rules were proposed for the formation of the new club and attendance for the meeting  showed that thirty members actually attended.

At the 3rd Committee meeting on 24th April 1970, the General Secretary, Norma Drew delivered a report (as Chairman of the Torbay Sports Advisory Council) on progress being made to improve athletic facilities in Torbay.

In retrospect this was a landmark for the embryonic club  and Torbay Council. The minutes stated: 'It was pointed out that the Sports Council had put forward a recommendation to the Local Authority that work starts as soon as possible on Athletic facilities at Clennon Valley in order that Torbay Athletic Club might have a hard surface track on which to hold inter-club and other meetings!

Over 30 years later, the same uneven ruined grass at Torre Valley North, Torquay bears testament to the Local Authority's object failure to deliver.

On December 5th, Norman Drew had already resigned as General Secretary (moved to Weymouth / Pressure of work) and no communication had been received from the Sports Council. It was agreed that the acting Secretary Marc Watts write to enquire why.

Marc Watts raised the declining state of the new club affairs and put forward a novel scheme to the Committee which he had devised for a full time manager of the club. If ask he would be willing to undertake himself.

The scheme allowed for this manager to organise and administrate existing and new club activities including coaching, officials, public relations, school liaison and fund raising activities out of which his salary would be paid. The scheme was 'reasonably well accepted in principle by the meeting' - the matter to be raised at the next meeting.

On the 11th January 1971 the secretary's suggestion was discussed at great length. Notable objector to the scheme for a paid manager was the most respected Mr Bill Davey however, the end result was that Dennis Crook proposed that the Committee recommend the appointment of a full or part-time manager on a professional basis, on a term to be agreed by the Committee. Jon Hassall seconded the proposed.

The first AGM was held at the Oddfellows Hall, Paignton on March 26th 1971.

It was decided that legal advise be sought over the appointment of manager.

Mr Davey who had declined to stand again as president was unanimously elected as the first Vice-President and life member.

On April 16th 1971, it was agreed that Marc Watts be appointed 'Administrator' of the Torbay Athletic Club, fees to be paid after a contract was signed.

Herald Express
Torbay Athletic Club
Greatest World Record

WORLD BEATERS !

NEARLY four decades on, the same lumpy field and changing rooms have hardly changed a lot, which is in itself a damming indictment, writes David Thomas


But this year's 40th anniversary of Torbay Athletic C1ub has revived memories of, perhaps the greatest performance in their history,
which took place at Torre VaIIey North on August Bank Holiday 1971.

A year before, the Torquay and Paignton clubs had amalgamated to form Torbay AC, and the new club was keen to promote itself with an eye-catching event.

It was decided to make an attempt on the One-Club World 24-Hour Record, then held by a squad from Furman University, South Carolina, at 277 miles 896 yards.

If you joined the forces of every club in Devon now, you would be pushed to put together a ten-man team capable of tackling such a daunting task.

To break the record, every member would have to run at least 27 miles in relays at an average speed of just over five-minutes-a-mile, with no sleep. Yet Torbay AC at the time was strong enough to do it.

Founder-member Jim Campbell's idea, at first greeted with scepticism and even derision, finally went into action at 2pm on August 29th with a squad ranging from international Dennis Crook down to 16-year old starlet Martin Wilson, a future sub four minute miler.

Everything went well early on and the team was soon ahead of record schedule.

But as night fell, supporters went home, tiredness started to set in and times slowed.

In the early morning, disaster seemed to strike when Mike Dagg distraught at the thought of letting his team-mates down, had to retire with large blood blisters on his feet.

By breakfast time, morale had slumped and most of the runners were hobbling on to the track for their stints, unable to stretch or warm up properly.

Campbell recalls: "The record attempt was in serious jeopardy, until the 'cavalry' arrived in the shape of Torquay United's physio.

"His massage of our tired, seized-up limbs was nothing short of miraculous

"Runners who had been limping around in just under six minutes started running five-minute miles again, and the race for the record was on once more."

Plaimnoor's "magic sponge" man was Harry Topping, a much-loved figure at United who still lives in retirement in Torquay.

Trevor "Iron Man" Honeychurch was violently sick at one stage and slowed right down before returning to the fray seemingly fresher than before.

Young Wilson, who had already exceeded all expectations, fought off a series of cramp attacks

Crook, who averaged 4mins 59 Seconds for the 30 miles he completed, Bill Valentine, Chris Mayhew and Paul Bolland kept up a remarkable consistency and even when Marc Watts finally admitted defeat through blisters with an hour to go, the record was in sight.

The crowds had returned for the closing stages, helping to build up a tremendous atmosphere, and when Jon Hassall ran past the flag indicating the old record, there were still several minutes to go.

Wilson, the boy who had run like a man, was given the honour of running the last leg. Champagne corks popped and the local councillor who had come along for the presentation struggled to make his voice heard above the cheering crowds

Crook, Campbe11, Honeychurch and Valentine all still live in Torbay, and Valentine even runs regularly at veteran events.

Looking back, Campbell remembers "As we limped and hobbled away for sleep, we glanced down at the track, and a furrow of two to three inches deep had been gouged out of the turf all the way round.

"After that world record, the laying of an all-weather track for Torbay was cited as a certainty, not even a probability.

"But almost incredibly, that same, sorroer grass track is still in use by the club to this day in 2000."

Some Old Photos

Start of the Torbay Athletic Club Championship
September 2000 at the Babbacombe Cricket Club

Start of the Torbay Athletic Club Championship
 September 1999 at Cockington Village

Morning of London Marathon 1996

Torbay Athletic Club 1994

COURSE RECORDS

PORT of DARTMOUTH
ROYAL REGATTA ROAD RACES


1983 Barry Knight 25m 45s (Course Record)
1984 Dennis Crook 30m 24s (Course Record MV40)