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Early days of the Olympic Harrier Club |
Updated 31 Jan 03 |
The Whyte Mackay Shield
Three of the clubs around back in the early 1900s were the Wellington Harrier Club,
Civil Service and Catholic Young Mens Amateur Athletic Club. Wellington
Harriers was the only regular club that enjoyed
winter harriers. The major trophy of the time, the Whyte Mackay Shield
(a 5 mile teams road race at Hutt Park), was therefore a rather one-sided competition.
One morning in 1909 while Wellington Harrier members where inspecting the Whyte Mackay
course, it was decided that the competition should be made fairer
by reducing the strength of the Wellington Harriers team. Member F Hodson announced
he would try and form a club in Brooklyn. With the help of other members (including
Percy Wilton and WH Philp) and some
outstanding runners, Brooklyn Harrier Club was set up, and successfully competed
for the Whyte Mackay Shield, winning it in 1911 and 1913.
Brooklyn Harrier Club split in two
However, at the Brooklyn Harrier Club AGM in early 1913, there was a disagreement amongst
members, and founder F Hodson, along with a number of other Brooklyn harriers, decided
to break away and form their own club.
So on 5th February 1914 a meeting to form a new club was held in the offices of WH Philp.
Mr G Frost was elected President, Mr FJ Byrne Club Captain, and Mr JT Don Honorary
Secretary and Treasurer. And the Olympic Harrier Club was formed.
Immediate Success for Olympic
Now there were three strong clubs in Wellington (Wellington, Brooklyn and Olympic). Olympic
had immediate success, winning the individual (FR Byrne) and team wins in that years
cross country champs.
World War I and the following decade
In the next year or so Scottish Harriers appeared on the scene.
In 1916 the clubs found themselves depleted because of World War I, so the Wellington,
Olympic and Scottish clubs combined to form Trinity Harriers. They were back on their
own in 1919, and despite tragic losses in the war and a limited interclub programme,
Olympic went on to have an an outstanding decade. The Grand Memorial races were added in
the 1920s and the Shaw Baton interclub relay was first held in 1923.
Some things never change
From a 1923 newspaper reporting on a club race:
"Some men who have accustomed in the past to take places well up the front were
this time left behind; whether they were genuinely indisposed or merely trying
to get one on to the handicapper with a view to future races is not known; certainly
with the present handicapper and their own past records such an attempt would
be unavailing."
I dont think any comment is needed on this!
Up to the present day
Some of the Clubs members who lived in the Hutt Valley formed a local club,
the Hutt Valley Harriers (now part of Valleys United), in the 1920s. Another
Club member, Fred Mair, formed the Christchurch Olympic club after moving there.
Wellington Harrier Club recently merged with the Wellington Track and Field Club to form
the Wellington Harrier Athletic Club, and
is this year celebrating its centenary. Scottish is also as strong as ever. However Brooklyn Harriers only survived for a few more decades before
finally folding around 1950.
Today Olympic is as strong as its ever been, with a strong membership and more members
competing overseas than ever before.
Early club photos
Click on a thumbnail picture for an enlargement.
When it all started, 1914

Standing: F Hodson, CO Coad, ?, FJ Burrell, ?, L Brown.
Seated on left wall (from front): L Pearce, ?, EA Shaw.
Seated on right wall (from front): JT Don (Honorary Secretary and Treasurer),
?, ?, R Cook
Seated on steps (middle): M Poynton, G Frost (President), JP Luke, C Murray, ?
Seated on steps (front): C Duck, WH Philp, FJ Byrne (Club
Captain), CH Baker
Winners of the first Bennett Memorial Road Race, 1921

Standing: C Campbell, EA Shaw,
JW Scatchard
Sitting: H McCormick, N Craig, WH Philp, HE Moore
Winners of the Bennett Memorial road race 1924

Standing: JW Scatchard, JR Perston, H Grove.
Sitting: C Campbell, AT Davies (President),
PL Wilson
Do any of those names look familiar?
Some of the early members ensured theyd never be forgotten:
EA Shaw
EA (Ted) Shaw, a founding member of the club, was the donor of the trophies for the Shaw Baton relays, first raced in 1923 and traditionally the first interclub event on the Wellington cross
country calendar.
WH Philp
WH Philp had a significant role in the founding of the club.
- He was the donor of the shield for the Philp Shield club team race in 1922.
- Club members donated the Philp Memorial Cup after his death in 1924. Since 1929 has been awarded
to the first Senior Men in the Grand Memorial club race.
- His family donated the Dad Philp Pewter Pot (originally won by Dad Philp, as he was
known, as a rowing trophy on the Thames River) after his death in 1924, and is now
awarded annually to the person with the fastest time in the Grand Memorial club race.
JR Perston
JR (Jack) Perston was a important figure in the early years of the club. He went on to be
club President for 21 years from 1928 to 1949. He donated these trophies:
- the baton which is the trophy for the Perston Baton club relay (first raced in 1933)
- the AR Perston Memorial trophy (in memory of his father) in 1938 for the Perston
Memorial club race (originally called the Presidents Handicap
and first raced in 1932; renamed the Perston Memorial in 1938). (Perston was club
president from 1932-1937).
- the Mrs FC Perston Memorial trophy (in memory of his mother) in 1938 for the fastest
time in the Perston Memorial race. The trophy was carved by Mrs Perston in 1905.
- the Perston Rose Bowl originally won by Jack in 1920 as a sports prize;
donated in 1949 for the fastest time in the junior Grand Memorial club race.
- the JR Perston cup, originally awarded to the first Olympic or Rotorua runner home
in the Twenty Mile Gold Cup Race, but since that races demise is awarded to
the Mens U20 club cross country champion.
C Campbell
C (Colin) Campbell donated the Campbell Cup in 1924 for the Run-In Points prize. Nowdays
we prefer to warm-down after pack runs, so
the cup is now awarded to the Masters Men road racing champion.
AT Davies
AT (Arthur) Daviess wife presented the Arthur T Davies Memorial Vase after his
death, in 1954, to be awarded to the most improved junior (now Men U20)
JW Scatchard
JW (Bill) Scatchards wife presented the Bill Scatchard Memorial Cup, to be
awarded to the Boys U16 club cross country champion.
MGW Jan 2003. Information from "Olympic Harriers: the first 75
years (1914-1989)"
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