Vic Clapham

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AlmamaterWynberg Boys' High School.
OccupationComrades Marathon
Vic Clapham
Alma materWynberg Boys' High School.
OccupationComrades Marathon

Vic Clapham (16 November 1886 – 1962) was the founder of the Comrades Marathon, the world's largest ultra-marathon, of approximately 90 km held annually between Durban and Pietermaritzburg in South Africa.

As a World War I veteran, Clapham conceived the race to commemorate the South African soldiers killed during the war. It was run for the first time on 24 May 1921[1][2][3] and has been run more than 80 times since then, now with an average field of 20,000 runners.

Vic Clapham was born in London[2] on 16 November 1886 and arrived in the Cape Colony in South Africa with his parents at the outbreak of the Anglo-Boer War in 1899. Clapham attended Wynberg Boys' High School.

First World War

Comrades Marathon

References

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