Thursday, October 29, 2020

 

Remembering Browning Ross, 'Father of American Distance Running'

Posted: September 2, 2017 - 7:43 PM

Written by Phil Anastasia @PhilAnastasia | panastasia@inquirer.com



Photo by DAVID MAIALETTI/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

 

 Browning Ross landed in lots of places in the long course of his running and coaching career — from England and Finland to compete in Olympic Games, to Sao Paolo, Brazil, for a torch-lit New Year's Eve race, to Ethiopia, where he had to watch his step in front of Haile Selassie's pet lion.

But one of the most unlikely was the 300 block of Ridgeway Street in the row-homed heart of Gloucester City.

"Serendipitous," Jack Heath said, still shaking his head in wonder that such a world-class figure would deem to coach a high school track team without a track and a high school cross-country team without uniforms.

Oh, and the Gloucester Catholic Rams of the early 1970s also didn't have a bus for transportation, meaning runners without their own wheels had to pile into Ross' well-traveled Buick Skylark for rides to meets and practices.

Plus, the cross-country team's course was soon paved over to make way for the Deptford Mall.

"What luck," Heath said. "How could a person like that end up coaching at a place like Gloucester Catholic?"

The late, great Ross was a Woodbury native, Villanova University star, two-time Olympian, Pan Am Games champion, tireless competitor, ground-breaking publisher, and indefatigable meet director whose life-long contributions to the sports of track and cross-country nearly defy measurement.

Heath, the cross-country coach at his alma mater of Gloucester Catholic, takes his best shot as author of Browning Ross: The Father of American Distance Running, a meticulously researched and richly sourced 336-page ode to his coach, friend, and inspiration.

The book is available through Amazon and barnesandnoble.com and should be in stores later this month, Heath said.

"I always used to tell Browning, 'You should write a book about your experiences,'" Heath said. "But he was too humble and too busy."

Heath fretted that too many of today's runners and coaches were unaware that such an important figure in the history of distance running spent his entire life in South Jersey, save for his service in the Navy in World War II and his countless days on the road in search of another race.

"I felt his legacy was fading," Heath said. "I felt like not enough people were really aware of his impact on running, especially around here. I thought, 'I want to get his story out there.'"

Heath interviewed more than 50 people during a "labor of love" that took five years to complete. He had lots of help from Ross' family, especially his daughters Bonnie and Barbara, who supplied "boxes and boxes" of scrapbooks filled with reports of their father's feats.

"For a long time, I kind of had it hanging over my head, 'When are you going to be done?'" Heath said. "But it was weird. In a way, I was able to get close to him again. I knew a lot, but it wasn't until I was able to step back and see the big picture that I realized how remarkable he really was.

"When he was alive I would find out about how years ago he won some two-mile indoor race in New York and the next day won a 10-mile in Canada, and I'd ask him how he could do that and he would deflect, 'Oh, the only thing I remember about that was that I had to hitchhike in Buffalo and it was really cold.'"

Ross grew up in Woodbury, starred at Woodbury High School and Villanova, and made the 1948 and 1952 U.S. Olympic teams as a 3,000-meter steeplechaser. He won the 1,500 meters at the 1951 Pan Am Games, finished first in the Berwick (Pa.) "Marathon" — a grueling, nine-mile race that annually drew some of the nation's top runners — an astounding 10 times and captured enough trophies and plaques over a lengthy career to fill three attics to the rafters.

Heath agrees with "Barefoot" Charlie Robbins, an 11-time AAU national champion, who called Ross the "most versatile runner of all time."

Ross' contributions to the sport stretched well beyond his own achievements in competition. In a real way, Ross laid the groundwork for the running boom that began in the 1970s and continues to this day.

He published the first nationally distributed magazine on distance running, the Long Distance Log, starting in the mid-1950s. He used to write articles and reprint race results on the back of test papers and use the mimeograph machine during his time as a teacher at Woodrow Wilson High School in Camden.

In the late 1950s, Ross was one of the founding fathers of the Road Runners Club of America. He also coached the United States cross-country team in the late 1960s.

But he probably affected the most people as a meet director and coach. Ross was a tireless promoter of the sport, staging "all-comers" events and organizing countless track and field meets, from Summer Sizzlers in July to Snowball Series gatherings in January.

He would set up a table and register competitors. He would lay out the course and set up the field events. He would time results. He would supply and present awards. He would meet and greet and treat everyone the same, from top-level athletes to below-average runners.

"He did everything at these meets, for years and years," said Heath, a 1977 Gloucester Catholic graduate who ran competitively at Glassboro State College, now Rowan University. "I don't think there's been an all-comers meet since he stopped holding them. And he did so many of them."

Ross agreed to become Gloucester Catholic's track and cross-country coach in 1972. He stayed associated with the sports at the school until his death in 1998 at the age of 74.

To Heath, it was Ross' relationship with Gloucester Catholic, a school with no facilities and little in the way of running tradition, that underscored the essence of the man — his humility, his generosity, his sense of service, his willingness to help anyone learn to appreciate the wonders of his sport.

"He was just such a nice person," Heath said. "He was this world-class athlete and he did it all the right way.

"He treated people so well. He had a great sense of humor. He helped so many people. I just think people should remember him."


Phil Anastasia @PhilAnastasia | panastasia@inquirer.com





Browning Ross book available at:
https://www.amazon.com/Browning-Ross-American-Distance-Running/dp/1511888253

 

 

A book to honor Browning Ross |

Updated October 2020,; Posted Aug 18, 2017
By Bob Shryock | For NJ.com

Jack Heath has written the definitive book that chronicles the vast achievements of
Gloucester County's only two-time Olympian:
"Browning Ross: The Father of American Distance Running."

The well-written and thoroughly documented 343-page book
is filled with anecdotes of Ross' long and fruitful career,
including his training regimen, that was highlighted by his
appearances in the 1948 and 1952 Olympic Games
as a steeplechase participant.


I'm proud to be included for writing an obituary tribute to the
 life-long Woodbury resident after his passing:



"Gloucester County Times columnist and long-time friend Bob Shryock wrote,
 'and while the hearse was delivering legendary Browning Ross to
 his final resting place, members of the Gloucester Catholic High School
 track team he coached so proudly jogged alongside in a tear-provoking,
 gut-wrenching tribute.


'"
Heath had countless memories of his good friend, and none more poignant
than the spring of 1998.
"On March 11, the South Jersey AC running club held a testimonial dinner
for Browning that brought back many of his friends. I was seated next to Browning
and when he accepted a plaque from the organizers my first 
thought was of the
hundreds he had won or had engraved to give out as 
prizes.

We coached track together that spring and he called me on a weekend 
in April to tell me he was officiating at the Penn Relays. He joked
about his upcoming birthday and asked I had time to pick out anything expensive for a gift.

"On April 27, my phone rang at home and the voice identified themselves
 as being from the Gloucester County Times, said a brief apology, and asked
 if I had a comment about the news that Browning had just passed away. I was stunned."

Browning had died of a heart attack. And the phone kept ringing in Jack's house,
all of the callers in complete and utter shock.

"Besides being a close friend," Heath wrote, "he was more than a mentor, 
literally the sun around whom the whole South Jersey running world revolved."

Said another running legend and close Ross friend, Tom Osler: "I saw more grown men
crying at Browning's funeral than I have anywhere else in my life. I was
much too grief-stricken to speak at his service."

The Gloucester Catholic track team dealt with their grief by donning their track
uniforms after the service and accompanying Browning one last time, 

Heath wrote, running the  mile alongside the hearse from the church to the cemetery.
One of Ross' athletes, Sean McClenachan, wrote a poem he called "An Ode to Browning."

It read, in part,
"Never was there a humbler man,

"No mention of the awards or the meets you ran,

"The people you knew, the lives that you touched,

"How badly we ran never seemed to matter much,

"In our hearts and minds, you'll always be number one,

"We'll be thinking of you each and every time we run,

"They're calling you now, call you by name,

"The angels know that they're running with fame."

More from Tom Osler: "His memory lives on in those who were fortunate
enough to know him personally. No other runner has influenced me more.
Part of him became part of me, and I am the better for it."

Browning was inducted into many halls of fame, including Gloucester County,
Woodbury High, Villanova and the National Distance Running Class of 2002.
Heath's excellent book does him justice.
 

                                            Bob Shryock 

Browning Ross book: https://www.amazon.com/Browning-Ross-American-Distance-Running/dp/1511888253

Friday, June 5, 2020

Friday, May 22, 2020

Dr. Fauci to Jesuit high school graduates: 'We will get through this'


Dr. Anthony Fauci

By Carol Zimmermann • Catholic News Service • Posted May 18, 2020
WASHINGTON (CNS) — Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, is used to addressing the country about steps to contain the coronavirus, but in mid-May he spoke directly to graduates of the nation’s 60 Jesuit high schools with words of encouragement and congratulations.
“Please, hang in there. We need you to be smart, strong and resilient. With discipline and empathy, we will all get through this together,” he said in a recording sent to Jesuit high schools that many posted on their school websites.
Fauci, who earned the nickname “America’s doctor” years ago and has advised six U.S. presidents on national health concerns, was Jesuit-educated in both high school — at Regis High School in New York — and college — at the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts.
The idea to have him talk to Jesuit high school graduates came from Jesuit Father Daniel Lahart, president of Regis High School. He told America magazine he had asked Fauci to record a video message for the school’s online graduation ceremony but that idea expanded to another video message request after another Jesuit school president said he had a similar idea.
So, the Regis president asked if Fauci could do a second, more general message for all Jesuit high school seniors.
The result is a two-and-a-half minute recording that begins with “warm greetings from Bethesda, Maryland” and ends with the doctor’s wishes of congratulations and advice to: “Stay safe and be well as you celebrate this important milestone of your life.”
“Currently, our lives have been upended by a truly historic global pandemic,” Fauci said, adding that he was “profoundly aware that graduating during this time, and virtually, without your friends, classmates and teachers close by is extremely difficult.”
Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, speaks during the daily coronavirus task force briefing at the White House in Washington April 5, 2020. (CNS photo/Joshua Roberts, Reuters)
The nation’s top infectious disease expert gave a shoutout to his own Jesuit education by saying he often describes Regis High School as the “best educational experience” he could have imagined. He said it was where he “became immersed in the intellectual rigor of a Jesuit education” and where he picked up key tenets of the Jesuit tradition that have sustained him throughout his life and career.
“Two of these — precision of thought and economy of expression — inform how I think, how I write and how I communicate with the public every day,” he said. He also stressed the Jesuit emphasis on social justice and service is especially important “during the present unsettling times.”
“Now is the time, if ever there was one, for us to care selflessly about one another,” he said.
Father Lahart admitted the video messages were “an audacious ask of someone who is incredibly busy and concerned with worldwide health,” but he also said Fauci “speaks so easily about what his Jesuit education means to him, so I presumed it wouldn’t take him long to film either one.”
“Today, we also can all take pride that the man who is probably the most trusted person in the United States is a graduate of a Jesuit high school and a Jesuit college. He takes great pride in his Jesuit education, and as he proudly professes, it has formed his life and his career,” the priest said.
The same week this video was posted on Jesuit school YouTube accounts, Fauci gave testimony by video before the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions. He is observing a “modified quarantine” after being in contact with a White House staffer who tested positive for the coronavirus.
In his May 12 remarks to Congress, which have drawn criticism from President Donald Trump, Fauci warned some states are reopening too early and risking additional outbreaks of coronavirus cases especially in vulnerable populations.
Reopening too soon, without widespread testing and contact tracing measures, he said, could trigger outbreaks that governments may not be able to control. He also warned that new hot spots could cause unnecessary suffering and deaths and in turn set back efforts to help local economies.
On the day of his testimony, more than 80,684 people in the U.S. had died from COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus, and more than 1.3 million people in the country had confirmation they’ve been exposed to it.
Fauci also repeated his call for a vaccine and warned that it likely would not be ready by the next school year.
Although his message to Jesuit school graduates was far less dire, it was not the first time Fauci has been called back to school, so to speak. A year ago, he addressed Regis alumni and waxed nostalgically about his four years there. He also spoke about his career, saying he had been decidedly apolitical and nonideological in his work with six presidential administrations.
Fauci earned the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President George W. Bush for his work in Africa developing a program to stop the spread of HIV/AIDS.
During his Regis talk last May, when asked if there was anything that kept him up at night, Fauci told the group that he sleeps well because his days are usually so long, but he did have one worry.
“I worry about a pandemic,” he told fellow Jesuit alums, saying he was concerned about the potential emergence of a virus that could attack the lungs, similar to the flu that killed millions in 1918 and 1919.