Sammy Mellor Explained

Sammy Mellor
Birth Name:Samuel Alexander Mellor Jr.
Birth Date:19 December 1879
Birth Place:Yonkers, New York, U.S.
Nationality:American
Sport:Long-distance running
Event:Marathon
Spouse:Eva Florence Mellor
Children:4

Samuel Alexander Mellor Jr. (December 19, 1879 – November 5, 1948)[1] [2] [3] was an American long-distance runner who won the 1902 Boston Marathon and competed in the marathon at the 1904 Summer Olympics in St. Louis, Missouri.[4]

Early life

Mellor was born in Yonkers, New York.[5] He attended School Two and trained in Dunwoodie at Buckwheat Track.[5] His first race was a 6-mile event on January 22, 1898, in Mount Vernon, New York, which he won.[5]

On July 4, 1901, Mellor won the 25-mile marathon at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, New York.[5] His 3:16:39.4 performance in temperatures reaching 104 °F earned him an unofficial national championship and his first national victory.[5]

Boston Marathon

Mellor has been described as "one of the early stars" of the Boston Marathon.[6] He finished in the top 10 six out of nine years between 1901 and 1909.[3]

In the 1901 Boston Marathon, Mellor finished third behind Canadians John Caffery and William "Bill" Davis.[7] [8] [9] [10] One year later, he was victorious in the event's sixth edition with a time of 2:43:15.4 in race conditions that featured strong winds and blowing dust.[5] [7] [8] [9] In 1903, Mellor would finish nearly six minutes behind John Lordan, the 1902 runner-up, after losing the lead and walking down Heartbreak Hill.[7] [8] [6] [9] [11] During the 1904 Boston Marathon, he would lose the lead at mile 20 and go on to finish in sixth place.[9]

Mellor dropped out of the race at Chestnut Hill in 1905 after setting a record pace early on.[12] Mellor was among the leaders in 1906 prior to being overtaken by David Kneeland and falling back.[13] The next year he dropped out at Wellesley after colliding with a bicycle. He finished in 8th-place in 1908, 5th in 1909 ("the Inferno"), and 34th in the 1910 race.[13] Ten years after he won the event, Mellor was slated to compete in the 1912 Boston Marathon, which served as the United States Olympic Trials for the 1912 Summer Olympics in Stockholm, Sweden,[14] but he did not enter the race.

Olympian

An announcement in the August 6, 1904, issue of The New York Times indicated that the Metropolitan Association of the Amateur Athletic Union would hold a "special five-mile race" at Celtic Park on August 13, 1904, with the eight top finishers receiving a paid trip to compete in the marathon at the Olympic Games in St. Louis on August 30, 1904.[15] Mellor, listed as representing the Mohawk Athletic Club, was named as one of 19 "probable competitors" in the event.[15]

As a member of the 1904 United States Olympic Team,[5] he was a favorite to win the marathon.[3] According to The Olympic Marathon by David Martin and Roger Gynn, Mellor was in third at the 3-mile mark, in second at the 6-mile mark, and leading just past the halfway point.[8] Shortly thereafter, he developed a stitch or severe cramps and was overtaken by the eventual gold medalist, American Thomas Hicks.[8] At about 14.5 miles or 2 hours and 4 minutes into the race, Mellor retired from the race.[8]

Other accomplishments

In 1904 at the Canadian Marathon of Hamilton, Ontario (actually 19 miles and 168 yards long), Mellor was paced to a course record by a horse and buggy.[5] He also won a 10-mile race by six inches on Young’s Million Dollar Pier in Atlantic City, New Jersey, in 1905; he claimed this was his most difficulty victory.[5] By the spring of 1909, Mellor held the American record in the twenty-mile.[16] Among his other victories are the Newark Marathon (1907), the Bronx Marathon (1909), the Mercury Athletic Club 25-mile race (1909), and the Empire City Marathon (1909).[5] In 1909, Mellor won an "amateur marathon" in Troy, New York, on April 28, 1909, and finished third at the Bronx Amateur Marathon on May 8.[17]

Mellor helped establish the Yonkers Marathon with Edward Wetmore Kinsley in 1907, and finished second in the event's second running.[5] [18] [19] Mellor also founded the 3.5-mile Yonkers Schoolboys Race with help from Kinsley in 1908.[5] At various times throughout his running career, Mellor represented the Mohawk Athletic Club, the National Athletic Club, the Hollywood Inn Athletic Association (also referred to as the Hollywood Inn Athletic Club), the Yonkers Harriers, and the Mercury Club.[5] [7] Having competed in 29 marathons, Mellor retired from racing in 1909,[5] but in the following year ran his tenth Boston Marathon in a time of 3:08.

Eva Florence Mellor was Sammy Mellor's wife.[20] They had four children. He was unrelated to Charles "Chuck" Mellor, the winner of the 1925 Boston Marathon and an Olympian in 1920 and 1924.[21]

Notes

  1. Web site: 1880 United States Federal Census. Year: 1880; Census Place: Yonkers, Westchester, New York; Roll: 947; Family History Film: 1254947; Page: 527C; Enumeration District: 138; Image: 0577. July 11, 2016.
  2. Web site: U.S., Social Security Applications and Claims Index, 1936-2007. 2015. Ancestry.com. July 11, 2016.
  3. Web site: Mallon . Bill . Bill Mallon . Gjerde . Arild . Teigen . Magne . Foster . David . Heijmans . Jeroen . Sammy Mellor . www.sports-reference.com . Sports Reference LLC . https://web.archive.org/web/20200417171715/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/me/sammy-mellor-1.html . dead . April 17, 2020 . February 16, 2011.
  4. Web site: Sammy Mellor . Olympedia . January 17, 2021.
  5. Web site: September 11, 2007 . Samuel Mellor Marathoner . City of Yonkers . Yonkers, New York . www.yonkersny.gov . May 17, 2016.
  6. Book: Johnson . Richard A. . Johnson . Robert Hamilton . 2009 . The Boston Marathon . The 1890s to 1930 . Arcadia Publishing . 9780738563503 . 13–14 . https://books.google.com/books?id=ADBaxpL5-sEC&pg=PA13 .
  7. Book: Cooper . Pamela . 1999 . The American Marathon . Syracuse University Press . Syracuse, New York . 9780815605737 . 21 . The City and Sport Bureaucracy . https://books.google.com/books?id=He0QG1aAq04C&pg=PA21 .
  8. Book: Martin . David E. . Gynn . Roger W. H. . 2000 . The Olympic Marathon . Human Kinetics Publishers . 9780880119696. 40, 45–47 . 1904: Tom Hicks Conquers Heat Wave In St. Louis . https://books.google.com/books?id=Qb125O62NVQC&pg=PA40 .
  9. Web site: 2011 . Boston Marathon History: 1901-1905 . www.baa.org . . Boston . February 21, 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110221123355/http://www.baa.org/races/boston-marathon/boston-marathon-history/race-summaries/1901-1905.aspx . February 21, 2011 . dead . mdy-all .
  10. News: April 20, 1901 . John Caffrey Again Wins the Marathon Race, Cuts 10 Minutes From the Record He Made Last Year: Davis, the Indian, Second; Mellor of Yonkers Third -- Man From Sparta Makes Poor Showing -- Ronald McDonald Collapses After Plucky Race -- Ugly Rumors As To Cause . The Boston Globe . Boston .
  11. Book: Connelly, Mike . 2003 . 26 Miles to Boston: The Boston Marathon Experience from Hopkinton to Copley Square . Mile 22 . The Lyons Press . 9781585748280 . 193 . https://books.google.com/books?id=K9oZk0a7t2kC&pg=PA193 .
  12. News: April 20, 1905 . A New Marathon Champion: Frederick Lorz of the Mohawk Athletic Club of New York Captured the Great Run in an Exciting Contest . Boston Evening Transcript . Boston . 4 .
  13. Web site: 2011 . Boston Marathon History: 1906-1910 . www.baa.org . . Boston . February 21, 2011 . https://archive.today/20130414092120/http://www.baa.org/races/boston-marathon/boston-marathon-history/race-summaries/1906-1910.aspx . April 14, 2013 . dead . mdy-all .
  14. News: April 18, 1912 . OLYMPIC ROAD TRIALS.; Boston Marathon Runners Hope to Better Time Made by DeMar. . The New York Times . New York .
  15. News: August 6, 1904 . WILL RUN FOR ST. LOUIS TRIP. Eight Best Men in Race to Go to World's Fair for Big Event. . The New York Times . New York . pdf . May 14, 2012.
  16. March 13, 1909 . From Other Schools: Carlisle, Pennsylvania . The Native American . Phoenix, Arizona . 10 . 10 . 108 .
  17. Book: 1909 . The World 1910 Almanac and Encyclopedia . Track and Field Athletics . Press Publishing Company . New York . 385 . https://books.google.com/books?id=cGA3AAAAMAAJ&pg=PA385 .
  18. News: November 27, 1908 . J.F. CROWLEY WINS YONKERS MARATHON; Irish-American Runner Leads Big Field Over Westchester County Roads. . . 7 . February 7, 2011.
  19. Web site: September 11, 2007 . Edward Wetmore Kinsley . www.yonkersny.gov . City of Yonkers . Yonkers, New York . February 6, 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20101223222409/http://yonkersny.gov/Index.aspx?page=1668 . December 23, 2010 . dead . mdy-all .
  20. News: June 22, 1950 . Mrs. Samuel Mellor . New York Times .
  21. Book: Falls, Joe . Joe Falls . The Boston Marathon . February 1979 . Collier Books . 9780020285205 . 173 . April 21, 2014.