WHAT IS THE AUSTRALIAN
CENTURIONS CLUB
We base our existence on the lead given by the British who have
had a Centurions Club for many years. We were formed as a club in 1971 due
to the hard work of 4 Victorian based people
- Tom Daintry who has been an Aust race walker
for many years
- Brian Parkinson who was involved in racewalking
as an official
- Fred Redman who had been a Centurion in England
and came to Aust in the sixties.
- Len Matthews, another expatriate Brit who
was also a British Centurion.
These people put up the initial money to have the medallions and
certificates made and promoted the idea of an annual 100 mile/24 hour race.
Thus the number of Centurions gradually rose until we had 20 by 1980. At
this time, we moved in other directions and the club simply ceased to function
as an active entity. We reformed in 1994 and since then we have been making
up for lost time and have done the following
- affiliation with the Aust Federation of Race
Walking Clubs
- the setting up of an honour board for Australian
Centurions
- the striking of a new medallion die
- helping run annual Centurions Events
- the regular issue of newsletters to all members
- the acceptance of a number of new Australian
Centurions into our ranks
- the recognition of ultra-distance best on
record performances
- registering of our own home page that you
are now reading.
With each of these initiatives, we have strengthened our position
within the racewalking community in Australia and now can proudly regard
ourselves as the ultra-distance arm of Australian racewalking.
Here are some of our Centurions. Press here
to find our more about the details.
Let me give you some details of how the club functions and its
aims. This may be summarised as follows
- All persons who walk 100 miles within 24 hours
in Australia automatically become life members of the club.
- The club exists solely to honour the performance
of centurions. It does not run its own events. It is not a competitive club.
Its sole aim is to foster long distance walking in Australia
- It has no annual fees or subsidies. It relies
on the willingness of Centurions to make occasional donations as required
on an as-needs basis. Our only ongoing costs are the annual affiliation
fees with the Aust Federation of Race Walking clubs, our annual Government
Affiliation fee, the ongoing cost of newsletters and any costs involved
in helping host the annual Centurions walking event.
- We hold no regular meetings apart from an
Annual General Meeting which we try to hold in conjunction with a 24 hour
walk if there is one on in the particular calendar year.
Press here to return to the Home Page.
Tim Erickson (terick@melbpc.org.au)
Secretary, Australian Centurions Club
Melbourne, Australia