The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Traveling Display Honors AJC Peachtree Road Race

Exhibit at Lenox Square, then Atlantic Station, other Atlanta locations.

- By Raisa Habersham raisa.habersham@ajc.com

1970 was a pivotal year for Atlanta and the state.

Jimmy Carter was elected as Georgia’s 76th governor, the state ratified the 19th Amendment 50 years after it became a law, and Hank Aaron became the first Braves player reach 3,000 hits.

That same year also saw the start of what has become one of Atlanta’s most unifying events: The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on Peachtree Road Race.

On Friday, just feet from the starting line at Lenox Square, the Atlanta Track Club unveiled a traveling display about the race’s history.

More than 60,000 participan­ts run the 6.2-mile race — the largest 10K race in the world — from Buckhead to Piedmont Park in Midtown. Initially noncompeti­tive, now thousands enter a lottery to get a number for the race.

The anniversar­y display, which is about 20 feet long and 20 feet

wide, features facts from the race’s history and artifacts such as the

first Peachtree Road Race T-shirt and the 1970 winning trophy awarded to Jeff Galloway. Galloway, a native Atlantan, is an Olympic runner and founder of Phidippide­s running store in Ansley Mall.

The Atlanta Track Club hosts the annual road race, which has been sponsored by the AJC since 1996.

“It feels as special as it is,” said Rich Kenah, the club’s executive director, of the upcoming anniversar­y. “It’s the world’s largest running party and the way Atlanta celebrates the Fourth of July. It’s only appropriat­e that we start it here.”

The traveling exhibit will stay at Lenox Square mall until March 12 and will then sit at Atlantic Station for three days. From there, the exhibit will travel to other popular Atlanta locations.

The yearlong celebratio­n kicked off last July with the Peachtree 50, a collection of stories published on www. peachtree5­0.com each week leading up to the race. Some of the stories are featured in the exhibit, including one honoring female winners and the race’s volunteers, who began with 12 and have now swelled to more than 3,000.

In its inaugural year, the race was sponsored by United Kingdom-based beer company Carling Brewing Co. Then, there were 150 participan­ts who entered for $1. Only 110 crossed the finish line.

One of them was Alabama native Bill Thorn, a track coach who runs the race every year.

“It’s become a way of life,” he said at Friday’s news conference inside Lenox Square.

Thorn moved to Georgia in 1954 after getting his physical education degree at Birmingham-Southern College. The then-24-year-old had played several sports except for track and field.

It wasn’t until he worked at a local YMCA that Thorn familiariz­ed himself with the sport and became a coach. Thorn is now 88 and a coach at Landmark Christian School in Fairburn. He has coached the sport for more than 65 years.

Running is still embedded in Thorn’s daily routine.

“It just became like brushing your teeth — a habit,” he said.

The Atlanta Track Club will announce upcoming events to commemorat­e the race’s history leading up to the July 4 race.

One of those events includes the annual T-shirt design contest. This year’s contest will feature celebrity designs from Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, author Emily Giffin, the Atlanta Braves, the Atlanta Hawks and Jeff Galloway.

Voting on the designs will open March 1 and will determine which design ultimately winds up in runner goodie bags at the end of the race.

Atlanta Track Club members can register for the AJC Peachtree Road Race from March 15 to 31. Nonmembers can enter a lottery during that time.

 ?? PHOTOS BY HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? Top: Atlanta Track Club unveiled a traveling display Friday in Lenox Square on the history, legends and legacy of the world’s largest 10K just feet from the Peachtree start line. Above: Bill Thorn, the only person to complete every running of the Peachtree, chats with Julia Emmons, longtime race director.
PHOTOS BY HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM Top: Atlanta Track Club unveiled a traveling display Friday in Lenox Square on the history, legends and legacy of the world’s largest 10K just feet from the Peachtree start line. Above: Bill Thorn, the only person to complete every running of the Peachtree, chats with Julia Emmons, longtime race director.
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