It wasn’t until I went to college that I learned that Patriots’
Day is
not a holiday outside of Massachusetts. Growing up in the
state, I took it for granted that Patriots’ Day meant no school and
either a pre-dawn wakeup to go see the reenactment at the Old North
Bridge in Concord or a mid-morning trip to Heartbreak Hill to watch
the runners enter the last leg of the marathon.
If we went to the marathon, we would usually get there early
enough to see the leaders come through, and then as the race slowed
down we would pass the time by throwing a frisbee or playing catch
among the B.C. students and other onlookers. We would wait until
the elite marathoners gave way to the better amateurs, and then
ultimately leave soon after we saw the Hoyts pass by.
The Hoyts
are a father-son team: the now 70 year-old Dick Hoyt and his son
Rick, who is quadriplegic. For the past 33 years, Dick has pushed
Rick in a specially-designed chair through the Boston Marathon, in
addition to many other races and triathlons. Today Sports
Illustrated has a
lengthy profile of the two and their amazing running history.
Not only does the story convey the magnitude of the Hoyts’
accomplishments, it also goes a long way toward explaining to those
not lucky enough to have work or school off today what a
significant part of the Patriots’ Day tradition the Hoyts have
been for the past 30 years.
JFGalt| 4.18.11 @ 1:12PM
While we easily rail against OBAMA! and his machine it surpirses me to see no comments here. What better example of the self reliance of America. What an antithesis to OBAMA! and his culture of enslavement to the state. Live free or Die. Go Hoyts!
c. j. acworth| 4.18.11 @ 5:45PM
"Listen my children and you shall hear
of the midnight ride of Paul Revere.
On the 18th of April in '75,
scarcely a man is now alive who remembers
that famous day and year."
I highly recommend "Paul Revere's Ride" by David Hackett Fischer for a thorough and thoroughly enjoyable account of the events leading up to and following the famous ride and the battles of Lexington and Concord. (That's Concord, Mass., not Concord, New Hampshire, by the way! ;) )