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Adding winning teams to Hudson Relay rock
12020-05-28T21:17:37+00:00Helen Conger9053f99d4e4d5a851764c8d94d34f8d9e9ad73b591black and white view of a man wearing a jacket, pants, and hood, etching lettering into a boulder2020-05-28T21:17:37+00:00028667/22/19827/22/1982Case Western Reserve UniversityCWRU PhotographyCWRU ArchivesHelen Conger9053f99d4e4d5a851764c8d94d34f8d9e9ad73b5
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12020-05-20T15:38:41+00:00Hudson Relay Rules, Routes, and Winners22This section provides detailed information about the rules, routes, and winners of the annual Hudson Relayplain2020-07-31T15:46:12+00:00When planning for the first race began, running from Painesville to Cleveland was proposed as the route. Quay Findley, Class of 1911 and member of the planning committee, suggested running from Hudson to Cleveland. His suggestion was accepted and, until 1990, Hudson to Cleveland, with minor variations, was the race’s route.
The length of each leg was 1 mile until the 1970s, when half-mile legs began. Early rules required each runner to finish his mile unassisted and no runner could participate in more than one mile. Team sizes varied from 24 to 52, It was the custom for the class president to run the final mile, with elected team captains running the first mile. The overall length was 26 miles until 2003 when the course was changed to pass through the North Residential Village, shortening the distance to 24.5 miles.
Monitoring progress of the race was a constant, but the method changed over time. In the early years, people who lived along the route phoned in updates, which were recorded on a large map of the course at the steps of Adelbert Main. In 1972 WRUW, the student radio station, offered live coverage of the race using a radio car.