Case Western Reserve University ArchivesMain MenuAthleticsThis page provides an explanation for and an index to the Athletics section of the websiteBuildings and GroundsThis page provides an explanation for and an index to the Buildings and Grounds section of the websiteOrganization, Governance, and SymbolsThis page provides an explanation for and an index to the Organization, Governance, and Symbols section of the websitePeople of CWRUThis page provides an explanation for and an index to the People of CWRU section of the websiteUniversity Life and EventsThis page provides an explanation for and an index to the University Life and Events section of the websiteAbout This SiteSite development, scope, purpose, and contributorsCWRU Archives Staffec4500175310e554b76925ae682e5e2e81cf14db
Runners prepare to start the Hudson Relay
12020-05-28T21:17:36+00:00Helen Conger9053f99d4e4d5a851764c8d94d34f8d9e9ad73b593Hudson Relay, 1910plain2020-09-07T19:32:40+00:00016306/13/19106/13/1910unknownunknownCWRU ArchivesRunners prepare to start the Hudson Relay, 6/13/1910Copyright status unknown.Events and Activities ; PeopleWestern Reserve University ; R77000 Students ; E76230 CompetitionsHudson RelayChristine Liebson6faeb936e67a615bb9a88f40102e089038d20a54
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12020-05-20T15:29:48+00:00Hudson Relay Origins10This section provides detailed information about the beginning of the Hudson Relayplain2021-02-03T21:59:41+00:00With very few exceptions, the Hudson Relay has been run every year since 1910. The University Archives celebrates the centennial of the Hudson Relay with this web exhibit highlighting some of its little-known history.
Monroe Curtis (Adelbert Class of 1911) initiated the Hudson Relay. His intention, as described by the student yearbook, was to “fill in the hitherto blank observance of the Undergraduate Day of Commencement Week.” Hudson was chosen as the starting point to connect Western Reserve’s original home to its current University Circle location.
In the beginning the Hudson Relay was an Adelbert College activity. It would be many years before other schools of Western Reserve officially participated. Each Adelbert College class fielded a team of runners, who each ran one mile.
Crowd mobs the winner of the Hudson Relay Hudson Relay team of the Class of 1918 Among the traditions established in the earliest years of the Hudson Relay was the custom of carrying a message from the Mayor of the Village of Hudson to the Western Reserve University President. Beginning in the 1930s the message was from the Western Reserve Academy Headmaster.