
‘The runners are coming’: Boston Marathon helps celebrate 250th anniversary of the Revolutionary War
BOSTON (AP) — Paul Revere rode down Boylston Street to the Boston Marathon finish line — or almost there, as it turned out — proclaiming “the runners are coming” on Monday morning as the world’s oldest and most prestigious annual marathon helped celebrate the 250th anniversary of the Revolutionary War.
Reenactors on horseback, accompanied by a fife and drum playing “Yankee Doodle,” helped start the festivities and add a bit of levity when Revere’s horse was spooked by the finish line decal on the street and stopped. The actor portraying the colonial silversmith and patriot had to hop off and walk the last few steps himself.
After reading a proclamation, Revere gently tugged the horse the rest of the way before riding off to more ceremonies commemorating the midnight ride on April 19, 1775, that warned the colonists in Lexington and Concord that the British were on the march.
Marcel Hug of Switzerland had no such trouble completing the course, zooming into Copley Square in an un official time of 1 hour, 21, minutes, 34 seconds for his eighth Boston wheelchair title. He beat two-time winner Daniel Romanchuk by more than four minutes.