Norm Bright
Bright in 1946
Born January 29, 1910[ 1] Mossyrock, Washington , U.S. Died August 29, 1996 (aged 86)Seattle , U.S.[ 2] Sport Athletics Event 800–10,000 m Personal best(s) 1500 m – 3:56.6 (1935) mile – 4:14.5 (1935) 5000 m – 14:39.4 (1938) 10,000 m – 33:53.0 (1944)[ 1]
Bright in 1983
Norman Bright (January 29, 1910 – August 29, 1996) was an American runner, mountaineer , and teacher . Bright once held the American record in the two-mile run .[ 3]
Biography
Bright was the son of a school principal and a teacher. Born in Mossyrock, Washington , he was one of eleven children. Bright's mother reportedly rubbed olive oil into his legs as an infant when she was told by a doctor that her son was not "moving and working his muscles enough". Bright attended Western Washington University where he earned a teaching degree, Stanford University where he earned a bachelor's degree , and Miami University where he earned a master's degree in counseling.[ 2]
During World War II , Bright served in the United States Army .[ 2] He was initially rejected due to a slow pulse , however, he went to another enlistment center after running three miles to raise his heart rate .[ 4] In 1945, Bright married Franca Fiorentino whom he had met in New York City . The couple had one daughter (Juliana), and later divorced. Bright moved to Seattle in 1966 and worked for the Seattle School District as a psychologist .[ 2]
Bright participated in the Olympic trials in 1936, but failed to qualify, finishing fifth in the 5,000 m after twisting an ankle and collapsing in the 100 degree temperatures that had a third of the field unable to finish the race.[ 2] [ 5] [ 6] He was the winner of the 1937 Bay to Breakers , setting the course record as the first man to run under 40 minutes.[ 2] [ 7] [ 8] That same year, he set a course record of 47:22 at the Dipsea Race , but finished second due to the impairing nature of the event.[ 9] Thirty-three years later in 1970, he won the event.[ 10] The Norman Bright Award is given for "Extraordinary Effort in the Dipsea".[ 11]
In the mid-1960s, Bright began to slowly lose his eyesight due to atrophy of the optic nerves.
[ 12]
[ 13]
In 1978, he was struck by a bus, breaking numerous bones; his vision faded rapidly after that.
[ 13]
[ 14]
He needed a "guide," to keep him on course.[ 2] Rules have been developed to ensure blind athletes do not gain an advantage when led in a race.[ 15]
In 1975 he set the M65 World record over 800 m and 1500 m distances while winning at the first Association of Veteran Athletes (WAVA) World Championships in Toronto , Ontario , Canada.[ 16] [ 17] He was the first 65-year-old under 5 minutes in the 1500 m. He also won the steeplechase at the same meet.
In 1976 he ran the Bay to Breakers with the guide (39 years after his victory in the event).[ 2] Later that year he set the M65 American record in the 10,000 m that still stands.[ 18]
Bright was also a mountaineer reported to have climbed every major peak in the United States.[ 2]
Bright is mentioned in Laura Hillenbrand 's best-selling biography about Louis Zamperini , Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption . Bright appeared on the cover of Runners World in September 1974, running a steeplechase at the age of 64 and nearly blind.
Bright was a member of San Francisco's Olympic Club .[ 7]
In 2000 he was elected into the USATF Masters Hall of Fame .[ 19]
Bright died in Seattle due to complications from pneumonia and cancer.[ 7]
References
^ a b Norman Bright . trackfield.brinkster.net
^ a b c d e f g h i Bjorhus, Jennifer; Norton, Dee (September 6, 1996). "Norm Bright, Blind Marathon Runner, Dies Of Cancer At 86" . The Seattle Times .
^ "WESTERN ALL-CENTURY TRACK AND FIELD TEAMS" (PDF) . Grfx.cstv.com . Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-11-12. Retrieved 2016-08-20 .
^ Bright Kunkel, Georgie (August 21, 2008). "West Seattle Herald: My brother was a long-distance runner" . Retrieved March 4, 2022 .
^ "Runner's World | Shoe reviews, training advice, running news, nutrition tips" . Runningtimes.com . Retrieved 2016-08-20 .
^ Hymans, Richard. "The History of the United States Olympic Trials : Track & Field" (PDF) . Usatf.org . Retrieved 2016-08-20 .
^ a b c Zane, Maitland (September 19, 1996). "Leonard Wallach – B2B director – dies" . The San Francisco Chronicle .
^ Benyo, Richard ; Henderson, Joe (2002). "B: BAA to Bush, George W." . Running Encyclopedia: The Ultimate Source for Today's Runner . Champaign, Illinois: Human Kinetics. pp. 25– 26. ISBN 9780736037341 .
^ Spitz, Barry. "99th Dipsea: Makela joins Hall of Fame" . Mercury News. Retrieved 2016-08-20 .
^ "The History of the Dipsea Race" . Dipsea.org . 1905-11-19. Retrieved 2016-08-20 .
^ "The Dipsea Race: 2010 Race Summary" . Dipsea.org . Retrieved 2016-08-20 .
^ "3126 from 42 nations compete in 3rd WORLD VETERANS CHAMPIONSHIPd" (PDF) . National Masters News . Museum of Masters Track & Field. September 1979. p. 10.
^ a b "Blind Man Jogs Alone" (PDF) . mastershistory.org . Los Angeles Times. Jan 29, 1978. p. 15.
^ "Indefatigable Bright a long-distance legend" . Western Washington University Athletics. May 19, 1983.
^ "IPC Athletics – News, Events & Paralympic Athlete Bios" (PDF) . Ipc-athletics.paralympic.org . Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-09-14. Retrieved 2016-08-20 .
^ "Results of the World Masters Track and Field Championships : Toronto, Canada" (PDF) . Mastershistory . Retrieved 2016-08-20 .
^ "The World Association of Veteran Athletes" (PDF) . Usatf.org . Retrieved 2016-08-20 .
^ "Statistics – Records" . USATF.org . Retrieved 2016-08-20 .
^ "Masters Hall of Fame" . USATF.org . Retrieved 2016-08-20 .
Bibliography
Olson, Leonard T., Masters Track and Field: A History , McFarland & Co., North Carolina, 2001. ISBN 0-7864-0889-8
Two Mile Record, 1935, 9m13.2s: "Those Were the Days, Today in History - July 9" . Archived from the original on 2006-07-16. Retrieved 2006-08-05 .
"WESTERN ALL-CENTURY TRACK AND FIELD TEAMS" (PDF) . Graphics.fansonly.com . Retrieved 2016-08-20 .
Wood, Michael & Coombs, Colby, Alaska: A Climbing Guide , The Mountaineers Books, 2001. ISBN 0-89886-724-X
1876–1878New York Athletic Club 1879–1888NAAAA 1888–1979Amateur Athletic Union 1980–1992The Athletics Congress 1993–onwardsUSA Track & Field Notes
Note 1 : In 1888 both the NAAAA and the AAU held championships
OT : The 1920, 1928, 1932, 1992, 1996, 2000, 2004, 2008, 2012 and 2016 championships incorporated the Olympic Trials, otherwise held as a discrete event.
2020 OT : The 2020 Olympic Trials were delayed and held in 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic .
Distance : Until 1924 the event was 5 miles; from 1925–27 and from 1929–31 it was over 6 miles.
1906–1979Amateur Athletic Union
1899: Alec Grant
1900: Alec Grant
1901: Alec Grant
1903: Alec Grant
1904: George Bonhag
1905: George Bonhag
1906 : George Bonhag
1907 : George Bonhag
1908 : Mike Driscoll
1909 : Mike Driscoll
1910 : Joseph Monument
1911 : George Bonhag
1913 : William Kramer
1914 : Harry Smith
1915 : Michael Devaney
1916 : Joie Ray
1917 : John Ryan
1918 : Edward Garvey
1919 : Gordon Nightingale
1920 : Harry Helm
1921 : Max Bohland
1922 : John Romig
1923 : Joie Ray
1924 : Joie Ray
1925 : Paavo Nurmi (FIN ) , Harold Kennedy (2nd)
1926 : William Goodwin
1927 : William Goodwin
1928 : Leo Lermond
1929 : Edvin Wide (SWE ) , Robert Dalrymple (2nd)
1930 : Joe McCluskey
1931 : Leo Lermond
1932 : George Lermond
1933 : George Lermond
1934 : John Follows
1935 : John Follows
1936 : Norm Bright
1937 : Norm Bright
1938 : Don Lash
1939 : Don Lash
1940 : Greg Rice
1941 : Greg Rice
1942 : Greg Rice
1943 : Greg Rice
1944 : Oliver Hunter
1945 : Forest Efaw
1946 : Forest Efaw
1947 : Curt Stone
1948 : Curt Stone
1949 : Gaston Reiff (BEL ) , Fred Wilt (3rd)
1950 : Curt Stone
1951 : Curt Stone
1952 : Horace Ashenfelter
1953 : Horace Ashenfelter
1954 : Horace Ashenfelter
1955 : Horace Ashenfelter
1956 : Horace Ashenfelter
1957 : John Macy (POL ) , Alex Breckenridge (2nd)
1958 : Veliša Mugoša (YUG ) , John Macy (2nd)
1959 : Bill Dellinger
1960 : Al Lawrence (AUS ) , Lew Stieglitz (2nd)
1961 : Bruce Kidd (CAN ) , John Macy (3rd)
1962 : Bruce Kidd (CAN ) , Jared Nourse (4th)
1963 : Michel Bernard (FRA ) , Bob Schul (2nd)
1964 : Ron Clarke (AUS ) , Pete McArdle (2nd)
1965 : Billy Mills
1966 : Lajos Mecser (HUN ) , Tracy Smith (2nd)
1967 : Tracy Smith
1968 : George Young
1969 : George Young
1970 : Art DuLong
1971 : Frank Shorter
1972 : Emiel Puttemans (BEL ) , Leonard Hilton (2nd)
1973 : Tracy Smith
1974 : Dick Tayler (NZL ) , Frank Shorter (2nd)
1975 : Miruts Yifter (ETH ) , Pat Manders (3rd)
1976 : Suleiman Nyambui (TAN ) , Greg Fredericks (2nd)
1977 : Suleiman Nyambui (TAN ) , Garry Bjorklund (3rd)
1978 : Suleiman Nyambui (TAN ) , Marty Liquori (2nd)
1979 : Marty Liquori
1980–1992The Athletics Congress 1993–presentUSA Track & Field Notes * Events before 1906 are considered unofficial. Distances have varied as follows: 2 Miles (1899–1931) and odd numbered years since 2015, 5000 meters (1933–1939), 3 Miles 1932, (1940–1986), and 3000 meters (1987–2014) and even numbered years since 2014