There is a retired letter carrier in the Baltimore area by the
name of Robert C. Ray, whose running exploits are legendary.
Serious runners throughout central Maryland know him simply as
Bob Ray. Bob initially started running on a regular basis on December 18,
1953, and ran for over thirteen years before he started running
every day on April 4, 1967. As of December 31, 1999, Bob had run
86,808 miles in the continuous days of his streak, an average of
almost 7 1/4 miles per day. Since his beginning over 46 years
ago, Bob has logged in excess of 108,000 miles.
These are overwhelming numbers, making Bob's running
accomplishments awesome by any standard. Included in the figures
are more than 500 races, eighteen of which were marathons. He
set his best time of 3:08 in the Harrisburg Marathon in 1983
when he was 46 years old.
In addition, Bob spread his footprints across America in July,
1987 by running the 48 contiguous states. He has run in Hawaii,
and did the Midnight Sun Marathon in Alaska in 1992 to complete
the states.
Back in 1990, he was one of only 125 runners to race up the 560
steps and 27 stories of the World Trade Center at Harborplace in
downtown Baltimore, and the only one to do it barefooted. His
time of 3:36 placed him second, only 36 seconds behind the
winner.
On April 4, 2000, just three days prior to his 63rd birthday,
Bob will reach 33 years of running without missing a day--a
milestone certainly worthy of recognition. Bob holds the record
for the longest running streak in the United States--a third of
a
century.
Bob's daily running streak exemplifies his personal traits of
perseverance, determination, dedication of purpose, fortitude
and self-discipline. All these attributes combine to lift the
human spirit and inspire us all to try harder in our own
endeavors.
Not to be overshadowed by his running feats are the rich human
qualities that have endeared Bob to so many over the years. He
is known far and wide as a caring and kind-hearted person who is
always willing to do anything requested of him.
Bob volunteers as much--or more--of his time and efforts as
anyone. He has handled the start/finish line duties at hundreds
of races, and has coached and encouraged hundreds of runners.