Bricklayer BillThe Untold Story of the Workingman’s Boston Marathon

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Bricklayer Bill The Untold Story of the Workingman's Boston Marathon Patrick L. Kennedy and Lawrence W. Kennedy

Patrick L. Kennedy and Lawrence W. Kennedy

Foreword by Bill Rogers. The Boston Marathon is filled with iconic characters like John J. McDermott, who won the first contest in 1897, and Johnny Kelley, who finished the race 58 times. Equally notable is “Bricklayer Bill” Kennedy, a working class Irish-American who was part of the amateur running cast in America before the sport turned professional. Co-authors Patrick Kennedy and his father Lawrence have written an engaging, dramatic story about their famous ancestor, who won the 1917 Marathon, two weeks after the U.S. entered World War I. Boston Harbor was on full alert for German submarines lurking off shore. Despite calls to cancel the race, Kennedy insisted on running, sporting a bright stars and stripes bandana. He won the race and became an instant hero, his picture splashed across newspapers around the world. The authors write that Kennedy “tapped into the zeitgeist not only of that moment in but also of that place – a proud but nerve-wracked city that needed a win on a grand stage.” November 2017 | University of Massachusetts Press | $24.95 paperback | 342 pages

Irish Cultural Centre

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