Ray Lewis Track & Field Centre
1100 Mohawk Road East, Hamilton, Ontario. Canada L8T 2S4
1100 Mohawk Road East, Hamilton, Ontario. Canada L8T 2S4
Raymond Gray "Ray" Lewis, CM (October 8, 1910 – November 15, 2003) was a Canadian track and field athlete and the first Canadian-born black Olympic medalist.
A descendant of African-American slaves, he was born and died in Hamilton, Ontario. Lewis was nicknamed Rapid Ray for his speed on the track. He excelled in the 100, 200, 400, and 800-metre distances in high school and captured seventeen national high school championships (including a record four in one day) while a student at Hamilton's Central Collegiate.
Lewis briefly attended Milwaukee's Marquette University on a scholarship but returned to Canada after only a semester. He found a position on the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) as a porter during the Great Depression, a job he would hold for 22 years. Lewis continued training – often running alongside the CPR train tracks during stopovers on the Canadian Prairies – and won a bronze medal as part of the 4 x 400-metre relay team at the 1932 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, California. In the 400-metre event, he was eliminated in the quarter-finals.
Two years later, he won a silver medal in the mile relay (4×440 yards) at the British Empire Games (later the Commonwealth Games). In the 440 yards competition, he was eliminated in the semi-finals. Narrowly missing the cut for Canada's 1936 Olympic team, he ran for two more years before retiring after a bout of pain from shin splints (shin splints had caused Lewis problems in the latter portion of his running career). He received greater recognition later, including the Order of Canada in 2001. In 2002, Canadian author John Cooper wrote his biography, Rapid Ray: The Story of Ray Lewis. The children's book chronicled his youth in Hamilton, as well as his training for the Olympics. A Hamilton school named in his honour, Ray Lewis Elementary, opened in 2005 and was occasionally visited by his widow Vivienne. (Source: Wikipedia)
Raymond Gray "Ray" Lewis, CM (October 8, 1910 – November 15, 2003) was a Canadian track and field athlete and the first Canadian-born black Olympic medalist.
A descendant of African-American slaves, he was born and died in Hamilton, Ontario. Lewis was nicknamed Rapid Ray for his speed on the track. He excelled in the 100, 200, 400, and 800-metre distances in high school and captured seventeen national high school championships (including a record four in one day) while a student at Hamilton's Central Collegiate.
Lewis briefly attended Milwaukee's Marquette University on a scholarship but returned to Canada after only a semester. He found a position on the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) as a porter during the Great Depression, a job he would hold for 22 years. Lewis continued training – often running alongside the CPR train tracks during stopovers on the Canadian Prairies – and won a bronze medal as part of the 4 x 400-metre relay team at the 1932 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, California. In the 400-metre event, he was eliminated in the quarter-finals.
Two years later, he won a silver medal in the mile relay (4×440 yards) at the British Empire Games (later the Commonwealth Games). In the 440 yards competition, he was eliminated in the semi-finals. Narrowly missing the cut for Canada's 1936 Olympic team, he ran for two more years before retiring after a bout of pain from shin splints (shin splints had caused Lewis problems in the latter portion of his running career). He received greater recognition later, including the Order of Canada in 2001. In 2002, Canadian author John Cooper wrote his biography, Rapid Ray: The Story of Ray Lewis. The children's book chronicled his youth in Hamilton, as well as his training for the Olympics. A Hamilton school named in his honour, Ray Lewis Elementary, opened in 2005 and was occasionally visited by his widow Vivienne. (Source: Wikipedia)
** UPCOMING EVENTS **
April 15
Technical Equipment Training.
April 23
Technical Equipment Training #2.
April 29th
Introductory Officiating Clinic.
Pole Vault Clinic.
High Jump Clinic.
May 4th
Mark Graham Memorial Invitational Track & Field Meet.
May 6th
Golden Horseshoe Track & Field Meet.
May 24th
91st Highlanders Athletic Association Elementary School Meet.
June 1st - 30th
2023 ParticipACTION Community Challenge.
June 18th
Royal Canadian Legion (District B) Track & Field Championships.
September 17th
Fall Field Festival.