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Kathrine Switzer, the First Woman to Run the Boston Marathon, Recalls Being 'Attacked' During Famous 1967 Race (Exclusive)

Kathrine Switzer faced physical and verbal attacks during the 1967 Boston Marathon, but refused to quit the race

People Kathrine SwitzerCredit: Bettmann

NEED TO KNOW

  • Her historic run led to the inclusion of women in the Boston Marathon starting in 1972

  • Switzer continues to empower women globally through her nonprofit 261 Fearless and celebrates her legacy in running events

When Kathrine Switzer stepped up to the start line at the Boston Marathon in 1967, she knew she had done everything she could to train for the moment.

The then-20-year-old Switzer, a Syracuse University student, had spent months working alongside cross-country assistant coach Arnie Briggs, logging hundreds of miles in preparation for the big day to prove that she could do it.

Nearly 60 years later, ahead of the 2026 Boston Marathon, Switzer caught up with PEOPLE to talk about her experience and share what made her keep going even after she "was attacked in the race."

While no woman had ever officially run the Boston Marathon, Switzer was determined to be the first. Leading up to the race, Switzer tells PEOPLE she didn't hide the fact that she was a woman.

At her coach's advice, she registered for the race and signed up as K.V. Switzer, the name she had been using since she was 13, inspired by journalists who signed their work with their initials. She paid the entry fee, and on race day, her coach picked up the bibs for everyone in their group.

Despite hoping to wear "really cute maroon shorts" and a matching top, she ultimately had to wear a sweatsuit due to the cold weather and sleet, which she was used to after months of training in Upstate New York.

Kathrine SwitzerCredit: Paul Connell/The Boston Globe via Getty

As she looked down to pin her bib, reality set in when she saw her name, K.V. Switzer, next to her number, 261.

"I wasn't disguised," she emphasizes. "I didn't have a hood up. I had on a sweater, a sweatshirt, and sweatpants because it was really freezing."

Switzer and all the runners were then pushed into the starting area, and the race officials checked off her number. She recalls thinking to herself, "Well, there's no problem, obviously."

"The guys all knew I was a girl, and were thrilled," she says. "They were coming over to me and said, 'Wish my wife would run,' or 'I wish my girlfriend would want to,' and 'You're going to go the whole way?' The gun goes off, and I felt great."

However, just a few miles in, she caught the eye of the press truck, and they immediately started "screaming at the driver to slow down" so they could ask her questions.

Soon after, however, she heard someone from the running board shouting at her, saying, "What's going on?"

"He's just shouting at me. All of a sudden, somebody pushed him and came running down the street after me, and I didn't see that," she shares.

Before she knew it, she was being accosted by the race manager, Jock Semple, who tried to remove her bib and kick her out of the race.

"I heard him at the last minute because of his leather shoes, and at the moment I turned, he was right in my face, screaming at me, 'Get the hell out of my race!' with his hand on my shoulder," she recalls.

"He said, 'Get the hell out of here and give me those numbers!'" she adds.

Switzer jumped back and turned to get away from him, but Semple pulled on the back of her shirt and grabbed at her race bib, tearing off the top corner.

"Arnie, my coach, who knew him well, they used to run together, started screaming, 'Jock, leave her alone. She's okay, I've trained her,'" Switzer recalls. "He said, 'You stay out of this,' and he pushed Arnie."

Kathrine SwitzerCredit: Paul J. Connell/The Boston Globe via Getty

Her boyfriend at the time, Thomas Miller, was a 235-lb. All-American football player who had decided to run alongside Switzer. When Miller saw what was going on, "he clipped the official and sent him flying."

"I went, 'God, we killed him!'" she remembers. "Because he smashed him really, and so I saw him going through the air, and then I took off down the street, and Arnie said, 'Run like hell!' "

Switzer and Briggs eventually caught up to the press truck, which she says accelerated and "knocked over half the photographers." While members of the press had initially been kind to Switzer, they then started screaming at her.

"'When are you going to quit? What are you trying to prove? You're a Suffragette!'" she recalls them yelling. "Really, really aggressive stuff, and I said, 'Listen, I'm trying to run, just leave me alone, I'm trying to run.' "

As the press prodded her and questioned her intentions, she finally replied, "I'm not saying anything to you guys. If you want to cover the race, you'd better get up there with the leaders. I'm in the race, I'm staying in it. On my hands and my knees if I have to, I am finishing."

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The people on the press truck didn't believe her, but they drove off to capture the front of the race.

"Arnie said, 'Are you serious?' I said, 'I'm very serious. Everybody's always telling women that they can't do things, and when they try them, then they do something like this, so no wonder they can't do things. I'm going to finish the job.' "

With that in mind, despite the adrenaline, her coach told her that they needed to slow down, get in control, and finish the race.

"Time went on, and I was so angry at this official, and then while I was on Heartbreak Hill, I let it go," she tells PEOPLE. "I said he's a product of his time. I'm not going to convince him of anything. I'll finish the race. That probably won't convince him, but Ihaveto finish the race."

Around three to four miles away from the finish line, Switzer says she noticed a few women on the sidelines. Many of whom were watching her with their arms folded.

"But," she emphasizes, "one of them went down on her knees and was holding onto the fence, and she goes, 'Come on, honey, do it for all of us!' "

That moment made her realize that the race was bigger than her.

Kathrine Switzer and her People Magazine feature from 1979Credit: Kathrine Switzer

"I said, 'My God, if I just give them the opportunity, maybe they'll run,'" she says. "Physically, I felt great, but mentally I felt like I had so much work to do. I could see it: the years ahead. If I'm really serious about this, it's going to be hard, but it's worth doing. So, we'll do that. I crossed the finish line and said, 'Okay, time to get to work.' "

And that she did.

Many of the people who covered the race were convinced it would be Switzer's last. She remembers one of them saying, "This is just a one-off deal, you'll never run another marathon, right?" to which she replied, "One day you're going to hear about a little old lady who's 80 years old training in Central Park and drops dead. It's going to be me. I am running forever."

While change took time, it happened nonetheless.

After the marathon, the AAU banned women from competing in races against men, as women had not previously been explicitly excluded. Five years later, however, in 1972, women were officially allowed to compete in the Boston Marathon.

Switzer finished third in the 1972 Boston Marathon, and Semple, the same man who tried to stop her, presented her with her trophy.

Kathrine Switzer at the Boston Marathon in 2017Credit: AP Photo/Mary Schwalm

Switzer, now 79, tells PEOPLE that she continues to run 30 to 40 miles a week. Her experience with the Boston Marathon led to her creating women-only events because they could be nonintimidating and welcoming, and women "really responded."

Through her global nonprofit, 261 Fearless, Switzer continues the mission she first set out on, building a worldwide community that uses running as a vehicle to empower women of all backgrounds to realize their strength — physically, mentally and socially.

To celebrate the 50th anniversary of running the Boston Marathon, Switzer ran the race again in 2017 to help raise money for her charity and her nonprofit.

"It was one of the happiest days of my life, actually. It was the first time that women were fifty-fifty. At the finish line, waiting for me with a medal, I could see Joann Flaminio from the top of Boylston Street, the first woman president of the Boston Athletic Association. It was a momentous occasion," Switzer shares.

The whole experience was "so much fun."

Kathrine Switzer

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"I stopped 13 times on the course. Everybody had a sign. Women were holding little girls and saying, 'Please kiss my little girl,'" she remembers. "Everybody out there knew about it. They'd say, 'There goes Kathrine.' I didn't have Kathrine on my shirt or anything, but the fact that they knew the history and were appreciative of it, rather than scorning it."

In this year's race on April 20,Switzer's261 Fearlessrunners are sponsored byAvon. Switzer previously served as Avon's Global Running Ambassador and helped expand the brand's international running programs, including the Avon International Running Circuit, the largest women's running series in the world at the time, which raised awareness and funds for breast cancer and other critical causes affecting women.

Switzer has transformed the landscape of athletics for women and hopes to continue that legacy by showing women how running can serve as a vehicle to empower and unite.

"When I'm running, the guy next to me is a different race from me, doesn't speak English, the person on my right, I don't know their gender, and we don't care. As long as they can run, we're running together," Switzer says. "At the end, we hug each other,all stinking and sweating. I would give my life for them during that time. We will never see each other again after some time. It's a phenomenal feeling."

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Kathrine Switzer, the First Woman to Run the Boston Marathon, Recalls Being 'Attacked' During Famous 1967 Race (Exclusive)

Kathrine Switzer faced physical and verbal attacks during the 1967 Boston Marathon, but refused to quit the race NEED TO KNOW ...
Knife crime deaths surge as at least ‘two school-aged children dying every month’

At least two school-agedchildrenare dying every month fromknife injuriesin England, with most fatalities resulting from a single stab wound, according to a new national analysis.

The Independent US

This alarming trend shows a rise in knife-related deaths among under-17s, from 21 in 2019/20 to 36 in 2023/24.

It comes a month afterThe Independentreported that children as young as sevenwere taking knives into school.

An investigation found that more than 700 knife crimes, including threats and attacks, being recorded by police at schools in England and Wales last year.

The findings emerge from two studies, including one by Bristol Medical School researchers, which examined 145 children and young people under 18 who died from knife wounds in England between April 2019 and March 2024.

Data from the National Child Mortality Database (NCMD), hospital, social care, and police records was analysed to identify reduction strategies.

Of those lost, 90 per cent were male, with an average age of 14.4 years. A significant 75 per cent (110 victims) were from areas facing the greatest levels of poverty.

Around one-third (32 per cent) of those who died were Black, and another third (31 per cent) were White.

On a population basis, young people of Black or Black British ethnicity were approximately 13 times more likely to die from a knife-related injury than White children.

Around one-third (32 per cent) of those who died from knife-relatd injuries were Black and another third (31 per cent) were White (Andrew Matthews/PA)

Most child victims of knife-related deaths had also been involved with statutory services prior to their fatal injury.

Of the 57 cases available for detailed analysis, injuries to the chest and neck caused 75% of deaths and 60% died before reaching hospital. Two thirds of those who died suffered a single stab wound.

Researchers found adverse childhood experiences were common among young people, with a history of domestic violence and abuse the most frequent.

A quarter of children (24%) lived with an adult with mental illness, and nearly a third (31%) lived in a household with substance abuse.

Gang involvement was mentioned in a third of case files, and concerns about carrying knives were recorded in a quarter (25%) of cases.

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The researchers said the findings indicated the group at highest risk of experiencing a fatal stab wound in England were young people of black ethnicity who live in urban areas of deprivation.

Lead author Dr Tom Roberts, an A&E clinician at North Bristol NHS Trust, said: “Knife-related fatalities among children and young people are a significant public health concern.

“Our research identifies where action could be taken to prevent future tragedies and demonstrates the urgent need to support children facing adversity and marginalisation.

“Despite frequent contact with services, many children received no targeted support for adverse childhood experiences, especially domestic violence and abuse, revealing major gaps in early intervention.”

The Knife Angel sculpture, created with 100,000 knives collected by 41 police forces across the country via knife amnesties and confiscations (PA)

Co-author Dr Edd Carlton, also an A&E clinician at North Bristol NHS Trust, added: “Our findings show how dangerous carrying a knife can be, a single stab wound can prove fatal.

“It also emphasises the urgent need for prevention strategies that address the social, environmental, and structural factors behind these deaths.”

The second study examined the circumstances around the 58 deaths of children under 18 in England who died from knife injuries between 2019 and 2024 and had detailed NCMD case files.

The research explored how and why these children died, and the different types of violence they may have been exposed to at home, school or in their communities.

The study revealed that 58 children who died had experienced some form of violence or harm during their lives.

Many were both victims and perpetrators in different settings, the home, school, or community, but services often focused only on one aspect of their experience.

Lead author Dr Jade Levell, from the University of Bristol, said: “Our analysis shows that many of these children experienced multiple forms of violence across home, school, and community before their early deaths.

“Although it is not possible to conclusively say whether a specific intervention would have made a difference, it is plausible to believe that appropriate interventions that acknowledge the extent of violence cutting across different domains of home, school and community in some children’s lives could have made a positive difference.”

– The first study, Pre-Injury, injury and post-injury factors leading to death in children and young people who were victims of knife crime in England between 2019-2024: a review of the National Child Mortality Database, is published in the journal Emergency Medicine Journal.

– The second study, Childhood violence across distinct, overlapping, and concurrent contexts: polyvictimization, polyperpetration, and missed interventions points among child knife crime fatalities in England, is published in the journal Frontiers of Sociology.

Knife crime deaths surge as at least ‘two school-aged children dying every month’

At least two school-agedchildrenare dying every month fromknife injuriesin England, with most fatalities resulting from a single stab w...
Hero principal who tackled school shooter is crowned prom king

A heroicOklahoma high schoolprincipal,shot in the leg while taking down a school shooter,was crowned prom king this weekend.

The Independent US

Aheartwarming videofrom Friday night showed students at Pauls Valley High School, 60 miles south of Oklahoma City, crowning Kirk Moore just weeks after he disarmed a former student who had plans of carrying out a mass shooting.

In the video from prom night, Moore walks through the crowd at the dance and high-fives cheering students. The DJ declared Moore “our king” and then played the Nickelback song “Hero.”

Moore has been lauded for his heroic actions after he wrestled Victor Lee Hawkins, a 20-year-old former student, to the ground after he entered the school and began firing a pistol earlier this month.

Surveillance footage captured Moore tackling Hawkins, disarming him and staying on top of him until police arrived April 7.

Oklahoma high school principal Kirk Moore was crowned prom king Friday after wrestling down a former student who was planning a mass shooting (@DudespostingWs /X)

The video, released by the school district, showed the suspect in a dark hooded sweatshirt entering the school and pointing a handgun at two students in the lobby.

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Moore can then be seen rushing at him and taking him to the ground. The footage also shows another teacher picking up the gun and taking it away.

No students were injured in the attack.

“The actions of the staff and the principal stepping in as soon as they saw a subject with a firearm saved lives today,” Hunter McKee, a spokesperson for the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation, said after the shooting.

Hawkins was arrested and charged with unlawfully carrying a firearm, shooting with the intent to kill and pointing a firearm.

Surveillance video captured Moore tackling the would-be shooter to the ground earlier this month (AP)

Hawkins told investigators that he had planned to kill students, Moore and then himself in a mass shooting “like the Columbine shooters did,” referencing the 1999 school shooting in Colorado that resulted in the deaths of 12 students and a teacher.

Hawkins has pleaded not guilty to the criminal charges. His court-appointed attorney, Tyson Stanek, declined to comment on the charges, citing policies of the Oklahoma Indigent Defense System. He is being held on a $1 million bond.

Hero principal who tackled school shooter is crowned prom king

A heroicOklahoma high schoolprincipal,shot in the leg while taking down a school shooter,was crowned prom king this weekend. Ahear...
‘I collapsed into my cream tea on a bike ride. Turns out I had a serious, undiagnosed health problem for 50 years’

An Essex woman, who unknowinglylived with a significant heart defectfor over five decades, is now embarking on a challenging 54-mile charity cycle from London to Brighton.

The Independent US Diana Warren, right, and wife Lisa on a bike ride (PA)

This life-altering discovery, made after a dramatic collapse during a leisurely bike ride, has prompted her to undertake the endurance cycle for the British Heart Foundation.

Diana Warren, 55, was enjoying a bike ride with her wife, Lisa, in June 2022 when she suddenly collapsed.

The couple had paused their 14-mile journey to Mersey Island at a local cafe, where Ms Warren, then 51, had chosen a coffee and a cream tea "for carbohydrates" to sustain them for the remainder of their trip.

“I’d put the cream on the scone ready to go for it, and I don’t remember much after that,” Ms Warren, who lives in Colchester, told PA Real Life.

“Apparently, I went face down into it, waste of a scone!” she laughed.

Diana Warren said learning of her condition was a ‘shock’ (PA)

“I came to (as) somebody (was) putting a cold cloth on the back of my neck, and they were phoning for an ambulance… and spent a couple of hours fully trying to come back to normal.

“We all put it down as me just having a faint, although it’s quite unusual to faint whilst you’re sitting down, which was a concern when I went to see the doctors about a week later.”

For a week afterwards, Ms Warren said that her wife “nagged” her to go and see a doctor, with the keen cyclist simply putting her fainting episode down to a side effect of menopause.

However, she eventually booked an appointment, still believing it could not be anything serious.

At her initial appointment, her GP told her he believed it could be to do with her heart, and promptly referred her to Colchester Hospital’s cardiology department.

“It was a bit of a shock, because I was just like: ‘How can it be anything to do with my heart when I’ve been pretty active?’” Ms Warren said.

“You know, I’m not a gym bunny, I don’t go to the gym every day, but we walk most places. We cycle when the weather’s good, or when the weather’s not so good and you just need the fresh air. We’re not lazy people.”

After further tests, including an electrocardiogram, Ms Warren was told that she had an Atrial Septal Defect – a hole in her heart.

Ms Warren, left, is doing the London to Brighton cycle for BHF as she feels it's important “to give back, however you can” (PA)

“They said it’s been there your whole life, and it’s surprising it’s not been alerted or discovered before,” she said.

“But then, I’ve never really been in hospital to have any tests or anything done on it.”

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Ms Warren was told that the hole was “the size of a two pence piece – which is quite big, apparently”.

According to the NHS, an Atrial Septal Defect (ASD) is a hole between the two collecting chambers of the heart, the atria, which allows blood to cross from the left chamber to the right, leading to extra blood flow through the lung arteries and lungs. Symptoms include shortness of breath, tiredness, irregular heart beats, fainting and lung infections.

They are usually treated with a device – a plug – made from metal mesh.

If left untreated, ASDs can lead to pulmonary hypertension, heart failure, stroke and other heart and lung problems, according to the BHF.

Ms Warren was referred to St Bartholomew’s Hospital in London for treatment, and surgeons attempted keyhole surgery – entering through her groin – to patch the hole, but none of the three surgery attempts were successful.

Instead, Ms Warren required open heart surgery, which took place in April 2024 after a six-month wait.

“I have to say, St Bart’s were absolutely amazing the whole way through it,” she said.

Ms Warren on a bike with Lisa, her brother Gary and sister-in-law Teresa (PA)

“They were very approachable, they gave you phone numbers if you wanted to speak to anybody before or after. They looked after my wife when I was in hospital. The surgeon was absolutely amazing.”

Ms Warren also had a pacemaker fitted during the surgery, and now has annual check-ups but is able to live a normal life.

This year, she is preparing for a mammoth 54-mile bike ride, having got back in the saddle as soon as she could after her major operation.

Along with her brother Gary and his wife Teresa, Ms Warren will ride from London to Brighton for the British Heart Foundation on Sunday June 21, a route that goes from Clapham Common to Brighton Seafront, and one she has always dreamed of completing.

She began training in January, gradually increasing her maximum mileage by 10 miles each month, and doing exercises recommended by the British Heart Foundation to get stronger for cycling.

“My squats are coming up really good!” she said.

Ms Warren said it feels it is important to fundraise for the British Heart Foundation as someone with lived experience of a heart condition in order to thank them for their work, adding that the “support they give all of the different heart conditions that people have is amazing”.

“To give back, however you can – those of us who have had a heart condition and are well enough to be able to do something to give back – I think is important, to help others who will, sadly, maybe get into the position where we are, where you don’t know where to turn, you don’t know who to speak to, you don’t know what to do.”

British Heart Foundation’s London to Brighton Bike Ride 2026 takes place on Sunday June 21.

To find out more and sign up, visit www.bhf.org.uk/l2b.

‘I collapsed into my cream tea on a bike ride. Turns out I had a serious, undiagnosed health problem for 50 years’

An Essex woman, who unknowinglylived with a significant heart defectfor over five decades, is now embarking on a challenging 54-mile ch...
Louisiana gunman killed seven of his own children and one other child in deadliest US mass shooting in years, police say

A gunman inLouisianakilled seven of his ownchildren, critically wounded their mother, and killed an eighth child on Sunday,policesaid.

The Independent US

The children were aged between 1 and 12 years old, according to Shreveport Police Department spokesperson Christopher Bordelon. The gunman has been identified as Shamar Elkins.

The mother is in critical condition. The gunman wounded a second woman at the scene as well. Bordelon said that the suspect had previously been arrested in a 2019 firearms case.

In total, 10 people were shot in the attack that took place across at least three locations in Shreveport. Police said Elkins shot a woman at one home before traveling to a second where he killed the children.

Seven were found shot inside the home and an eighth child was found dead on the roof after they apparently tried to escape the attack.

Eight children have been killed in a mass shooting in Louisiana following a ‘domestic disturbance,’ police said Sunday morning (Shreveport Police Department)

Bordelon said Elkins fled in a stolen vehicle and was fatally shot by officers during a chase in neighboring Bossier City.

“The individual responsible once leaving this scene performed a carjacking right here in close proximity to the corner of West 79th and Linwood, at which point in time, Shreveport police patrol officers got behind that vehicle in a chase incident,” Bordelon said.

Shreveport Police Chief Wayne Smith said he was “taken aback” by the horrifyingshooting.

“My heart goes out to this entire community for the tragic event that has taken place this morning,” Smith said. “I just don’t know what to say. My heart is just taken aback. I just cannot begin to imagine how such an event can occur.”

He said the crime scene was an “extensive scene unlike anything most of us have ever seen.”

Shreveport police chief Wayne Smith said ‘my heart is just taken aback’ following the horrific attack (Shreveport Police Department)

“This is a tragic situation, maybe the worst tragic situation we've ever had,” Shreveport Mayor Tom Arceneaux added. “It’s a terrible morning in Shreveport.”

State Representative Tammy Phelps said at a news conference that some of the children tried to escape through the back door.

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“I can’t even imagine what the police officers, first responders actually dealt with when they got here today,” she said.

Police said they were still gathering details about the crime scene, and the Louisiana State Police is also investigating.

The two surviving victims were both women who had been shot in the head. One of the women is believed to have been in a relationship with the suspect, according to Smith. Police said one of the women fled to a neighbor’s house after she was shot, according to theWall Street Journal.

Police tape blocks off a house in Shreveport, La., that is one of the locations tied to a mass shooting Sunday, April 19, 2026 (AP)

House Speaker Mike Johnson, who is from Shreveport, issued a statement on Sunday saying his team was in communication with local investigators.

“We’re holding the victims, their families and loved ones, and our Shreveport community close in our thoughts and prayers during this incredibly difficult time,” Johnsonwrote on X.

He said he had spoken with Arceneaux and described the shooting as a domestic issue that spiraled into violence.

“I just spoke with @ShreveportMayor Tom Arceneaux about the situation and the multiple law enforcement agencies currently engaged in the investigation to pledge any assistance we can possibly provide,” hewrote. “What apparently began as a domestic dispute this morning ended in amass shootingwith ten people shot—including eight children, ages 1 to 14, who all lost their lives.”

Members of Shreveport’s City Council visited the scene on Sunday afternoon where they held a public prayer for the victims and their families,NBC News reports.

Shreveport City Council chair Tabatha Taylor said the children killed “had their whole life ahead of them.”

“This is the result when someone snaps,” Taylor said. “So, I’m going to ask the community, along with prayer, with every mental health consultant that is out there — this family and this community needs you.”

The shooting is the deadliest mass shooting in the U.S. in more than two years,according to the Associated Press.

The city of Shreveport is in northwestern Louisiana, with a population of around 180,000.

Louisiana gunman killed seven of his own children and one other child in deadliest US mass shooting in years, police say

A gunman inLouisianakilled seven of his ownchildren, critically wounded their mother, and killed an eighth child on Sunday,policesaid. ...

 

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