div>
There is, however, something that sets apart the Grand Annual Olympic Festival that began life in Liverpool in 1862. The games were wholly amateur in their nature, whilst also being
international in their outlook.
They were open to ‘gentlemen amateurs’ and when the first one was held it boasted a programme that was almost identical to that that the first Modern Olympiad used when it was hosted by Athens in 1896. The links between the two meetings are far too close to simply be dismissed as being little more than coincidence.
Pioneered by John HulleyJohn Hulley was something of a pioneer of gymnasia, giving talking about the importance of physical education in Liverpool for years. He
founded the Olympic Festival in the city as a way of showcasing his philosophy around mass participation in sport, continuing them for many years alongside his work as a director of gyms located on both Myrtle Street and Bold Street.
At the same time, a similar festival of sporting endeavour was being hosted by William Penny Brookes in Much Wenlock, Shropshire, with the two men eventually coming together to form the National Olympian Association.
The Olympic Festival in Liverpool proved to be so successful that a National Games was hosted in London in 1866, with Hulley at the heart of the matter. That came after more than 10,000 people watched the first Festival, which was encouragement enough for the city to
play host to five more.
The first one had been hosted at Mount Vernon Parade Ground, with others taking place at the Zoological Gardens, about which you can read more elsewhere on this site, whilst the fourth was hosted away from Liverpool in Llandudno in North Wales.
The post
How the Olympic Movement Started in Liverpool first appeared on
Scouse Not English.
More...
Bookmarks