Congratulations to HM Queen Elizabeth II on her Platinum Jubilee year.
ORIENTEERING THROUGH THE SEVEN DECADES
7 DECADES, OVER 7 DAYS!
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First started in Norway and Sweden around the beginning of the 20th century and later spread throughout Europe, culminating in the establishment of an International Orienteering Federation in 1961, with European championships held from 1962 and World Championships from 1966.
Source: British Orienteering Archive / British Orienteering Focus Magazine (Summer 2017)
1967 The British Orienteering Federation was formed on 17 June 1967 at a meeting in Barnard Castle, Co. Durham after much preparation by the English and Scottish Orienteering Associations; the English Orienteering Association was disbanded when the British Orienteering Federation came into being.
A British Orienteering Federation Executive Committee worked quickly to establish a common practice in all areas of the UK where Orienteering had started.
1967 - The first British Orienteering Championships with what came to be known as ‘classic’ courses was held the following day, in Hamsterley Forest, on an O.S. 1:25,000 photocopied map.
The course planner was Lol Clarke, South Ribble Orienteering Club and the controller (called ‘vetter’ at that time) was John Haworth, Pendle Forest Orienteers.
The 10.2 km course was won by Gordon Pirie in 1:51:50, with Chris James 3rd, Chris Brasher 5th, John Disley 8th, and Martin Hyman 9th.
Carol McNeill won the Senior Women’s course by more than 11 minutes! S Bone (later Sue Harvey) was 7th.
Southern Navigators won the Senior Men’s Team Trophy.
The event was well reported in The Guardian and The Daily Mail. It was re-enacted on the 25th Anniversary in 1992, over 2 days, the first day with the old map and courses and the second as a modern event.
On 27 October 1967 Chris Bonington, former British Orienteering President, wrote an article published in the Sunday Telegraph Magazine which brought Orienteering into the wider public eye for the first time.
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1967, British Orienteering Federation's first National Office was at 3 Glenfinlas Street Edinburgh.
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Jennie Taylor Communications Officer, says: "It's quite impossible in just a few news items to portray adequately all aspects of British Orienteering Federation's and British Orienteering Activities over the last seven decades. There are so many people across the UK who have contributed so much to British Orienteering's growth and development."
What are your personal orienteering highlights from this decade (60’s)?
Email: jtaylor@britishorienteering.org.uk
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Look out for '#2: ORIENTEERING THROUGH THE SEVEN DECADES – 1970 - 1979' will be posted tomorrow (Saturday 4 June) at 13:00.