Rulebreakers and Ghost Runners: The British women who asserted their right to run
The incredible untold stories of the British women who broke the rules and pioneered female running today.

Did you know that until April 1975 women in the UK were not permitted to race more than four miles and were banned from racing against men? Back in the 1960s, women started to break the rules and 'crash' men's road races, challenging discrimination and showing that they were perfectly capable of running marathons – or even further.

Sports historian Katie Holmes shares the untold stories of these female pioneers. Amidst social and cultural change, feminism and significant changes in athletics brought about by the 1970s jogging craze and the marathon boom of the early 1980s, these inspirational women broke the rules, broke records and broke barriers.

There's Violet Piercy who set the first women's world best in the marathon in 1926; Scottish athlete Dale Greig who ignored the rules to compete in the 1964 Isle of Wight marathon; 'Queen of the Roads' Leslie Watson who successfully challenged the exclusion of women from Britain's most famous ultramarathon; and Lyn Billington who campaigned for women's long-distance races to be included in the Olympics.

This is a fascinating, inspiring account of how British women asserted their right to run long distance and changed the landscape of running for good.

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Rulebreakers and Ghost Runners: The British women who asserted their right to run
The incredible untold stories of the British women who broke the rules and pioneered female running today.

Did you know that until April 1975 women in the UK were not permitted to race more than four miles and were banned from racing against men? Back in the 1960s, women started to break the rules and 'crash' men's road races, challenging discrimination and showing that they were perfectly capable of running marathons – or even further.

Sports historian Katie Holmes shares the untold stories of these female pioneers. Amidst social and cultural change, feminism and significant changes in athletics brought about by the 1970s jogging craze and the marathon boom of the early 1980s, these inspirational women broke the rules, broke records and broke barriers.

There's Violet Piercy who set the first women's world best in the marathon in 1926; Scottish athlete Dale Greig who ignored the rules to compete in the 1964 Isle of Wight marathon; 'Queen of the Roads' Leslie Watson who successfully challenged the exclusion of women from Britain's most famous ultramarathon; and Lyn Billington who campaigned for women's long-distance races to be included in the Olympics.

This is a fascinating, inspiring account of how British women asserted their right to run long distance and changed the landscape of running for good.

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Rulebreakers and Ghost Runners: The British women who asserted their right to run

Rulebreakers and Ghost Runners: The British women who asserted their right to run

by Katie Holmes
Rulebreakers and Ghost Runners: The British women who asserted their right to run

Rulebreakers and Ghost Runners: The British women who asserted their right to run

by Katie Holmes

Hardcover

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Overview

The incredible untold stories of the British women who broke the rules and pioneered female running today.

Did you know that until April 1975 women in the UK were not permitted to race more than four miles and were banned from racing against men? Back in the 1960s, women started to break the rules and 'crash' men's road races, challenging discrimination and showing that they were perfectly capable of running marathons – or even further.

Sports historian Katie Holmes shares the untold stories of these female pioneers. Amidst social and cultural change, feminism and significant changes in athletics brought about by the 1970s jogging craze and the marathon boom of the early 1980s, these inspirational women broke the rules, broke records and broke barriers.

There's Violet Piercy who set the first women's world best in the marathon in 1926; Scottish athlete Dale Greig who ignored the rules to compete in the 1964 Isle of Wight marathon; 'Queen of the Roads' Leslie Watson who successfully challenged the exclusion of women from Britain's most famous ultramarathon; and Lyn Billington who campaigned for women's long-distance races to be included in the Olympics.

This is a fascinating, inspiring account of how British women asserted their right to run long distance and changed the landscape of running for good.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781399425353
Publisher: Bloomsbury USA
Publication date: 08/25/2026
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 6.02(w) x 9.21(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Katie Holmes is an independent sports historian. She is a recognised expert in the field of women's distance running and regularly speaks at conferences and seminars. She was awarded the Sporting Inequities Prize 2022 by British Society of Sports History for outstanding work in an under-researched area. Holmes is a keen runner and is based in Nottingham. Runyoung50.co.uk / @RunYoung50

Table of Contents

Introduction

1. Women have always been athletes

2. Dale Greig and the 1960s

3. The early 1970s: Rulebreakers and ghost runners

4. 1975: A year of change

5. 1976 to 1979: The marathon pioneers

6. Leslie Watson: Queen of the Roads

7. New opportunities for women: Jogging and the marathon boom hit Britain

8. The first London Marathon: The Avon International Women's Marathon 1980

9. Lyn Billington: Campaigning for change

10. Joyce Smith: Setting the standard for the marathon

Conclusion

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