Episode 182: Winning the first Grandma’s Marathon with Wendy Cregg
Release Date: 06/12/2019
Pressroom Podcast
Duluth News Tribune readers will now be able to hear the top stories of the day in a quick, easy-to-follow podcast. The "Duluth News Tribune Minute" will feature the most important news from around the Northland, including weather and sports, every weekday morning. Brought to you by the reporters at the Duluth News Tribune, Superior Telegram and Cloquet Pine Journal, the podcast will provide listeners the local news they need to start their day. The first episode will be available Monday, Feb. 1. Subscribe and listen at , Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts and Spotify.
info_outline Listen to this: New podcast by the Duluth News TribunePressroom Podcast
Hey Pressroom Podcast listeners. No, we aren't back with new episodes. Sorry. But we do want to let you know about a new podcast produced by the Duluth News Tribune that you might be interested in. One hundred years ago, on June 15, 1920, three black circus workers, Elias Clayton, Elmer Jackson and Isaac McGhie, were wrongfully accused of sexual assault and murdered by a mob. In this six-part series, the News Tribune will look back at one of Duluth, Minnesota’s dark moments in history, a time when an estimated 10,000 people participated in or were witness to a hate crime — then didn’t...
info_outline Non-episode: Be back soonPressroom Podcast
The bad news: We're going on hiatus. The good news: We will be back later this year with even more things Duluth. In the meantime, if you have suggestions for guests, topics or just want to say hello, you can reach us at . Thanks for listening and we will be back soon.
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info_outline Episode 182: Winning the first Grandma’s Marathon with Wendy CreggPressroom Podcast
In the summer of 1977, an 18-year-old girl from the Iron Range who just wanted to see if she could run a marathon became the first woman to cross the finish line of a now iconic race. On this week’s episode, Wendy (Hovland) Cregg, the first Grandma’s Marathon female champion, shares what it was like to run the inaugural race and what competitive sports were like for women in the 70s when Title IX was enacted by Congress.
info_outlineIn the summer of 1977, an 18-year-old girl from the Iron Range who just wanted to see if she could run a marathon became the first woman to cross the finish line of a now iconic race.
On this week’s episode, Wendy (Hovland) Cregg, the first Grandma’s Marathon female champion, shares what it was like to run the inaugural race and what competitive sports were like for women in the 70s when Title IX was enacted by Congress.