John Campbell

John Campbell

LINK TO John Campbell’s Archive 17 June 1991 RUNNERS WORLD ILLUSTRATE ARTICLE

List of New Zealand Athelete winners of the Boston Marathon

The memorial was installed in 1996, therefore Lisa Hunter- Galvin’s name as the 2015 winner would not be listed. We have a few images of the Boston Marathon memorial on our Public Art Boston website. But to get images of each of the individuals you mentioned inscribed on the seal, required I go out and specific take pictures for your inquiry. The pictures are below.
John Campbell 1989 and 1990more
Lorainne Moller 1984more
Roger Robinson 1984more
Allison Roe in 1981 more
Jack Foster 1976more
Dave McKenzie in 1967more

RACE WITH EVEN SPLITS

  • I wish I could have that time over again
  • ages 40-49 2:11:04 April 1990
  • You don’t know how you are going to feel at the race. That’s the problem
  • Don’t start the race too fast. Start the race with even splits in mind
John Campbell Photo Gallery

DON’T PUSH THE DOWN HILL

  • Don’t get carried away on the down hil going too fast.
– Use – It – As – Relaxation – A Collectable Experience

NEVER GIVE UP

 
  • 1988 B.A.A Boston Marathon
– Men’s Open 6th
  • 1989 B.A.A Boston Marathon
– Men’s Master 1st
  • 1990 B.A.A Boston Marathon
– Men’s Master 1st
  • Men’s Masters Course Record
– 2:11:04 (ages 40-49) 1990 – 2012 Course Record 2:11:04 22yrs
  • Men’s Seniors (ages 60+) Clive Davies
– 2:43:20 1981
  • I CAN BEAT THAT!

Indigenous Heritage

Te Runanga o Ngai Tahu

John Campbell was born on 6 February 1949 on the Treaty of Waitangi public holiday.  In 2006 he discovered his maori heritage of Ngai Tahu.

Waihopai Runaka “Patahi” kaumatua 1215 and 1144

Captain Robert Brown came from Australia as the Captain of the whaling ship “Glory” while he was here he married a Maori Princess called Te wharerimu, from the Ngai Tahu tribe.  When she was married to Brown she was baptised and called Martha Te Wharerimu.  She was born at Ruapuke Island, which is in Stewart Island.  When they married they moved to Codfish Island and lived there, and Captain Robert Brown is in the history books as the founder of that island.  They had five children all born on Codfish Island and Captain Brown was drowned at sea about 1844, his wife Martha is buried with her son Thomas at the Riverton Cemetery.   Pictured above Patahi (Mrs Edwin Palmer)

Te Runanga o Otakou “Wharerimu Brown” kaumatua 1289 and 1071

  Captain Robert Brown’s son “Robert” was the father of George Edwin Brown, the man in the photo above.  This is where the maori line comes from.  George Edwin Brown came to Henley and he lived at the maori kaik there, where he owned and farmed land, and this was where John’s grandfather Walter Maxwell Brown was raised. Above George Edwin Brown and Helen McNaught married on 6 February

John Campbell 2013