The 33rd Annual Brian's Run will take place on Sunday, December 5th, 2010,
at West Chester Henderson, in West Chester, Pennsylvania. Brian's Run is
the longest consecutively run race in the Philadelphia area.
Brians
Run began in 1978 as a one-time fund raising event to benefit
Brian Bratcher, a West Chester Henderson High School football
player who sustained a life-challenging spinal cord injury at
the age of 15 during a scrimmage. Brian was paralyzed that year,
and his friends, their parents and the community as a whole wanted
to help. They organized a race and hoped to raise $500. That first
year, 2,000 runners participated and the effort raised $20,000
to help Brian with his expenses. After 1979, Brian felt he had
benefited enough from the proceeds and asked to have others benefit
from the annual event. The race for years has raised funds for
disabled people from the community who need help with physical
mobility, seeing and communication.
West Chester
University has hosted the event in recent years and the campus,
as a whole, contributes thousands of hours to the effort. Hundreds
of students work on race day, as student organizations designate
Brians Run as one of their service efforts. Hundreds of
University employees volunteer as well, printing registration
forms, distributing race applications, handling traffic, acquiring
financial support, and lodging for the elite runners who come
from all over the country, and the myriad of details that go into
organizing race day. Over the years, the race has been supported
by many local organizations, including Rotary Clubs, Lions Clubs,
West Chester Running Club and the West Chester Area School District.
Brians
Run has raised more than $600,000 over the years, but for the
first time in 1995 a new segment of the community benefited. When
West Chester University offered to formally give Brians
Run a home and assist with the year-round planning, the Brians
Run Executive Committee decided to help students needing assistance.
Portions of the money raised by the charity race are targeted
to assist West Chester University physically challenged students
needing assistance and physical equipment to complete their studies
and maintain a good quality of life and disabled persons from
the community continue to be eligible for funds as well.
Each year,
the race has attracted thousands of runners - ranging from locals
to nationals and international participants -- and recently received
national recognition by Runner's World magazine as one of the
"100 Great Races." In recent years, the race-day activities
have drawn about 3,000 participants and many spectators who spend
the day volunteering and cheering on the runners.
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