H
trending
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

‘I’ll keep doing it as long as I can’: Harry Newton, London Marathon’s oldest runner at 88

about 5 hours ago
A picture


Retired grocer from Macclesfield is proof that running is not just a young person’s game after only starting his journey at the age of 57At a time when running has never been more popular with generation Z, one man is proving that it is not just a young person’s game.The oldest athlete in this Sunday’s London Marathon is 88-year-old Harry Newton – whose remarkable running journey only started by chance when he was 57.Since then Newton, a retired grocer from Macclesfield, has completed 31 marathons, including 21 at London and another by jogging 461 times around his garden during lockdown.And he has a simple message for nervous first timers this weekend.“Don’t try to run too quickly, and keep a steady pace,” he says.

“And make sure your bowels are empty.”As Newton speaks his wife, Phyllis, who is a sprightly 85, laughs in amusement.What does she make of his unlikely journey? “She always tells me I’m daft, and she wishes I wasn’t doing it, but she’s been a terrific supporter,” he says.“She will be there this year, along with around 20 members of my family.And this year I will be in the VIP area – I get to choose when I start and there are private toilets as well!”Newton’s late-blooming started by chance when he attended a meeting of the Northern Council of Grocers in the Lake District.

“There was a chap from Mars confectionery who spoke to us about the London Marathon,” he says.“He said if anybody would like to raise some funds for the Grocers’ charity, I might be able to get you an entry form.”A few days later a form arrived in the post and, after getting the nod, Newton laced up a pair of running shoes for the first time in the autumn of 1994.“When you’re on the farm, you tend to live the life of a farmer,” he says.“And similarly as a grocer, you also work long hours.

So I wasn’t a runner at all before that.”Training, it is fair to say, didn’t go quite to plan.The longest run Newton did before his first marathon was just nine miles because he had knee issues.And when he got an X-ray a week beforehand, his doctor delivered a blunt message.“He said to me ‘although it’s not unusual for a man of your age, there is some wear and tear in that knee, and I do not see it standing up to any marathon’,” he says.

“But I had a couple of thousands of pounds sponsorship riding on it, so I thought I would give it a go,“That first one was slow, but I got round in five hours and 10 minutes by running and walking,” he adds,“Although I hurt all over for about a month afterwards,”By then the marathon bug had hit and it never let go – including running one in his back garden,“That was when we weren’t allowed to go out much,” he says.

“So I thought the answer was to run around the garden.I strode it out to about 110 yards.And I just kept going round in circles until my watch told me I’d done enough.I think it was 461 times.”Newton’s personal best at London is three hours, 52 minutes and 30 seconds – set when he was 70 years old.

He will be slower this year, but last September ran Morecambe in five hours and 56 minutes, well inside the six hours and 10 minutes limit to get a Good For Age place for over 85s.Like any runner he is determined to give it his very best on Sunday and will take to the start line wearing a pair of Saucony super shoes, which normally retail for £280.“There was a sale in a local shop in Wilmslow a month or two ago.So I grabbed a pair.”The world championship bronze medallist Julia Paternain, who is also racing in the same shoes on Sunday, says she is amazed by Newton’s achievements.

“The fact that he’s running a marathon at 88 is just so inspiring,” she says.“And it’s really cool that I’ll be in the same company as him.”And whatever happens, Newton isn’t finished yet.“A few years ago, I probably wouldn’t have thought to still be running at 88, but I’ll keep doing it as long as I feel as if I can,” he says.“I will be slower every year, won’t it? But that’s age.

And you can’t do a lot about that.”Before he goes, he has a final nugget for those of a certain age who are inspired to follow in his footsteps: see a physio and get strengthening exercises to stay injury-free – and don’t be afraid to give it a go.“I’ve found that very helpful,” he says.“And for the last five or six years, touch wood, I have been pretty clear.Sometimes you do go out and you think, ‘Oh, this knee’s pinging a bit this morning’, but you run a mile or so and you forget all about it, don’t you?”
cultureSee all
A picture

The Hours won awards for Nicole Kidman’s fake nose – and hearts as a queer classic

Michael Cunningham’s Pulitzer prize-winning book The Hours – inspired by Virginia Woolf’s seminal 1925 novel, Mrs Dalloway – imagines one day in the lives of three women separated across time periods. The triptych follows Woolf in the throes of writing Mrs Dalloway; Laura Brown, a depressed housewife who is reading Woolf’s novel in postwar America; and Clarissa Vaughan, a New Yorker who acts as a contemporary embodiment of Woolf’s titular character.Cunningham’s 1998 text, though widely acclaimed, was initially deemed unadaptable due to its nonlinear structure and stream-of-consciousness approach that paid homage to Woolf’s pioneering style. However, since its publication, The Hours (which takes its name from Mrs Dalloway’s working title), has been reinterpreted as an opera and, most notably, a 2002 film directed by Stephen Daldry.As the title suggests, the film explores the ways in which the routine of a single day can be at once beautiful in its ordinariness or seismic in its oppressive mundanity

3 days ago
A picture

Vanessa’s a pillar of the hiking community | Brief letters

Your report (Campaigners seek listed status for historic trig points that mapped Britain, 16 April) didn’t mention the Vanessa trig point – Vanessa being a corruption of the Venesta company, which made cardboard tubes into which the concrete for the pillars was poured. These were designed for less accessible places, mostly in the Scottish Highlands and Islands. I was never less than half exhausted when I met one.Margaret SquiresSt Andrews, FifeThe Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link

4 days ago
A picture

Zoologist, author and presenter Desmond Morris dies aged 98

The zoologist Desmond Morris, perhaps best known for his book The Naked Ape and his work on the ITV programme Zoo Time, has died aged 98.Morris’s son Jason paid tribute to him after his death on Sunday, praising his many professional achievements as well as his role as a father and grandfather.“His was a lifetime of exploration, curiosity and creativity,” Jason said. “A zoologist, manwatcher, author and artist, he was still writing and painting right up until his death. He was a great man and an even better father and grandfather

4 days ago
A picture

V&A East Storehouse and Norwich Castle among finalists for museum of the year

The V&A East Storehouse, the National Gallery and an accessible castle in Norwich are among the contenders for this year’s Art Fund museum of the year award, the most prestigious UK prize in the sector.The annual prize offers the winner £120,000, with £20,000 going to each of the other finalists, who the Art Fund’s director, Jenny Waldman, said had all “innovated in different ways”.This year’s list is dominated by some of the biggest names in the cultural sector that have undergone big refurbishments or invested in significant new outposts, such as the V&A’s East Storehouse, which will be seen by many as a frontrunner.Based in the Olympic Park in Stratford, east London, the space aims to reimagine what a storeroom can be, with partitions removed so visitors can see “and breathe the same air” as the objects. Waldman said the V&A Storehouse, which opened in spring 2025 at a cost of £65m, had broken the boundaries of what a store could be

4 days ago
A picture

Letter: Sir Neil Cossons obituary

In 1971, Neil Cossons and I were on the staff of Liverpool Museum, and he invited me to accompany him on a visit to Ironbridge Gorge in Shropshire. We admired Blists Hill furnace, the bridge, the surrounding buildings and their setting, and shortly afterwards he became its director.The appeal it had as a monument to the industrial revolution lay in it being a complete entity. Many other site-based museums rely on translocating buildings, often into a replicated local landscape. History occurs in places, and Neil knew that raising one’s gaze from the built artefacts to the landscape enables understanding: preserving the place was crucial

5 days ago
A picture

‘Women want to experience pleasure’: how the female gaze caught the attention of film, TV and fiction

From passionate romantasy novels to premium television dramas, culture is bringing the agency, desires and interior lives of women to the fore. It’s proving good for business, but is this a permanent revolution?Do you voraciously read the pages of steamy romantasy bestsellers by Sarah J Maas or Rebecca Yarros? Or flood your group chat with breathless recaps of the latest goings-on in TV series such as Heated Rivalry or Bridgerton? Or even immerse yourself in the divisive and challenging cinematic worlds of Emerald Fennell? If so, you surely can’t have failed to notice that in pop culture, the female gaze – storytelling that highlights the meandering, textured, sublimely messy inner worlds and wants of women – is enjoying an explosion.On TV, you can see it everywhere, in the interior lives and desires taken up by Big Little Lies, Sirens or Reese Witherspoon and Kerry Washington’s Little Fires Everywhere. Romantasy harbours it in the shape of powerful maidens and sex in fae (fairy) realms, while Fennell’s Wuthering Heights and Promising Young Woman are marketed with the promise of converting women’s experiences into dark beauty on the big screen.A shift, a moment or a commercial juggernaut? That depends how deeply you look

5 days ago
businessSee all
A picture

BP’s chair deserved a kick for his silly obstinacy over shareholder resolution

about 16 hours ago
A picture

Lockheed Martin CEO sees Trump’s Pentagon as ‘golden opportunity’ for growth

about 17 hours ago
A picture

Iran war hurting UK economy as consumer confidence falls; BP’s new chair suffers investor revolt – as it happened

about 18 hours ago
A picture

Simon Edye obituary

about 18 hours ago
A picture

UK braces for price rises driven by Iran war as economic confidence plummets

about 18 hours ago
A picture

American Airlines says soaring price of jet fuel will cost it $4bn this year

about 18 hours ago