King of the Mountain (race) explained

King of the Mountain
Status:Permanently cancelled
Genre:Foot race up Mount Cooroora
Date:Third week in July
Frequency:Annually
Venue:Stan Topper Park
Location:Pomona
Coordinates:-26.3663°N 152.8543°W
Country:Australia
Years Active:1958–1960, 1979–2023
Founder Name:Bruce Samuels
Barry Webb
Prev:23 July 2023

The King of the Mountain is an annual mountain climb race held in Pomona, in the Australian state of Queensland and organised by the Cooroy-Pomona Lions Club. Since its first formal race in 1959 following a bet in the Railway Hotel in 1958, the race has become a local holiday involving the district schools and a carnival like atmosphere.[1]

Course

The original course was from the Railway Hotel (now demolished) to the top of Mount Cooroora and back. The 1979–2021 course went from the ANZ Bank to the top and back. The 2022–Present course is 1km longer but still starts from the old ANZ Bank building.[1] [2]

History

In 1958, Bruce Samuels, a local footballer and railway porter in the town ran to the top of Mount Cooroora as a hangover cure.[2] After being called out, a timed run was held on 22 March 1958 with Samuels completing the run in 40 minutes. In 1959, Brisbane local Barry Webb took up the challenge and completed it in 35:00. On 27 June 1959, the first formal race was held with Frank Mainwaring taking the title with a time of 31:51.[1]

On 1 March 2024, the Pomona Lions Club announced in a public statement that the race was permanently cancelled following a raft of strict conditions put in place by the Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service (QPWS).[3] In a public statement by the Department of Environment, Science and Innovation issued on 2 March, they said "In recent years the entry numbers have been limited to 80 competitors at QPWS’s request, the only amendment requested this year has been that the start is staggered over two stages of 40 competitors each."[4] The resulting public comment has called for the event to be held as per usual in July with the new condition inplace.[3]

Inter-school challenge

As part of the festival, the inter-school relay is held on the morning of the race on the road surrounding Stan Topper Park. Some schools also partake in the inter-school tug-o-war competition.[5]

The following schools participate:

Main race winners

Bruce Samuels completed a timed run in 1958 to prove it was possible with a time of 35:00. Barry Webb was the first to take up the challenge in 1959 with a time of 40:00, shortly after that on 27 June 1959, Frank Mainwaring took the title in the first formal race involving 5 competitors.[1]

Year Male Female
Name Time Name Time
1958Bruce Samuels 40:00 rowspan=4 colspan=2
1959Barry Webb 35:00
1959Frank Mainwaring 31:51
1960Ken Fullerton 29:44
1979George Fewtrell 26:14 Anne Daly
198026:25 colspan=2
198126:03 Bernadette Evans 45:25
198226:13 Anne Daly 33:11
198324:51 Bernadette Evans 38:43
198425:42 Anne Daly 31:32
1985Graham Barralet 23:27 Rosalie Hyland 31:37
1986Barry Posser 23:48 Maureen Lawson 30:48
1987Graham Barralet 22:50 Suzy Walsham 30:04
1988Barry Posser 22:53 Sue Malaxos 27:48
1989Graham Barralet 22:55 Maureen Lawson 29:53
199023:20 Lynette Gordon 32:07
199123:13 31:13
1992Barry Posser 24:32 31:34
199325:14 Kim Beckinsale 30:53
199424:04 Meagan Burton 28:55
1995Matthew Kaluder 24:45 29:09
1996Aaron Strong 28:18 34:37
199723:27 29:30
1998Matthew Kaluder 24:45 Corallea Edwards 31:14
1999Barry Posser 24:46 Terri Kolb 33:40
2000Anthony Smith 24:36 Corallea Edwards 31:43
2001Aaron Strong 25:02 Meagan Edhouse 30:34
2002Michael Wakelin 24:13 Corallea Edwards 31:04
2003Chris Morrissey 24:25 Kim Beckinsale 31:01
2004Michael Wakelin 24:13 31:10
2005Chris Morrissey 24:39 Hubertien Wichers 31:04
2006Neil Labinsky 24:25 30:45
200723:54 31:36
200822:56 30:37
200922:43 Maree Stephensen 29:05
201023:38 28:17
201124:16 Hubertien Wichers 32:38
201224:20 Demelsa Murrihy 32:56
2013Ben Duffus 24:22 Helen Roundtree 28:55
201423:47 Kim Beckinsale 31:11
2015Hayden Wilde 25:42 Leslie Saunders 33:14
2016Mark Bourne 23:53 31:19
201724:36 Ruby Muir 27:49
2018Ben Duffus 23:30 Meg Reeves 30:47
2019Boaz Clark 26:30 Reesha Lewis 29:49
2020colspan=4
2021Jorge Hernaez Navarro 27:11 Leslie Saunders 33:04
2022Mark Bourne 31:24 Lee Cleary 40:39
2023Jorge Hernaez Navarro 31:15 Ange Harries 40:22

Popular culture

Australian band, Midnight Oil, created a theme song for the event when in 1990 they released a single about the race by the same name, King of the Mountain. Although many people think the song is a reference to Peter Brock and the Bathurst 1000 held at Mount Panorama, drummer Rob Hirst confirmed the song is actually inspired by the footrace up Mount Cooroora and the surrounding natural beauty and unique history of the Noosa hinterland.[8] [9]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Mountain Race History . kingofthemountain.com.au.
  2. Web site: King of the Mountain reset. Noosatoday.com.au. 20 July 2022 .
  3. News: Pomona’s King of the Mountain, on Mt Cooroora, ends after 44 years . 3 March 2024 . Courier Mail.
  4. News: The axing of a famed mountain race that has been operating on the Sunshine Coast for more than 40 years is being blamed on the State Government. . 3 March 2024 . ABC Sunshine Coast.
  5. Web site: PRIMARY SCHOOL RELAY NEWSLETTER 2019. kingofthemountain.com.au.
  6. Web site: Kids relay for mountain festival. Couriermail.com.au.
  7. Web site: Pomona King of the Mountain. www.saac.qld.edu.au/.
  8. Web site: kingofthemountain.com.au . kingofthemountain.com.au.
  9. Web site: Western Advocate . www.westernadvocate.com.au. 12 February 2018 .