Ruth Kennedy (married name Ruth Patten; born 1957), is a female former athlete who competed for England.
Early life
She lived at Flawforth Avenue in Ruddington, the daughter of Betty and Derek Kennedy.[1] She attended Brincliffe Grammar School.
Her coach was Colin Rains. She was the first Nottinghamshire female track athlete to represent England, in 1973.[2] In August 1973, the team came second in the 1973 European Athletics Junior Championships in Germany.
When aged 17 and at the school, she was part of the gold medal team at the 1974 Commonwealth Games, running the second leg, handing the baton to Jannette Roscoe on Saturday 2 February 1974, in a games record. She received the medal from Prince Philip. On the same day at the event Tanzanian army technician Filbert Bayi broke the 1500m world record by 0.9 seconds, and that Commonwealth record would last until 2022.[3]
On Sunday 8 September 1974 in European competition in Italy, the team came 6th. In the middle of her A-levels she was rushed to Nottingham General Hospital for an operation on her appendix. She took French and Latin A levels in hospital. She had been planning to attend the Midlands Championship at Warley, against East Germany.[4]
Ruth trained from 1 and half hours each night at the Harvey Hadden Stadium, with her friend Janette Roscoe. Janette and Colin Rains taught PE at Clifton College.(Trent Polytechnic), where Ruth wanted to study PE and French. She wanted to move up to 800m, as there were few British women at that distance.[5] She flew out to Athens on 19 August 1975,[6] where she picked up a bronze in the 1975 European Athletics Junior Championships.[7] But in 1976 she had an illness and never made the Olympic team. She represented Trent Polytechnic at the British Students Cross Country Championships. When at Trent Polytechnic, she competed at the World Student Games in Bulgaria, and came fifth.[8]
She played hockey for Trent Polytechnic.[9] She took part in the British Polytechnics Championships.[10]
When at Trent Polytechnic, she won gold at the 1978 Commonwealth Games. In Canada, she shared a room with Donna Hartley. Whilst that was good for team spirit, Donna Hartley was married, and her husband Bill was an athlete at the Games. Donna, aged 23, was not allowed to share a room with her own husband. Carnal relations were not apparently allowed. Alan Wells, in the Scottish team, and his wife Margot Wells, were also not allowed to share a room together. But it was strict Commonwealth policy to keep male and female sleeping arrangements separate, after some Scottish male athletes had been found in the women's area. Marea Hartman was the British women team manager.
At the Nottingham Goose Fair on 5 October 1978, she had a serious accident, with her boyfriend. At hospital, she had to have two finger nails removed.[11] The operator, from Rochdale, was fined £800 at Nottingham magistrates in May 1979.[12]
Athletics career
She represented England and won a gold medal in the women's 4 × 400 metres relay with Jannette Roscoe, Sue Pettett and Verona Bernard, at the 1974 British Commonwealth Games in Christchurch, New Zealand.[13][14] Four years later she represented England and won a gold medal again in the women's 4 × 100 metres relay, at the 1978 Commonwealth Games in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.[15] The other team members were Joslyn Hoyte-Smith, Verona Elder and Donna Hartley.[16]
Personal life
She married David Patten, aged 23, of Cardiff, on 18 August 1979 at Ruddington. He had attended Trent Polytechnic.
References
- ^ Nottingham Evening Post Tuesday 5 February 1974, page 1
- ^ Nottingham Evening Post Friday 16 February 1973, page 32
- ^ Nottingham Evening Post Saturday 2 February 1974, page 14
- ^ Nottingham Evening Post Monday 9 June 1975, page 16
- ^ Nottingham Evening Post Monday 14 July 1975, page 15
- ^ Nottingham Evening Post Monday 18 August 1975, page 19
- ^ Nottingham Evening Post Tuesday 26 August 1975, page 18
- ^ Nottingham Evening Post Wednesday 24 August 1977, page 21
- ^ Nottingham Evening Post Saturday 8 October 1977, page 15
- ^ Nottingham Evening Post Friday 5 May 1978, page 37
- ^ Nottingham Evening Post Friday 6 October 1978, page 1
- ^ Nottingham Evening Post Tuesday 22 May 1979, page 1
- ^ "1974 Games". Team England.
- ^ "Athletes, 1974 England team". Team England.
- ^ "1978 Athletes". Team England.
- ^ "Athletes and results". Commonwealth Games Federation.
You must be logged in to post a comment.