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Terry Fox's family to hike Mt. Terry Fox

Three of Terry Fox's siblings, two nieces and others will take on the 18 km hike to commemorate the Marathon of Hope

Hike marks 35th anniversary of the Marathon of Hope

Terry Fox set out on his Marathon of Hope in 1980, intending to run from St. John's, Newfoundland, to Victoria, B.C. (Canadian Press)

In September 1981 the family of Terry Fox were flown by helicopter to the top of a mountain near Valemount, in eastern B.C., to place a plaque and dedicate the peak to Fox, who had died from cancer just a few months prior.

Now, to mark the 35th anniversary of the Marathon of Hope, Terry Fox's family and others will be hiking up Mt. Terry Fox on Sunday, Sep. 6.

The Marathon of Hope was Terry's effort to raise money for cancer by running across Canada, despite already having lost a leg to the disease.

Terry made it 5,373 km from St. John's, Newfoundland, before he was forced to stop because the cancer had spread to his lungs.

Two men sitting on a black couch. The man on right has his hand on the man on the left's cheek.
Terry Fox and Fred Fox in 1980. Terry and I were only 14 months apart in age...as brothers we were typical, we got along some days, sometimes we fought, said Fred. (Courtesy Fred Fox)

He'll always be in our thoughts, inevery step we take," said Fred Fox, older brother to Terry.

"In no way [does]what we are doing on Sunday compareto what Terry did for 143 days, running close to a marathon every day. But Terry will be the one I'll be thinking about, and what he sacrificed to do, 35 years ago."

Fred will be hiking along with two other siblings, two of his nieces, and more than 50 other members of the public, including Valemount's hiking club.

Pivotal race in Prince George

The Labour Day weekend also marks another anniversary in Terry Fox's life the Labour Day classic run in Prince George.

In 1979 Fox competed in that race, then called the PG to Boston Marathon. He had started learning how to run with his artificial leg earlier that year, telling his family that he was training to compete in the Vancouver marathon in 1980.

He finished last inPrince George but that race gave him the confidence to start his cross-country run the following year.

"Finishing last wasn't something that Terry wasn't proud of," Fred said.

"He was proud of the fact that he crossed the finish line and finished what he started, and he realized that he could run that kind of mileage."

It was a pivotal moment, Fred added.

"He came home the next day and told our mother he'd kind of been telling a white lie, [he said] he wasn't training for the Vancouver Marathon, he wanted to run across the country to raise money for cancer research."

Now, as he and other members of the Fox family hike up Mount Terry Fox, Fred saysthey will take encouragement from Terry's life.

"Terry will be coaching me up that mountain all the way."


To hear the full interview click on the audio labelled: Mount Terry Fox hike marks 35 year anniversary of Canadian hero's cross-Canada tour