Saturday, 6 September 2014

Bill Gillespie keeps local Terry Fox Run running

Sequel to other Terry Fox story: Retired high school educator is dedicated to volunteerism
By Mark Schadenberg
Above and beyond !
In Woodstock, the community is truly grateful for the volunteerism of Bill Gillespie as the coordinator for The Terry Fox Run.
Gillespie has a strong committee -- along with the Lions Club of Woodstock as part of a busy crew, but Bill Gillespie deserves the lion share of the credit for building up The Terry Fox Run back to as strong as it previously was. Last year, there were 335 participants in Woodstock.
Gillespie will not forget the sacrifices and efforts of Terry Fox as he witnessed the struggles of the Marathon Of Hope twice in 1980, including Terry's day in Woodstock.
"It was 40 C -- his stump was bleeding," Gillespie recalled in a 2010 Woodstock Sentinel-Review story (link below). "(Terry) still took the time to wave to everybody.”
On a family trip later that summer, Gillespie would again see Terry, this time on Highway 11 near Orillia and Fox was running in the pouring rain.
"It's a huge unifying thing that has happened to a country and its people. Terry Fox is one of the best-known names inside Canada and outside of Canada,” Gillespie previously explained to The Sentinel-Review. "I'm really convinced Canadians are attracted to the adversity he overcame and didn't let stand in his way."

Before retiring as a teacher / faculty member at Huron Park Secondary School, Gillespie would be the long-time convener for the Terry Fox events at public schools around Oxford County, but in 2010 he (along with the Lions Club) decided to assume the organization of the event from the Narancsik family and the Rotary Club, which had kept the public version of the Terry Fox Run going for about 25 years locally.
If you would ask him, Gillespie would talk about himself in modest terms, but as an athlete he is a two-time world champion in basketball for Canada (Toronto Hounds) at the World Masters Games (2002 in 60-64 age group in Melbourne, Australia; and also 1989 in 45-50 bracket). In 1994 and 2002, he was a member of silver-medal Team Canada squads in a respective age group.
Gillespie knows about competing, internal fortitude and dedication. However, even Gillespie was overwhelmed by the sheer courage displayed by Terry Fox through his Marathon Of Hope and the suffering Fox endured as cancer was invading his lungs and forcing the run to end after 143 days.
Volunteerism is now the best word to describe Gillespie.
As a HPSS faculty coach, he organized the annual Captains – Veterans season-ending benefit high school basketball games for about 20 years, raising dollars for various charities. Not only did he coach basketball at HPSS for many years, but track and field as well.
His basketball roots go way (way) back as he played at the OUA level for Waterloo Lutheran, which today is Laurier university in Waterloo, winning a provincial league title with the Golden Hawks in 1966, and later playing with the famed Woodstock Kings of the Central Ontario Intermediate league.

It's easy to see why Bill Gillespie is a Lifetime Achievement member of the Woodstock Sports Wall of Fame. Further to this, when the Rick Hansen 25-Year 'Man In Motion' tour arrived in Woodstock a few years ago, raising awareness and money for spinal cord injury research, it was Gillespie who was selected to be as the Woodstock honourable medal bearer. Gillespie was also a recipient of the Queen's Jubilee award in 2012.
With the Lions Club and through his own initiatives, and assistance from the one-and-only wife Nancy, Gillespie collects pop cans and tabs for recycling, and then converting those dollars into a charitable donation. Gillespie has a revolving system of local restaurants (Fritzie's, Montana's, Kelsey's, Boston Pizza, Ody's, etc) who donate monthly proceeds from a certain table (Community Corner) in their restaurant to Lions Club causes. Every Christmas season is a time for giving time and collected items and toys to four local (winter) charities, including The Christmas Place and Inn Out Of The Cold. 
The list goes on and on. 
Thanks Bill !

Bill Gillespie with poster from two years ago
TERRY FOX RUN
'The Marathon Of Home' continues.
With worldwide collections now exceeding $650 million, the annual community fundraiser (there are still additional school fundraisers planned into the autumn), the Terry Fox Foundation contributes about $30 million annually to finding a cancer cure research projects.
Registrations on Sunday, Sept 14 begin at 9 a.m. At the BDO building at 94 Graham Street in Woodstock, with the walk (run or bicycle) beginning at 10 a.m. with distance of one, 2.5, 5 and 10 km. Participants don't have to begin at 10 a.m. as you can complete your chosen course at 9 a.m. if you prefer or much later as registrations will be accepted up to 2 p.m.
In looking through the Terry Fox Foundation website (www.terryfox.org) and recalling an old movie about the cross-Canada endeavour, I recall that Terry's most important wish about running into Toronto was to meet Darryl Sittler and Bobby Orr. Obviously, the photo below is Terry Fox with a Sittler jersey.


Pledge Sheets
In Woodstock, you can pick up a participation (registration) forms at many locations:
Kelsey's and Montana's restaurants on Norwich Ave.
Scotiabank branch on Dundas
Royal Bank branch on Dundas
Tim Horton's west end
Good Life co-ed fitness centre
Heart FM 104.7 studio on Norwich Ave.

Mark Schadenberg, Sales Representative
Senior Real Estate Specialist (SRES designation)
Royal LePage Triland Realty
757 Dundas St, Woodstock
www.wesellwoodstock.com
(519) 537-1553, cell or text
Email: mschadenberg@rogers.com
Twitter: markroyallepage
Facebook: Mark Schadenberg, Royal LePage Triland
Discussion . . . Direction . . . Determination . . . Destination

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