#LMCT40 campaign to celebrate our 40th anniversary
The London Marathon Charitable Trust (now the London Marathon Foundation) today launches its #LMCT40 campaign – a year of celebrations and initiatives to mark the 40th anniversary of the charity and four decades of inspiring activity.
The Trust (now the London Marathon Foundation) was created by London Marathon co-founders John Disley and Chris Brasher on 13 March 1981 to distribute the surplus generated by the event to fund sport and recreation projects in London. The very first London Marathon was held on Sunday 29 March 1981 and later that year the first seven grants from the charity were awarded, including £1,500 to the Ferndale Sports Centre in Brixton.
Forty years on, the charity has expanded its remit to fund projects across the UK and London Marathon Events (LME) now delivers a number of world class mass participation events in running, cycling and swimming every year in addition to the London Marathon. The surplus generated by LME, which is passed to The Trust (now the London Marathon Foundation) through corporate Gift Aid, means that a total of more than £93 million has now been awarded to over 1,470 projects across the UK, enabling people of all ages and abilities to become and remain physically active and challenging inequality of access to physical activity.
Since 1981, the charity has:
- Funded more than 55 different types of sports and activities
- Awarded funding to every one of the 32 London boroughs
- Awarded more than £11.4 million to 19 strategic partners since 2018 to Inspire Activity across the UK
- Awarded more than £7 million to projects which have helped preserve the Olympic Legacy such as the London Marathon Community
- Track and Lee Valley Velo Park, both in the Olympic Park
- Awarded £3.8 million to more than 200 play projects – play is often the first step into physical activity for many children, and the charity is one of the few organisations to fund play facilities
- Provided funding that has protected 46 playing fields (equal to 335 hectares) in perpetuity across the UK
Catherine Anderson, the incoming Executive Director of The London Marathon Charitable Trust (now the London Marathon Foundation), said: “This is a historic year in which we are celebrating the work we have done over four decades and also looking ahead to a bright future where inspiring activity for all has never been more important. Coronavirus has shown us all how vital it is to live healthy, active lives, but it has also highlighted the unacceptable inequalities that exist when it comes to access to sport and activity.
“Our vision is a society in which everyone is physically active, which is so vital for health and wellbeing, and we will be focusing on this with our #LMCT40 campaign throughout the coming year.”
As part of the #LMCT40 campaign launch, the charity announced that it will be offering any organisation that has received its funding over the past 40 years the chance to apply for one of 40 special Anniversary Places in this year’s Virgin Money London Marathon on Sunday 3 October, which is set to be the biggest marathon ever staged with 50,000 participants in the traditional mass participation event and another 50,000 in the virtual event.
As part of the application process for The Trust’s (now the London Marathon Foundation’s) Anniversary Places, organisations must demonstrate how the place in the world’s greatest marathon will be used to inspire activity.
Sir Rodney Walker, Chair of The London Marathon Charitable Trust (now London Marathon Foundation, said: “The London Marathon is an extraordinary force for good and we’re thrilled to enable 40 of our grantees to be a part of the world’s greatest marathon.
“The London Marathon Charitable Trust and London Marathon Events work towards our shared vision of inspiring activity. Our grantee organisations are fundamental in helping us in achieving this mission, through their work in using the power of sport and physical activity to create happier and healthier communities. We believe this wonderful opportunity will inspire more extraordinary work from our grantees.”
Note: Updated in March 2023 with references to the London Marathon Foundation’s new name.