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Tributes to Roger Le Moine

Roger Le Moine
Roger passed away on Thursday morning (22nd April 2004). He was having treatment for cancer of the liver, and was on his second course of chemotherapy when his body had a reaction to it, and suffered a heart attack whilst having an x ray. It was his wish that he would be just be cremated and without any funeral service.
Everyone will have their own memories of Roger and how he helped each and everyone of us at sometime during our walking careers.

This is very sad news and I know all Centurions who knew Roger will remember him with great affection.  He was a great character.  I expect many will be saddened that he wished no funeral as  many would have wished to pay their last respects. Chris Flint

I will remember him for all the hours we spent strolling  around the
Chigwell 10 in my preparation for the Stock Exchange  Brighton each year without his help I would never had done 20. Tony Perkins
 

From Ulrich & Traudl Kamm
As organizers of the Centurion event in Golden/Colorado in 2000 we were very honored to have Roger with us. He walked at a pretty good pace, focussed and with a very positive attitude. After 26.4 miles he got off course by 2 yards and fell over the edge of a sidewalk. As he was hurting and very cold, we sent him in an ambulance to the hospital. At that time we had a little bit of snow on the trail (there wasn't snow on the ground that day for the last 63 years!). Luckily Roger could come back soon and helped with the race and cheered on the walkers.We will never forget Roger.

Ulli (C-861) and Traudl
Race Directors Centurion USA 2000

 

Roger will be remembered warmly and with gratitude for his dedication and his real contribution to the Centurion brotherhood worldwide and to Surrey Walking Club, and for his tough and plucky approach to competition in all conditions. He will be greatly missed.
Sandra and Richard Brown C735, 760

Ah what sad news. Poor Roger....never really got to enjoy his retirement except for a first few years. I have rung Dudley Harris in NZ to let him know. I shall advise the Aust Centurions in our next newsletter which I am about to start work on now.
Thanks for passing this on. It does explain why we could not contact Roger for some time now.
Sadly. TimTim Erickson
 

We have read the sad news about the death of C-802 Roger Le Moine and want to give our respectful condolences to his family and to the Brotherhood of Centurions.
We will remember him as a great man in sport and racewalking.  R.I.P.
  C-389 Piet Jansens

VALE ROGER LeMOINE                16-10-1940 – 22-04-2004

Roger came to Australia for our 1998 event, held at the Collingwood Harriers track. There he walked a well-judged race to gain his Australian Centurion badge with a time of 23:04:51. He was a continuous presence on the track, never stopping, taking his drinks on the fly and never losing concentration for a minute. His determination was obvious and many remarked on his gutsy performance.

At the time of our walk, (1998) he had recently been retrenched from work, had done his financial calculations and decided to retire. This was the first of a number of trips that he then made, making the most of his new found leisure time. He came to Melbourne a week before the race to acclimatise and saw a lot of Victoria during that brief time. He left on the Monday after the race and travelled to Queensland where he took in the Great Barrier Reef and the mountain railway trip to Kuranda. He spent 5 nights with Fred Baker in Brisbane and caught up with John Harris to swap stories about how they had pulled up.
Then Roger hired a car and drove slowly down to Sydney to finish off. He was very impressed with Sydney with its great waterside location but felt he preferred Melbourne (a wise decision which I can endorse - with no personal bias at all!). While in Sydney, he had a great trip to the Blue Mountains. It was certainly a trip to remember.
Roger was already a British Centurion and a Continental Centurion so his Australian badge made him second only to Chris Clegg who has 4 badges (British, Continental, Australian and American).

In March 1999, he was off to Florida for another holiday and then in July 1999, he made the trip to New Zealand to try for a fourth Centurion badge with the newly formed Centurion club in that country. Unfortunately, he was forced to retire soon after the 50 mile mark and was taken to hospital for a brief checkup. All seemed ok and he returned to the track to watch the completion of the event.

Towards the end of 1999, he sold his family home and moved to a new abode near Bournemouth. He enthusiastically threw himself into various endeavours – setting up the British Centurions website, helping walkers in their long distance endeavours, working as an official timekeeping or manning the feeding stations at various events.
Like most old walkers, Roger always felt he had one final walk left in him and he made the trip to Colorado in September 2000 to try for the American Centurion badge. In conditions of snow and sleet, he retired after only 26 miles.
Never one to rest on his laurels, Roger travelled in June 2001 to Holland and walked the 50 miles Kennedy walk with Sandra and Vicky Brown. He then returned to America in November 2001 for a second American Centurion attempt, this time completing 43 miles in the San Diego event.
It was in 2002 that Roger was first diagnosed with cancer and an initial operation seemed successful. Unfortunately, the remission was only temporary and earlier this year things took a turn for the worse. His emails had become less frequent and I detected both frustration and despondency in his brief correspondences. He had only a short time to enjoy his retirement but he had used it to the full doing what he enjoyed most – immersing himself in the Centurion world.
Roger will be remembered warmly and with gratitude for his dedication and his real contribution to the Centurion brotherhood worldwide and to Surrey Walking Club, and for his tough and plucky approach to competition in all conditions.

He will be greatly missed by all his friends in the many countries that he has visited.
Tim Erickson
Secretary, Australian Centurions
27 April 2004
 

 

 

 

 

        

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