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Tag Archives: bennett

Remembering Bob Bennett

22 Saturday Mar 2025

Posted by deshon in Stories

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

bennett, co-founder, deshon, in memoriam, zolper

Covid-19. Remember?

It was five years ago this week that we became aware of the virus that would reshape our reality—much like 9-11 brought with it TSA-screening lines at airports back in the 2000s—bringing Zoom into our collective vocabularies and virtual meetings into our work and personal communication practices.

photo of Bob Bennett, Tar Heel
Bob Bennett in 2010

It was also five years ago last Sunday that CRR Bob Bennett, co-founder of the Creek Road Runners, passed away after a long, steady decline with dementia. In five to seven years, he went from longtime local age-group competitor in races to someone who, as the result of suffering of the deterioration of his mind, could neither move or speak very well at all nor remember anything.

But that’s not what this article is about. CRR Mark Deshon, CRR’s other co-founder, reflects upon his good friend and running partner of 20 years and shares these personal remembrances.

Downhills were Bob’s delight. He primarily ran on his toes, which always struck me as not advisable.

In 1980, I competed in a local race on campus with him, though we hadn’t actually met. It was a small field, and I quickly found myself among a group of seven runners at the front and was hoping to stick with it for the remainder of the approximately four-and-a-half-mile race. It was when we turned from West Main Street onto Corbit Street, heading toward north campus, that Bob separated himself from the rest of his challengers, me included. By the time I got to the bottom of that steep hill, I was a good 50 yards behind the leader and eventual winner—Bob Bennett. Humble to the core, he and I met after the race, shared plaudits, and became friends and training partners thereafter.

Bob had a quick wit.

One day, Bob and another young friend and I were on a training run from Newark into nearby Maryland and back. As we were running, with a serious tone he said to us that “running on the roads in Maryland is illegal,” trying to convince us that Maryland had a law prohibiting such. For a moment, my friend and I, who were both a good 15 years younger than Bob, were duped. Then, he just chuckled at our gullibility.

During a time when I suffered bursitis in my ischial tuberosity (the pelvic bone on which one sits), I would sit on an ice bag in the locker room after training runs to treat it. Bob would see me and, in a fake southern drawl, remark that I was “sitting on my ice” (pronouncing the word “ice” like “ass”).

The written and spoken word was part of Bob’s craft. 

Bob was a professor of English at UD and a Shakespeare scholar. Way back, well before the smartphone, he often would write notes to congratulate me on a particular accomplishment or remember me on my birthday. Often he would write lines of poetry, cleverly communicating a sentiment or encouraging me in verse.

The track was always Bob’s favorite. He had run for his beloved UNC Tar Heels [see above photo] and later trained with a group of prominent runners on the West Coast when he was a grad student at Stanford.

Back when the Delaware Field House had its 220-yard indoor track, we would occasionally head there to do interval training and get our speed kicks on the oval. One day, several of us went there to help CRR John Zolper achieve a 10-minute two-mile distance. Into his mid-40s by then, Bob managed to adequately act as John’s rabbit for the entire 16 laps. I couldn’t match that, having to stop for a breather after a five-minute mile and then join in again on the last half mile; even then, I couldn’t quite handle the pace.

In 1992, I had won a Philadelphia radio station giveaway of a subscription (an early forerunner of today’s various streaming options) to non-commercial telecasts of all track-and-field events of that year’s summer Olympics. Bob delighted in coming over to my house to watch literally hours and hours of this type of coverage, which I had recorded on VHS tapes, everything from the hammer throw to the short sprinting events. He particularly liked the excitement of the relays!

photo of Bob Bennett with Arc Corner stone
Bob Bennett in front of the Arc Corner stone in 2016

Remember Tiananmen Square? 

Bob appreciated the natural beauty of Newark’s nearby park system. During a time when a new bridge over the White Clay Creek was being planned, Bob was part of a coalition of citizens who were surveilling the area for potential environmental violations with regard to pre-construction preparations. One day when it was his turn to check out the site along Hopkins Road, he observed a bulldozer trying to move and clear earth, which had not yet been authorized by the state. In a standoff reminiscent of that Chinese citizen in front of the tank, Bob stood in front of the bulldozer, ordering the operator to cease and desist. We have him and others to thank for helping preserve much of the state parkland we now enjoy.

Bennett touched many a runner in his time and was huge part, indeed the soul, of the now 45-year history of the Creek Road Runners. May he continue to rest, or run, in peace.

CRR in the Hall of Fame

29 Friday Mar 2024

Posted by rosewc in Kudos

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Tags

bennett, compton, deshon, fischer, hall of fame, Pike Creek Valley Running Club, taggart

photo of Rudy Antonini, Mark Deshon, and Ray Christensen

CRR Mark Deshon, co-founder of the Creek Road Runners, was inducted into the Pike Creek Valley Running Club (PCVRC) Hall of Fame on March 14.

Criteria for induction are impressive personal accomplishments, support of the club, and positive impact on the Delaware running community.

During the ceremony, Deshon thanked the club and several individuals who have influenced his 53-year running career to date, including CRR Jim Fischer and the late CRR Bob Bennett.

Deshon joined this distinct pantheon of PCVRC runners that includes Fischer, CRR Bob Taggart, and CRR Deborah Compton.

Read the Hall of Fame citation and see the video of Deshon’s induction.

Memorial for CRR co-founder Bob Bennett

30 Thursday Sep 2021

Posted by deshon in News, Upcoming Events

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bennett, co-founder, Creek Road Runners, memorial

Joan Bennett asked that Creek Road Runners be made aware of the upcoming memorial service, as Creek Road Runners were such a part of the second half of the life of her late husband, CRR Bob Bennett.

A service of Celebration and Thanksgiving
for the life of CRR Robert “Bob” Bennett
will be held at 2:00 p.m. on Saturday, October 9,
at St. Thomas’s Episcopal Church,
276 South College Avenue
Newark, Delaware.

A reception will follow in the Parish Great Hall.

Bob passed away on March 16, 2020, of complications from Alzheimer’s disease. See story that was published at the time.

CRR co-founder Bob Bennett dies at 78

21 Saturday Mar 2020

Posted by deshon in News

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bennett, cottrell, Creek Road Runners, Delaware Sports Club, deshon, fischer, kaliakin, obituary, Pike Creek Valley Running Club, riordan, rose, taggart, white

photo of votive candleIt is with sadness that we announce that CRR Bob Bennett, co-founder of the Creek Road Runners, died on Monday, March 16, at his home at age 78, after a prolonged battle with Alzheimer’s Disease.

Bennett grew up in Washington, D.C., where he wrestled and ran track and cross-country for St. Alban’s, the Episcopal school associated with the National Cathedral. He received his undergraduate degree from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, during which time he ran track and cross-country, competing well among the rival ACC schools. He went west to Stanford for graduate school, where he continued his running with local clubs and some of the West Coast’s elite runners at the time.

photo of Bob Bennett running

Here’s Bob in his heyday in the 1988 Run For Bruce 5K.

Bennett met his wife-to-be, Joan, in graduate school, and they came to the University of Delaware for his faculty appointment in the English department in 1969. Bennett’s love of Shakespeare professionally and the environment as a citizen were second only to his love of running.

Early into his time here in Newark, he joined forces with other advocates to block the proposed reservoir project that would have turned much of one of the areas of what is now White Clay Creek State Park from a natural woodland into a big lake. We Creek Road Runners remain beneficiaries of this civic victory, made possible by Bob and others having fought this proposal.

photo of Bob Taggart, Bob Bennett, and YoUDee

Bob shares the podium at the 2013 Blue Hen 5K with CRR Bob Taggart and YoUDee.

In terms of running, Bob was always one of the best in his age group in the area; his main competitors were CRR Bob Taggart and the late Doug White. In the fall of 1980, he met a young runner who had recently joined the staff at the University of Delaware—Mark Deshon. Together, they conceived of and began organizing the Creek Road Runners.

CRR Mark Deshon remembers:

Bob and I had great times together, beginning when we met nearly 40 years ago after a race on campus. He won the race, and I came in third that day. He and I began training together and remained training partners for the next 20 years.

photo of Bob Bennett running

Bob loved the downhills, shown here in the 2004 Turkey Trot.

In our second race together, the 1980 Turkey Trot 10K, we each achieved a personal breakthrough. Bob and I battled most of the way, he stretching into a lead on the downhills and me catching up to him on the uphills, until the final turn for home onto Barksdale Road. Seemingly out of nowhere, Bob blasted by both Doug White and me (a youngster of 24 at the time), out-sprinting us and clocking in at 34:01 (at age 38!).

I also remember how valuable Bob was to me as I trained for my one-and-only marathon in 1991, sharing both his vast experience and energy on my behalf. I wouldn’t have been able to achieve that milestone without him and others with whom I was running at the time. He and I shared many runs and races together, both on the roads and trails.

photo of Bob and Mark

Bob and Mark Deshon pay homage to CRR Jim Fischer in 2012.

Bob was one of my dearest friends, and it was sad to see his decline over the past several years. I’m glad I got to spend some of that time with him—early on jogging in the park, later walking the trails, and most recently (when he neither could get around very well nor remember me), just visiting him.

photo of “Millennium Men” on Dec. 31, 1999

Bob (center) ran the initial Fair Hill trail event in 1999 with CRR Mark Deshon, CRR Vic Kaliakin, CRR Skip White, and CRR Charlie Riordan.

photo of Bob Bennett and other CRRs

Bob shows off our 10th anniversary trail run–event shirt among other Creek Road Runners at UD in 2012.

CRR Skip White remembers:

I remember, starting the fall semester at UD in 1987, suiting up in the (old, old) general locker room around noon and going outside to stretch, where I ran into Mark, Bob, and CRR Steve Cottrell and asked if I could join them. I was instantly welcomed into “the club” and had new friends for life.

Bob and I were a little less than five years apart, so, unluckily for me, every five years we were in the same age category. I can’t remember how many times Bob beat me, but I do remember the two times that I beat him!

CRR Bill Rose remembers:

I first met Bob and Joan Bennett at St. Thomas’s Episcopal Church around 1990. I quickly appreciated that Bob was a gentle soul who loved teaching at the University of Delaware and sharing with students his love of literature, especially Shakespeare.

I first raced against Bob at a 5K at St. Thomas’s in October 1993. I remember it because it was my fastest 5K ever, and he beat me. My last run with him was a very nice couple of miles at the end of December 2014, at the annual Fair Hill trail event.

photo of Mark Deshon and Bob Bennett

Bob is at peace and having fun on Creek Road with Mark Deshon in 2017.

Bob wrote a book, Romance and Reformation: The Erasmian Spirit of Shakespeare’s Measure for Measure, which was published by the University of Delaware Press in 2000. The “Erasmian” in the title refers to the great Dutch humanist Erasmus. Like Erasmus, Bob was a scholar and a humanist. I am glad I knew him. I will miss him.


Bennett leaves behind his wife, Joan, and adult children Miriam and Aaron, their spouses, and three grandchildren.

> University of Delaware memorial article
>
Bob Bennett’s obituary

In memoriam: CRR Tom Brill

03 Friday Aug 2018

Posted by deshon in News

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Tags

bennett, brill, deshon, in memoriam

photo of votive candleOn a sad note, one of the original Creek Road Runners, CRR Tom Brill, died on July 23 of complications from Parkinson’s Disease. Having retired from the University of Delaware in 2006 because of Parkinson’s, Brill also had to stop running, but he walked as much as he could in the ensuing years.

photo of Tom BrillBrill wrote his own obituary, a portion of which says, “He enjoyed hiking, running, canoeing and mountain climbing. He and his wife [Pat] won the Gore-Tex triathlon mixed pairs in 1985.”

CRR Mark Deshon remembers the day he first met Brill. Deshon met Creek Road Runners co-founder CRR Bob Bennett that same day during a 4.5-mile race in Newark. “This was my first road race in which I experienced running with the lead pack. Tom and Bob, 12 and 15 years my senior, respectively, were among a group of seven runners who were battling for the lead that day. Bob ended up winning, I finished third, and Tom finished right behind me in fourth.

“Tom was always such a kind and humble person,” Deshon continued. “In 2016, he came to an arranged 75th birthday lunch get together in honor of Bob, who had been one of Tom’s running partners back in the 70s.”

CRR Charlie Riordan, UD vice president for research, scholarship and innovation, called Brill “a true scholar-teacher,” and said, “He was a thoughtful and understated [chemistry department] colleague and mentor, whose scientific impact continues through the careers of the excellent students he produced.”

See University of Delaware article.

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