| Sport | Track and field |
|---|---|
| Founded | 1923 |
| Ceased | 2006 |
| Country | England/United Kingdom |
TheWAAA Championships was an annualtrack and field competition organised by theWomen's Amateur Athletic Association (WAAA) in England. It was the foremost domesticathletics event for women during its lifetime.[1]
Since 1880, theAmateur Athletic Association of England had held theAAA Championships, but it admitted men only and did not wish to include women.[2] Women's clubs and competitions were typically separate from the men's and in line with growing interest in the sport the WAAA was founded in 1922.[3] Several contests in the country were approved by the WAAA with "Championships of England" status that year, and this was subsequently replaced with an organisedWAAA Championships in 1923.[4] Aside from the 1927 championships inReading, Berkshire, the WAAA track and field event was based at various locations inLondon up to 1939.[5] The competition was interrupted byWorld War II but was re-instigated in 1945 and remained in London until a move toBirmingham in 1985.[6][4]
Aswomen's athletics developed in the 20th century, major international men's and women's events typically were held in conjunction, with women first appearing on theOlympic athletics programme in 1928 and theEuropean Athletics Championships being fully combined by its third edition in 1946.[7][8] The AAA and WAAA events remained divided for much longer and it was not until 1988 that the women's events were merged into an all-genderAAA Championships in 1988, though the WAAA remained the organiser of the women's events.[4] This change came during a period of reform that would see the sport fully professionalise and, in the UK, organisation move to national level.
The establishment ofUK Athletics in 1999 to serve as the national governing body for professional, elite athletics ultimately started the decline of the AAA Championships. UK Athletics took over the role of both national championships and international team selection with its ownBritish Athletics Championships from 2007 onwards.[9]
Thelong-distance track events,marathon,racewalking events andcombined track and field events were regularly held outside of the main track and field championship competition.[4]
The followingathletics events featured as standard on the main WAAA Championships programme:
The following events were regularly held, but often outside of the main programme:
Races were contested, and field events measured, in yards and feet up until 1968. The2000 metres steeplechase was held in 2002 and 2003 before moving to the standard 3000 m distance. The80 metres hurdles was contested until 1968 before being replaced by the new international standard100 metres hurdles. The200 metres hurdles was on the programme from 1961 to 1972, before being dropped in favour of the400 metres hurdles. A60 metres event was available from 1935 to 1950. A women'smile run was first contested in 1936, indicating a growing acceptance to women taking part in distance events. The3000 metres was introduced in 1968 and lasted until 1999. The standard5000 metres and10,000 metres events came after, being first held in 1980 as non-championship events before achieving full status.[4]
The field events expanded roughly in line with international changes. The triple jump first appeared in 1989, followed by championship events in pole vault and hammer throw in 1993, bringing women to parity with men in field events. Awomen's pentathlon (first held in 1949) was replaced with aheptathlon in 1981.[4]
Racewalking events underwent progressive change in distance, from 880 yards (1923–1927), to one mile (1928–1932), rounded down to 1600 m in 1933 to 1939, back to one mile (1945–1958), up to 1.5 miles (1960–68), then 2500 m (1969–1972), 3000 m in 1973 and 1974, before finally reaching the 5000 m distance in 1975. A 10,000 m walk was introduced in 1978.[4] A variety ofrelay races were contested by clubs prior to 1960.[6]
| # | Year | Date | Venue | Stadium | Notes/ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| — | 1922 | n/a | Various | Various | Championships status provided to several events |
| 1 | 1923 | 18 August | London | Bromley,Oxo Sports Ground | [10] |
| 2 | 1924 | 28 June | London | Woolwich Stadium,Woolwich Common | Discus added[11] |
| 3 | 1925 | 11 July | London | Stamford Bridge | |
| 4 | 1926 | 19 June | London | Stamford Bridge | |
| 5 | 1927 | 9 July | Reading | Palmer Park | |
| 6 | 1928 | 14 July | London | Stamford Bridge | Single handed javelin introduced |
| 7 | 1929 | 13 July | London | Stamford Bridge | |
| 8 | 1930 | 16 August | London | Stamford Bridge | single hand shot introduced |
| 9 | 1931 | 11 July | London | Stamford Bridge | |
| 10 | 1932 | 9 July | London | Stamford Bridge | |
| 11 | 1933 | 15 July | London | White City Stadium | |
| 12 | 1934 | 30 June | London | Herne Hill Athletics Ground | |
| 13 | 1935 | 10 August | London | White City Stadium | 60 metres sprint introduced |
| 14 | 1936 | 18 July | London | White City Stadium | 1 mile introduced |
| 15 | 1937 | 7 August | London | White City Stadium | |
| 16 | 1938 | 2 July | London | White City Stadium | |
| 17 | 1939 | 22 July | London | White City Stadium | |
| Not held 1940 to 1944 due toWorld War II | |||||
| 18 | 1945 | 18 August | London | Tooting Bec Athletics Track | |
| 19 | 1946 | 13 July | London | White City Stadium | |
| 20 | 1947 | 2 August | London | Polytechnic Stadium | |
| 21 | 1948 | 26 June | London | Polytechnic Stadium | |
| 22 | 1949 | 9 July | London | White City Stadium | Pentathlon introduced |
| 23 | 1950 | 8 July | London | White City Stadium | |
| 24 | 1951 | 7 July | London | White City Stadium | 60 metres discontinued |
| 25 | 1952 | 14 June | London | White City Stadium | |
| 26 | 1953 | 4 July | London | White City Stadium | |
| 27 | 1954 | 19 June | London | White City Stadium | |
| 28 | 1955 | 2 July | London | White City Stadium | |
| 29 | 1956 | 11 August | London | White City Stadium | |
| 30 | 1957 | 5–6 July | London | White City Stadium | Held over 2 days for the first time |
| 31 | 1958 | 7 June | London | Motspur Park | |
| 32 | 1959 | 4 July | London | Motspur Park | |
| 33 | 1960 | 1–2 July | London | White City Stadium | |
| 34 | 1961 | 8 July | London | White City Stadium | 200 metres hurdles introduced |
| 35 | 1962 | 7 July | London | White City Stadium | |
| 36 | 1963 | 6 July | London | White City Stadium | 100 metres hurdles introduced over a height of 2'6" |
| 37 | 1964 | 4 July | London | White City Stadium | |
| 38 | 1965 | 3 July | London | White City Stadium | |
| 39 | 1966 | 1–2 July | London | White City Stadium | |
| 40 | 1967 | 30 June–1 July | London | White City Stadium | Last event at White City,[12] 100m hurdle height increased to 2'9" |
| 41 | 1968 | 19–20 July | London | Crystal Palace National Sports Centre | Imperial distances replaced with metric distances, 3,000m introduced |
| 42 | 1969 | 18–19 July | London | Crystal Palace National Sports Centre | 80 metres hurdles discontinued |
| 43 | 1970 | 19–20 June | London | Crystal Palace National Sports Centre | |
| 44 | 1971 | 16–17 July | London | Crystal Palace National Sports Centre | |
| 45 | 1972 | 7–8 July | London | Crystal Palace National Sports Centre | |
| 46 | 1973 | 20–21 July | London | Crystal Palace National Sports Centre | 200 metres hurdles increased to 400 metres hurdles, 2,500 metres walk increased to 3,000 metres |
| 47 | 1974 | 19–20 July | London | Crystal Palace National Sports Centre | |
| 48 | 1975 | 18–19 July | London | Crystal Palace National Sports Centre | 3,000m walk increased to 5,000m |
| 49 | 1976 | 20–21 August | London | Crystal Palace National Sports Centre | |
| 50 | 1977 | 19–20 August | London | Crystal Palace National Sports Centre | |
| 51 | 1978 | 18–19 August | London | Crystal Palace National Sports Centre | Marathon and 10,000 metres walk introduced |
| 52 | 1979 | 27–28 July | London | Crystal Palace National Sports Centre | |
| 53 | 1980 | 15–16 August | London | Crystal Palace National Sports Centre | 5,000 metres and 10,000 metres introduced |
| 54 | 1981 | 24–25 July | London | Crystal Palace National Sports Centre | |
| 55 | 1982 | 30–31 July | London | Crystal Palace National Sports Centre | |
| 56 | 1983 | 29–30 July | London | Crystal Palace National Sports Centre | |
| 57 | 1984 | 15–16 June | London | Crystal Palace National Sports Centre | |
| 58 | 1985 | 26–27 July | Birmingham | Alexander Stadium | |
| 59 | 1986 | 6–7 June | Birmingham | Alexander Stadium | |
| 60 | 1987 | 24–25 July | Birmingham | Alexander Stadium | |
| — | 1988 | 5–7 August | Birmingham | Alexander Stadium | Olympic trials |
| — | 1989 | 11–13 August | Birmingham | Alexander Stadium | Triple jump introduced |
| — | 1990 | 3–4 August | Birmingham | Alexander Stadium | |
| — | 1991 | 26–27 July | Birmingham | Alexander Stadium | Hammer throw introduced |
| — | 1992 | 27–28 July | Birmingham | Alexander Stadium | Olympic trials |
| — | 1993 | 16–17 July | Birmingham | Alexander Stadium | Pole vault introduced |
| — | 1994 | 11–12 July | Sheffield | Don Valley Stadium | |
| — | 1995 | 15–16 July | Birmingham | Alexander Stadium | |
| — | 1996 | 14–16 July | Birmingham | Alexander Stadium | Olympic trials |
| — | 1997 | 24–25 July | Birmingham | Alexander Stadium | |
| — | 1998 | 24–26 July | Birmingham | Alexander Stadium | |
| — | 1999 | 23–25 July | Birmingham | Alexander Stadium | New javelin model introduced |
| — | 2000 | 11–13 July | Birmingham | Alexander Stadium | Olympic trials |
| — | 2001 | 13–15 July | Birmingham | Alexander Stadium | |
| — | 2002 | 12–14 July | Birmingham | Alexander Stadium | Steeplechase introduced |
| — | 2003 | 25–27 July | Birmingham | Alexander Stadium | |
| — | 2004 | 10–11 July | Manchester | Sportcity | Olympic trials |
| — | 2005 | 9–10 July | Manchester | Sportcity | |
| — | 2006 | 15–16 July | Manchester | Sportcity | |
| Event | Women | Women's titles |
|---|---|---|
| 100 metres | Joice Maduaka | 5 |
| 200 metres | Kathy Smallwood-Cook | 6 |
| 400 metres | Joslyn Hoyte-Smith Linda Keough | 3 |
| 800 metres | Kelly Holmes | 7 |
| 1500 metres | Hayley Tullett | 4 |
| 3000 metres | Yvonne Murray | 4 |
| 5000 metres | Hayley Yelling | 3 |
| 10,000 metres | Hayley Yelling | 3 |
| 3000 m steeplechase | Tina Brown | 2 |
| 100 m hurdles | Sally Gunnell | 7 |
| 200 m hurdles | Pat Nutting Pat Jones | 3 |
| 400 m hurdles | Gowry Retchakan | 5 |
| High jump | Dorothy Tyler | 8 |
| Pole vault | Janine Whitlock | 6 |
| Long jump | Ethel Raby | 6 |
| Triple jump | Michelle Griffith | 5 |
| Shot put | Judy Oakes | 17 |
| Discus throw | Suzanne Allday | 7 |
| Hammer throw | Lorraine Shaw | 6 |
| Javelin throw | Tessa Sanderson | 10 |
| Combined events | Mary Peters | 8 |
| 3000/5000 m race walk | Betty Sworowski | 4 |
| 10,000 m race walk | Irene Bateman Helen Elleker Betty Sworowski Vicky Lupton | 3 |