The largest 5K run in San Marcos is the Sights and Sounds Jingle Bell 5K held last Saturday. A rough estimate of runners was between 800-900 runners, joggers, walkers, dogs, strollers, several Santa Clauses, a few very nice Christmas suits on the more well-dressed runners and a few slow-walkers enjoying the music and decorations on the homes along the way. This was the first year that I did not take an active role in the race.
Sights and Sounds started in 1988 and the next year, 1989, Darrell Rhodes talked San Marcos Telephone Company to have a 5K run with the event. We measured the course and organized the race for the Sights and Sounds Celebration. It was held at the courthouse and ran down San Antonio Street and then returned by running down Belvin and Hutchison Streets to finish at the corner of the courthouse on LBJ. It was the year for the first 1K run for kids also. They ran down San Antonio Street to the island triangle and back to the courthouse. If I remember, we had a good turnout of runners for that first race.
Since I was going to a spectator for this year’s race standing at the corner of my block, I thought it would be nice to wear one of the old original shirts from the race. I dug down in a storage box of old race shirts and came up with a nice looking navy blue shirt from Dec. 5-7, 1996. On a personal preference, I thought the shirt design was much better than recent designs. I had to choose between a green shirt, a blue shirt and a white shirt with Christmas trees on the front. The back of the shirt had the sponsors as Norwest Bank, Century Telephone, Miscellaneous Steel Industries, Central Texas Medical Center, Hill Country Sports Medicine, Smartworks Inc. and the San Marcos Kiwanis Club. I am not sure what the entry fee for runners to enter the race but I would guess it was between $8-10 back then. And this included a long-sleeve cotton shirt. We may have had three police officers for traffic control — one at the end of San Antonio Street crossing Hunter Road, one on the Belvin-Hutchison cross over and then at the intersection of LBJ and Hopkins as they sprinted to the finish line. We gave the officers that monitored the race a race shirt for their service. It was a much simpler and laid back time back in the early days of races in San Marcos.






