Clare Gallagher

Clare Gallagher (born 1991 or 1992)[1][2] is an American ultrarunner and environmental advocate. She is a past winner of both the Leadville 100 and Western State 100 races. 

Clare Gallagher
Personal information
Born1991 or 1992 (age 32–33)[1][2]
Colorado, United States[3]
Alma materPrinceton University
Sport
SportUltra running

Early life

Gallagher grew up in the suburbs of Denver, Colorado, where she and her family often spent weekends in the mountains. She attended Princeton University where she studied ocean health and was influenced by ethicist Peter Singer. At one point[when?] Gallagher planned to go to medical school. She graduated from Princeton in 2014.[1][3]

Running career

Gallagher ran at Princeton but lost interest in running.[when?]  She spent a couple[quantify] of years in Thailand after college on a teaching fellowship. While in Thailand she won an 80-kilometer race in October 2014 having never run more than 10k previously. After her fellowship ended Gallagher moved to Boulder, Colorado and became active in the local trail running community.[4]

Notable race results
YearRaceFinishNotes
2014Thailand Ultramarathon1stinaugural race[5]
2016Dirty 30 50K2nd
2016US 30K Championships2nd
2016Aspen Power of Four 25K1st
2016Leadville 1001stsecond-fastest all-time (19:00:27)
2017Ultra-Trail du Mont-Blanc CCC1stcourse record
2017The North Face Endurance Challenge 50 Mile Championships2nd
2019Western States 1001stsecond-fastest all-time (17:23:25)[4][6]
2022Black Canyon 100k1st[7]
2022Leadville 1001st19:37:57[8]
2022Chuckanut 50k1st04:07:34[9]

Advocacy work

Gallagher is an advocate for issues such as climate change and the environment. She is an ambassador for Winter Wildlands Alliance and is involved with Protect Our Winters (POW). She won Western States in 2019 shortly after going on a two-week mountaineering expedition in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to advocate for the ANWR.[6][1][10] 

Gallagher won the Best of the Rockies—Advocate award from Elevation Outdoors Magazine in 2020 for her work as a Patagonia ambassador and POW athlete. The magazine noted that "she is a constant voice for climate action, social justice, and public lands."[11]

Since 2015 Gallagher is a member of Giving What We Can, a community of people who have pledged to give at least 10% of their income to effective charities.[12]

References