Roy Allenâs finish at the Ottawa 5K was not a normal race-weekend story. It was not about pace, medals or beating the clock. It was about a 100-year-old man moving through the streets of Ottawa with a walker, his family beside him and a crowd that seemed to understand they were watching something rare.
Allen completed the five-kilometre event at Tamarack Ottawa Race Weekend on Saturday, May 23, becoming the oldest person to walk the Ottawa Race Weekend 5K. His official finish time was 1 hour, 47 minutes and 19 seconds, according to tracking followed by his family during the event.
For a race that attracts thousands of runners and walkers, Allenâs achievement stood out because of what it represented. At 100, he was not only participating in one of Canadaâs best-known running weekends. He was showing that movement, purpose and community support can still shape life at an age when many people are expected to slow down completely.
Allen began the race shortly after 4 p.m. as part of âTeam 100,â a family group that walked with him through the course. His daughter Sara Bercier, her husband Marc Bercier, granddaughter Elizabeth Anglin, grandsons Alain, Justin and Matthieu Bercier, Kevin Dutrevil and Kevinâs wife Tonisha Dutrevil were among those who stayed close as he made his way through the route.
The response from spectators grew as Allen moved through busy parts of the course, including Metcalfe and Wellington streets. People who had come out to watch the race began cheering him on, many smiling as he passed. Some spectators became emotional, while others shouted encouragement from the sidewalk.
One of the reasons Allenâs walk connected so strongly with the crowd was the personal purpose behind it. His 5K effort supported four Ottawa organizations linked to aging, health and community care: the Council on Aging of Ottawa, Perley Health Foundation, Gloucester 50+ Centre and the Dementia Society.
The cause was especially close to Allenâs family. His wife, Melba Allen, is 94 and stays at Perley Health. That made the walk more than a public milestone. It was also a way for the family to give back to groups that support seniors and caregivers in real life.
The official Run Ottawa profile on Roy Allen described his participation as both a personal milestone and a fundraiser for local seniorsâ organizations. A separate Team 100 fundraising page also highlighted the campaign connected to his race-weekend walk.
Allen had prepared for the 5K by walking in shopping malls, a steady and practical training routine that helped him build strength before the event. His family said the uphill sections of the Ottawa course were more demanding than expected, but Allen continued forward with support around him.
His daughter Sara became emotional during the race as strangers kept cheering for her father. She described him as a kind and genuine man, saying that what people saw on the course was exactly who he is.
Family members also credited Allenâs long life and good health to simple habits. They said he never smoked, never drank alcohol and kept a cheerful outlook. On race day, that positive energy became one of the most memorable parts of the event.
Allenâs story also adds a broader message to Ottawa Race Weekend. In a public event often focused on performance, his walk shifted attention toward active aging, family care and the importance of staying connected to community. It showed that participation can be just as powerful as competition.
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After finishing the 5K, Allen did not treat the moment as a final chapter. He said he hopes to return and walk the event again next year.
That may be why his race-weekend moment stayed with so many people. Roy Allen did not just make history in Ottawa. He gave the city a living example of resilience, gratitude and the power of showing up, one step at a time.













