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ARTICLE |

WALKING

JAMA. 1909;LII(3):217-218. doi:10.1001/jama.1909.02540290043008.
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ABSTRACT

An item in our London letter this week again calls attention to a form of exercise as healthful as, in this country, it is uncommon. Surgeon-Major Hinton, who enjoys the distinction of being the oldest member of the Royal College of Surgeons, in his ninety-fifth year is reported as "walking for pleasure five miles or more a day." How many Americans—physicians or laymen— of even one-third the age of this veteran surgeon walk half that distance daily? In the country the buggy, in the city the ubiquitous street car, and in both the ever-increasing number of automobiles, all operate to make us a nation of riders rather than of walkers. While within the past year walking has been taken up as a passing fad, pedestrianism as a recreation is practically unknown in this country. So much is this so that a man seen walking along a country road is mentally

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