Firefighter's record-breaking London Marathon run

Gina Boltonand
Tom Ingall,Yorkshire
News imageSupplied A man is dressed in firefighter uniform with a black jacket and yellow helmet, wearing a marathon medal around his neck is being presented with a framed certificated by a woman on his left dressed in a blue blazer. She has brown shoulder-length hairSupplied
Mark Peart won a Guinness World record for completing the race in full fire-fighting kit

A firefighter has smashed the world record for the running fastest London Marathon in full kit.

Mark Peart, 38, from South Yorkshire Fire and Rescue, completed the 26.2m (42km) course in three hours, two minutes and 57 seconds on Sunday.

The previous record stood at three hours and 41 minutes.

Peart, the station manager at Penistone Fire Station, said as a firefighter he was used to being hot but admitted as the temperatures soared in London "it were a tough day".

Peart was running in support of the Firefighters Memorial Trust, a charity which supports the families of firefighters who have died in the line of duty.

He said he had not done a lot of training in the full kit but he was confident that as a keen runner he was capable, though he said afterwards it was time to put the record attempts to bed.

"Yesterday I made a bit of a deal with myself that that we're it," he said.

"That we're the last one."

News imageGilly Photography A man dressed in firefighter kit including mask and breathing apparatus standing in front of Buckingham Palace with marathon runners in the backgroundGilly Photography
In 2023 Mark Peart completed the London Marathon using breathing apparatus

A firefighter for 18 years, Peart is no stranger to physical challenges and this was not the first time he has secured a place in the record books.

In April 2023 he set a world record for running the London Marathon in full uniform while using an air tank.

On that occasion is took him four hours, four minutes and five seconds to complete the course, having to stop every two miles to have his tank changed.

"It was fine up until 16 miles when it suddenly became very heavy and uncomfortable. I won't be rushing back to break it," he said at the time.

Listen to highlights from South Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North

Related internet links