Background
Hulatt was born in Tibshelf, Derbyshire, and after leaving school he joined the army but bought himself out.
Hulatt was born in Tibshelf, Derbyshire, and after leaving school he joined the army but bought himself out.
He was from a working-class family and the only runner in the race who was not a university student. He worked as a miner at Williamthorpe Colliery and he would run five miles there and back each day. He also worked as a council rat catcher and in his spare time he ran for Alfreton Athletics Club, Chesterfield Harriers, Hallamshire Harriers, and London Polytechnic.
The historic four-minute mile event took place during a meet between British American Automobile Association and Oxford University at Iffley Road Track in Oxford and was watched by about 3,000 spectators.
Bannister"s time was 3 minutes 59.4 seconds and Hulatt recorded a time of 4 minutes and 16 seconds. Hulatt ran in the same American Automobile Association team as Bannister, Chris Chataway, and Chris Brasher, but these three were conspiring to pace Bannister to break the record.
Pacing was not allowed. Hulatt was told before the race by Bannister to run his own race, and he was not involved in the pacing.
Hulatt suffered an Achilles tendon injury in 1960, and in his later years he did some coaching, but only ran at the annual Tibshelf Horticultural Show.
He died aged 59 and was buried in the grounds of Saint John the Baptist Church, Tibshelf. On the fiftieth anniversary of his run, a one mile stretch of the Five Pits Trail was designed as the "Tom Hulatt Mile" identified by two marker stones, with inscribed plaques, in coal measures sandstone donated by the National Trust.