Throughout history, walking has been the main way people get around. The first humans to migrate from Africa, about 60,000 years ago, walked. They walked along the coast of India to reach Australia. They walked across Asia to reach the Americas, and from Central Asia into Europe. With the advent of cars at the beginning of the 20th century, the main story is that the cars took over, and "people chose the car", but there were many groups and movements that held on to walking as their preferred means of daily transport and some who organised to promote walking, and to counterbalance the widely-held view that often favoured cars, e.g. as related by
Peter Norton. During the 18th and 19th centuries,
pedestrianism (walking) was non a popular spectator sport, just as
equestrianism (riding) still is in places. One of the most famous pedestrians of that period was Captain
Robert Barclay Allardice, known as "The Celebrated Pedestrian", of
Stonehaven in Scotland. His most impressive feat was to walk every hour for 1000 hours, which he achieved between 1 June and 12 July 1809. This captured many people's imagination, and around 10,000 people came to watch over the course of the event. During the rest of the 19th century, many people tried to repeat this feat, including
Ada Anderson who developed it further and walked a half-mile (800 m) each quarter-hour over the 1000 hours. Since the 20th century, interest in walking as a sport has dropped.
Racewalking is still an
Olympic sport, but fails to catch public attention as it did. However major walking feats are still performed, such as the
Land's End to John o' Groats walk in the United Kingdom, and the traversal of North America from coast to coast. The first person to walk around the world was
Dave Kunst who started his walk traveling east from
Waseca, Minnesota on 20 June 1970 and completed his journey on 5 October 1974, when he re-entered the town from the west. These feats are often tied to
charitable fundraising and are undertaken, among others, by celebrities such as Sir
Jimmy Savile and
Ian Botham. ==Footpaths and roads==