Olympic organizers unveil torch route

Olympic organizers unveil torch route

Published Mar. 19, 2012 1:00 a.m. ET

Schoolchildren, charity fundraisers, war veterans and a centenarian are among 8,000 people who will carry the Olympic flame in the torch relay for the 2012 London Games, organizers announced Monday.

London Games officials unveiled a street-by-street map of the 8,000-mile route, which begins at Land's End - the westernmost tip of England - on May 19.

Some 8,000 torchbearers will carry the flame across Britain, with a stop in Dublin, Ireland.

The International Olympic Committee ruled relays should be confined to host countries after human rights protests disrupted the international route before the 2008 Beijing Games.

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Most of the torchbearers are members of the public chosen for embodying community spirit, courage and sporting determination.

The volunteers, who each will cover about 300 yards (meters) include Britain's oldest full-time firefighter and a soldier who lost three of his limbs in an explosion in Afghanistan.

The youngest is 12, the oldest, Londoner Diana Gould, who turns 100 on May 23.

''As long as the walk is on the flat I think I'll be OK,'' she told the BBC.

One of the first torchbearers will be Dave Jackson, a volunteer coast guard officer from Cornwall, southwest England.

''I think it'll be a case of 'don't drop it'! That'll be going through my mind quite a bit,'' he said. '''Don't start any fires.'''

While most torchbearers will walk or run, the flame will also be carried on skates, whizzed on a zip wire off the Tyne Bridge in Northeast England and rowed along the River Thames during its 70-day trip.

Olympic organizers said Monday that the relay will pass within 10 miles (16 kilometers) of 95 percent of Britain's population.

Details of the final two days of the journey - and the names of those who will carry the flame into the Olympic Stadium ahead of the July 27-Aug. 12 games - are being kept under wraps.

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