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Hannes Kolehmainen in the United States, 1912– 1921 By: Adam Berg, Mark Dyreson Berg, A
The Flying Finn's American Sojourn: Hannes Kolehmainen in the United States, 1912– 1921 By: Adam Berg, Mark Dyreson Berg, A. & Dyreson, M. (2012). The Flying Finn’s American Sojourn: Hannes Kolehmainen in the United States, 1912-1921. International Journal of the History of Sport, 29(7), 1035-1059. doi: 10.1080/09523367.2012.679025 This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in International Journal of the History of Sport on 15 May 2012, available online: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/09523367.2012.679025 Made available courtesy of Taylor & Francis: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09523367.2012.679025 ***© Taylor & Francis. Reprinted with permission. No further reproduction is authorized without written permission from Taylor & Francis. This version of the document is not the version of record. Figures and/or pictures may be missing from this format of the document. *** Abstract: Shortly after he won three gold medals and one silver medal in distance running events at the 1912 Stockholm Olympics, Finland's Hannes Kolehmainen immigrated to the United States. He spent nearly a decade living in Brooklyn, plying his trade as a mason and dominating the amateur endurance running circuit in his adopted homeland. He became a naturalised US citizen in 1921 but returned to Finland shortly thereafter. During his American sojourn, the US press depicted him simultaneously as an exotic foreign athlete and as an immigrant shaped by his new environment into a symbol of successful assimilation. Kolehmainen's career raised questions about sport and national identity – both Finnish and American – about the complexities of immigration during the floodtide of European migration to the US, and about native and adopted cultures in shaping the habits of success. -
Harry's Cigar Highlights of Haberdashery
games. Edcouch and Edinburgh were lead the moundsmen with seven won Goslin of Washington and Rice and MIDLAND BUNCHES HITS the winners. Harlingen and Lyford and no defeats. The almost passed Sweeney of Detroit, the first two Records to Go also played a fairly close game, 5*2, spitball has carried Stanley Coveles- have stolen 11 while the last three MIDLAND. July 7.—07*V—The Mid- Olympic Expected with off the lau- kie of New York through five games have 10 each. FORT LOCALS HEAD Lyford carrying land Colts bunched hit* are inti WORTH of and for second rank- rels. This defeat Harlingen successfully place two Biff Sarins hurleit here to-lav Fine Work Turned In the game forfeited to Brownsville ing. Next comes Crowder of St. PALS SHUT OUT Judged By by the Bio Hondo club, dislodged Louis with eight won and one lost, PALESTINE. Tex.. July 7.—W*>— to win 11 to 9. Cheeves *oi ftr* the best of the Yankee Harlingen from the pinnacle and then follows Hopkins shut out the Pals here tqr hits out of fire times up, t»© of AFTER seated Brownsville on the top when hurling staff, Hoyt, Pipgras and day, 3 to 0, allowing then only four1 BREAKS LOOP them beinff homers. SPELL; took a Fourth of Johnsftn and not far down the list is they July game hits Pennock. Biff Sprinff 302 012 OUi— 9. 17; 1 from Weslaco as Harlingen idled. Texarkana .. 000 300 000—3 ; 8; 1 a twin- 010 32< -11; * Tile locals had planned for The race to see who can steal the Palestine . -
Cambridge - June 13-14
1924 Cambridge - June 13-14 As in 1920, all finals were held on the second day except the walk, with heats on the first day, while all semi-finals took place on June 14, except for the 400m hurdles. A number of athletes did not make the top-4 in the trials, but were nevertheless selected because of their consistency in previous competition, showing a far greater flexibility of approach than was to be seen after World War II. The principal athletes who benefited were: Loren Murchison, Leroy Brown, John Watters, Alan Helffrich, George Lermond, Alfred LeConey, William Comins, Ernest Oberst and Pat McDonald. The New York Times noted that there were 419 entries, compared with 259 in 1920. Timing was with 1/10th and 1/5th of a second watches. Times are shown in tenths of a second for uniformity of presentation. The venue was efficiently served by the Boston Elevated Railway, which enabled large crowds to quickly get to and from the stadium. 100 Meters 15.20 Hr 1. 1. Chester Bowman (Syracuse) 10.6 2=. 3. Charley Paddock (LAAC) 10.6e 2=. 7. Jackson Scholz (NYAC) 10.6e 4. 2. Frank Hussey (Stuyvesant, NY HS) 10.7e 5. 5. Al LeConey (Meadowbrook AC) 10.7e 6. 4. Keith Lloyd (USC) 10.7e 7. 6. Loren Murchison (NYAC) 10.8e Semi-finals: (First 3 qualify), 14.25 Hr 1/ 1. Scholz 10.6, 2. Lloyd 10.8e, 3. Bowman 10.8e, 4. Paddock 10.8e, George Hill (Penn) 10.8e, Albert Washington (Chic AA) 2/ 1. LeConey 10.8, 2. -
BRONZO 2016 Usain Bolt
OLIMPIADI L'Albo d'Oro delle Olimpiadi Atletica Leggera UOMINI 100 METRI ANNO ORO - ARGENTO - BRONZO 2016 Usain Bolt (JAM), Justin Gatlin (USA), Andre De Grasse (CAN) 2012 Usain Bolt (JAM), Yohan Blake (JAM), Justin Gatlin (USA) 2008 Usain Bolt (JAM), Richard Thompson (TRI), Walter Dix (USA) 2004 Justin Gatlin (USA), Francis Obikwelu (POR), Maurice Greene (USA) 2000 Maurice Greene (USA), Ato Boldon (TRI), Obadele Thompson (BAR) 1996 Donovan Bailey (CAN), Frank Fredericks (NAM), Ato Boldon (TRI) 1992 Linford Christie (GBR), Frank Fredericks (NAM), Dennis Mitchell (USA) 1988 Carl Lewis (USA), Linford Christie (GBR), Calvin Smith (USA) 1984 Carl Lewis (USA), Sam Graddy (USA), Ben Johnson (CAN) 1980 Allan Wells (GBR), Silvio Leonard (CUB), Petar Petrov (BUL) 1976 Hasely Crawford (TRI), Don Quarrie (JAM), Valery Borzov (URS) 1972 Valery Borzov (URS), Robert Taylor (USA), Lennox Miller (JAM) 1968 James Hines (USA), Lennox Miller (JAM), Charles Greene (USA) 1964 Bob Hayes (USA), Enrique Figuerola (CUB), Harry Jeromé (CAN) 1960 Armin Hary (GER), Dave Sime (USA), Peter Radford (GBR) 1956 Bobby-Joe Morrow (USA), Thane Baker (USA), Hector Hogan (AUS) 1952 Lindy Remigino (USA), Herb McKenley (JAM), Emmanuel McDonald Bailey (GBR) 1948 Harrison Dillard (USA), Norwood Ewell (USA), Lloyd LaBeach (PAN) 1936 Jesse Owens (USA), Ralph Metcalfe (USA), Martinus Osendarp (OLA) 1932 Eddie Tolan (USA), Ralph Metcalfe (USA), Arthur Jonath (GER) 1928 Percy Williams (CAN), Jack London (GBR), Georg Lammers (GER) 1924 Harold Abrahams (GBR), Jackson Scholz (USA), Arthur -
Extensions of Remarks 11821 Extensions of Remarks
June 14, 1989 EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS 11821 EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS NORTH AMERICAN WETLANDS This trend in our waterfowl population is im These processes will be subject to continu CONSERVATION ACT portant for two reasons. First, waterfowl are ous review to ensure they are compatible readily visible indicators of environmental and consistent with waterfowl population crisis. They rely heavily on the wetland eco needs on a continental basis, and to evaluate HON. SILVIO 0. CONTE their environmental impacts and to ensure systems, and act as barometers, indicating public participation. OF MASSACHUSETTS environmental decay. Second, waterfowl are 8. The concept of stabilizing hunting regu IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES the most prominent and economically impor lations-with review at five-year intervals tant group of migratory birds in North America, and provisions for predetermined responses Wednesday, June 14, 1989 generating a direct expenditure of several bil to substantive waterfowl population fluctua Mr. CONTE. Mr. Speaker, on June 8, 1989, lion dollars annually. tions-is desirable to encourage long-term introduced, along with Congressmen DIN To deal with this international environmental waterfowl management efforts. GELL, JONES, DAVIS, and WELDON, the North problem, the United States and Canada To implement these principles and the American Wetlands Conservation Act signed in May 1986 the North American Wa goals of the plan, I introduced H.R. 2587, the (H.R. 2587). terfowl Management Plan, a comprehensive North American Wetlands Conservation Act. This legislation was developed in response approach to the problem of declining water The development of this legislation was to a growing environmental crisis in our coun fowl populations and the destruction of wet guided by three broad principles which form try: disappearing wetlands and a severe de lands. -
Cambridge - July 6-7
1928 Cambridge - July 6-7 The trials were again held over two days, but were complicated by some events being held in Philadelphia two days earlier. Increasingly large fields meant that the programme was much fuller than before, as is evidenced by the 100 meters results. 100 Meters - July 6 1. 3. Frank Wykoff (Glendale, Ca. HS) 10 3/5 2. 2. Robert McAllister (CCKC) 10.7e 3. 5. Henry Russell (Penn AC) 10.7e 4. 3. Claude Bracey (Rice) 10.7e 5. 1. James Quinn (NYAC) 10.8e 6. 6. Jackson Scholz (NYAC) 10.8e Semi-finals - first 3 qualify 1/ 1. Quinn 10 3/5, 2. Scholz 10.7e, 3. Bracey 10.7e, 4. Charley Paddock (LAAC) 10.7e 2/ 1. Wykoff 10 3/5, 2. Russell, 3. McAllister, 4. Frank Hussey (NYAC), 5. George Simpson (Ohio St) Quarter-finals - first 3 qualify 1/ 1. Simpson 10 4/5, 2. Paddock, 3. Quinn, 4. Karl Wildermuth (NYAC), also ran: Henry Cumming (NYAC), Folwell Scull (Penn) 2/ 1. Bracey 10 3/5, 2. Scholz, 3. Hussey, also ran: Don Bennett (Libbey HS, Toledo), Eddie Tolan (DAC), Frank Lombardi (Cal HS/LAAC) 3/ 1. Wykoff 10 3/5, 2. Russell, 3. McAllister, also ran: Aubrey Cockrell (HAC), Alfred Miller (BAA), Roland Locke (NYAC) Heats: - first 3 qualify 1/ 1. Simpson 10 3/5, 2. Bennett, 3. Hussey, also ran: Reginald “Pete” Bowen (PiAC), Weldon Draper (LAAC), Robert Reay (ChAA) 2/ 1. Bracey 10 3/5, 2. McAllister, 3. Cockrell, also ran: Robert Winfrey (Tenn), Howard Jones (NYAC), Robert Leffler (SLAA) 3/ 1. -
Irish Athletics Olympic History 1896-2012
Irish Athletics Olympic History 1896-2012 Venues: 1896 Athens (GRE), 1900 Paris (FRA), 1904 St. Louis (USA), 1906 Athens (GRE), 1908 London (GBR), 1912 Stockholm (SWE), 1920 Antwerp (BEL), 1924 Paris (FRA), 1928 Amsterdam (NED), 1932 Los Angeles (USA), 1936 Berlin (GER), 1948 London (GBR), 1952 Helsinki (FIN), 1956 Melbourne (AUS), 1960 Rome (ITA), 1964 Tokyo (JPN), 1968 Mexico City (MEX), 1972 Munich (FRG), 1976 Montreal (CAN), 1980 Moscow (URS), 1984 Los Angeles (USA), 1988 Seoul (KOR), 1992 Barcelona (ESP), 1996 Atlanta (USA), 2000 Sydney (AUS), 2004 Athens (GRE), 2008 Beijing (CHN), 2012 London (GBR), 2016 Rio de Janeiro (BRA) Although Ireland first competed in the Olympic Games in its own right as an independent nation in the Paris Games of 1924, Irish athletes prior to this, were among the best in the world and competed with distinction for Great Britain & Ireland as it was then referred to and for the USA, Canada and South Africa. All known Irish-born athletes who competed between 1896-1920, or athletes who lived in Ireland for a significant period of time and were members of Irish athletics clubs and are included in the below lists. Men 100m 1924 William J. Lowe 4h12 No time recorded 1928 Denis John Cussen 2h15 No time recorded 5 QF No time recorded 1952 Paul P. Dolan 3h2 11.12 1960 Patrick "Paddy" Lowry 6h3 11.11 1996 Neil Ryan 7h10 10.78 2000 Paul Brizzel 6h4 10.62 Prior to 1924 & Irish independence: 1904 Robert Kerr (Fermanagh/CAN) 3h2 No time 1908 Robert Kerr (Fermanagh/CAN) 1h10 11.0 1 SF1 11.0 3 11.0 1908 Denis Murray (Cork/GBI) -
Youngest and Oldest Olympians
Youngest and Oldest Olympians (at date of Olympic qualification) (All under 20, sprinters/jumpers over 30 and others over 40 are listed) – the oldest runner yet selected is Bernard Lagat, who was nearing 42 when he won the 2016 Trials 5000m. Youngest Oldest 100 Johnny Jones (76-4) 18-077 Peter Gerhardt (12W-2) 34-173 Donald Lippincott (12E-4) 18-205 Justin Gatlin (2016-1) 34-144 Frank Wykoff (28-1) 18-252 Jon Drummond (00-3) 31-310 Stanley Floyd (80-1) 18-365" Mel Pender (68-3) 30-314 Claude Bracey (28-4) 19-028 Barney Ewell (48-1) 30-135 Harvey Glance (76-1) 19-084 Dennis Mitchell (96-1) 30-116 Houston McTear (76-2) 19-129 Charley Paddock (20-3) 19-341 400R Carl Lewis (80-4R) 18-357 Darvis Patton (2012-5R) 34-202 Richard Stebbins (64-7R) 19-090 Michael Rodgers(16-4R) 31-117 Frank Hussey (24-4R) 19-120 Ronnie Ray Smith (68-4R) 19-166 Willie Gault (80-5R) 19-291 200 Dwayne Evans (76-2) 17-251 Peter Gerhardt (12W-2) 34-173 Donald Lippincott (12E-2) 18-205 Justin Gatlin (2016-1) 34-150 Richard Stebbins (64-2) 19-091 Floyd Heard (00-2) 34-121 Robert Cloughen (08E-4) 19-132 LaShawn Merritt (2016-2)32-012 Charley Paddock (20-1) 19-341 Jackson Scholz (28-3) 31-114 Robert Packard (36-3) 19-348 Shawn Crawford (2008-2) 30-174 Millard Hampton (76-1) 19-349 Barney Ewell (48-2) 30-136 400 Bill Green (80-1) 19-057 Michael Johnson (00-1) 32-307 Steve Lewis (88-3) 19-065 Antonio Pettigrew (00-3)32-256 Earl Young (60-2) 19-139 Butch Reynolds (96-2) 32-011 LaShawn Merritt (2016-1)32-006 800 Edwin Turner (32-3) 19-308 Johnny Gray (96-1) 36-000 Mark Everett -
Spalding's Official Athletic Almanac Price 25C
C 0' ..^'^^ 6^>. <^ ,-^ < 5,h. -^ . AmERICA'sNATIONAL GaME By A. G. SCALDING Price, $2.00 Net with over 100 A book of 600 pages, profusely illustrated sixteen forceful cartoons full page engravings, and having American artist by Homer C. Davenport, the famous The above work should have a place in every also in ftie nublic library in this country, as private houses. libraries of public schools and Lrame The author of "America's National everywhere, and by eyerv- is conceded, always, any living body to have the best equipment of the text writer to treat the subject that forms viz the story ot of this remarkable volume, ot ±5ase the origin, development and evolution country. Ball the National Game of our Almost from the very inception of the game manager and until the present time—as player, magnate—Mr. Spalding has been closely iden- infrequently he tified with its interests. Not has been called upon in times of emergency But for him to prevent threatened disaster. syn- the National Game would have been whose dicated and controlled by elements personal. interests were purely selfish and in- The book is a veritable repository of formation concerning players, clubs and in personalities connected with the game most is written in a ^ earlv days, and , . j its anecdotes and nteresting style, interspersed with enHvemng heretofore been published accounts of events that have not pubhc to The response on the part of the press and the history of the Mr. Spalding's efforts to perpetuate the early he is in receipt National Game has been very encouraging and a few of which are here given. -
1 the 1908 London Olympics
Canterbury Christ Church University’s repository of research outputs http://create.canterbury.ac.uk Copyright © and Moral Rights for this thesis are retained by the author and/or other copyright owners. A copy can be downloaded for personal non-commercial research or study, without prior permission or charge. This thesis cannot be reproduced or quoted extensively from without first obtaining permission in writing from the copyright holder/s. The content must not be changed in any way or sold commercially in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holders. When referring to this work, full bibliographic details including the author, title, awarding institution and date of the thesis must be given e.g. Harris, L. (2013) Britain and the Olympic Games 1908-1920: Perspectives on participation and identity. Ph.D. thesis, Canterbury Christ Church University. Contact: [email protected] Abstract Abstract This thesis examines Britain’s relationship with the Olympic Games between 1908 and 1920, a period which witnesses Britain’s first serious entrance into the Olympics and the development of the Olympic Games into the movement which it is today. This thesis uses the British media as the primary source to analyse and examine the development of the nation’s attitudes and identities towards the Olympics. The Games of this period, from London (1908), Stockholm (1912), Antwerp (1920), along with the preparations for the aborted 1916 Berlin Olympics are considered. The reaction to the British performance at each of the Olympics is the main focus of the research. There is also extensive examination into the periods in between the Games, as at this time the most plentiful discussion regarding the British approach appears, particularly that after the Stockholm Olympics. -
Pat Ryan of Pallasgreen
Excerpted from Champions of the Athletic Arena, by William Dooley. Published by General Publicity Service, Dublin, 1946. Transcribed by the Winged Fist Organization. Pat Ryan of Pallasgreen The Gaelic Athletic Association Championships of 1902 were held at Limerick on 16th September, and something like a sensation was caused there by a tall, rangy youth 19 years, Pat Ryan of Pallasgreen, Co. Limerick, who beat the famous Tom Kiely for the hammer throwing crown, at moderate mark, admittedly, of 136’. It was, nevertheless, the first time for a long number of years that Kiely was beaten on level terms, excepting by John Flanagan, but this young conqueror blossomed into perhaps the greatest natural hammerman that Ireland, or the world, has produced. A few have beaten his figures in the European theatre, but these adhered to a much more careful mode of life, and systematic training, for Ryan was one to speedily turn his trainers grey-haired. What John L. Sullivan was in boxing, Ryan was in athletics, almost to the letter. From 1902 to 1909, he won several Irish Championships, his best effort in these being 154’ 5”, in 1909, and his admirers were, by this time, bewailing the fact that he was not fulfilling early promise. The reason was that Pat, one of the very few lucky enough to hit upon the proper method of hammer throwing from the beginning, did not get down to serious training over any prolonged period. He was the superior man in his own land and was quite content to let matters rest at that. -
Helen Preece and the 1912 Olympic Modern Pentathlon
JOURNAL OF O LYMPIC HISTORY HISTORY LYMPIC VOLUME 29 | NUMBER 1 2021 VOLUME 29 | NUMBER NUMBER THE OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF THE INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY OF OLYMPIC HISTORIANS 1 | 2021 INSP I RED BY CHERRY B LOSSOMS: THE COUN T DOWN HAS ST AR T ED Inspired by Cherry Blossoms: The Countdown has Started + Tokyo 2020 Should Become a Manifestation of Human Resilience + “Knight of the Pedals” and the “Master Driver” on the Road + Impact of the Mass Media on the Image of Olympic Cities + Queen of Gymnastics Ágnes Keleti: A True Olympian + “A Possibility of a Lady Competitor”: Helen Preece and Modern Pentathlon C ONTENTS 1 Welcome to the Issue 38 “A Possibility of a Lady Competitor”: Helen Preece and the 1912 Olympic Modern 2 Olympic History in Popular Culture Pentathlon | by Christian Wacker | by Tom Lough, Kevin Witherspoon, and Kyser Lough 3 Tokyo 2020 Should Become a Manifestation of Human Resilience 48 72 Years of Olympic Memoirs | by Stan Greenberg 8 The “Knight of the Pedals” and the “Master Driver” on the Road 52 Rise of the Reich in Mandate Palestine: | by Volker Kluge The NSDAP, Jerusalem YMCA, and “Participation” of Attallah Kidess 18 The Impact of the Mass Media on the Image in the 1936 Berlin Olympic Games (Part 3) of Olympic Cities (Part 2) | by San Charles Haddad | by Richard W. Pound 65 Biographies of All IOC Members, Part XXXV 28 The Queen of Gymnastics | by Marcia De Franceschi Neto-Wacker Ágnes Keleti: A True Olympian and Volker Kluge | by Dezso˝ Dobor 70 Obituaries 35 Walther Tröger Honoured with the 2020 ISOH Lifetime Award 76 Book Reviews | by Volker Kluge Macmillan, 2016, Female Olympian and Would Be King; Specific Olympic Research Interests: Member Information Paralympian Events: Analyses, Backgrounds, and Distance runners of the past, diversity and protest Timelines.