Princeton and the Olympics

Dear Mr. Mudd,

What are the con­nec­tions between Prince­ton and the Olympics?

With the upcom­ing 2012 Olympics on the hori­zon, this is a pop­u­lar ques­tion. We have a blog entry from a few years ago con­cern­ing what Mudd has in its col­lec­tions relat­ing to the 1896 games.

Prince­ton University’s ties with the Olympics began at the revival of the Olympiad in 1896 when Dr. William Sloane, a Prince­ton pro­fes­sor, formed an Amer­i­can team for the games. On that team were four Prince­ton stu­dents. Robert Gar­rett, 1897 threw the dis­cus 96 feet to defeat a Greek cham­pion. Three other stu­dents par­tic­i­pated in the Athens games: Her­bert B. Jami­son ’97 (sec­ond in the 400 meters), Fran­cis A. Lane ’97 (sec­ond in the 100 meters), and Albert Clin­ton Tyler ’97 (sec­ond in pole-vault).

Photo cour­tesy: Prince­ton Alumni Weekly, Ricardo Barros

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In 1984 NBC-TV aired a minis­eries enti­tled The First Olympics: Athens 1896. The fol­low­ing clip shows the dis­cus throw of Garrett.

 

Also in the archives is a lau­rel branch that was awarded to Albert C. Tyler for his sec­ond in the pole vault a the 1896 games.

There are a num­ber of alumni that have won gold medals in the Olympics, as cat­a­loged by Prince­ton Alumni Weekly writer, Gregg Lange ’70.  Lange’s list and com­men­tary includes:

• Karl Fred­er­ick ‘1903 is the only Tiger to win three gold medals, all in 1920 in Antwerp. One of the better-shooting Prince­ton lawyers of the post-Burr era, he won an indi­vid­ual gold in the 50-meter pis­tol and team golds in the same event and the 30-meter, too. He later pulled off an unlikely dou­ble, as pres­i­dent in turn of the National Rifle Asso­ci­a­tion and the New York State Con­ser­va­tion Council.

• Her­man “Swede” Whiton ’26 is the only Prince­ton­ian to win in two sep­a­rate games and the first Amer­i­can yachts­man to win a race twice – the 6-meter sail­ing race at both the 1948 and 1952 Olympics in Lon­don and Helsinki with dif­fer­ent crews.

• Nel­son Diebel ’96 who was semi-rescued from weird­ness by his Ped­die swim­ming coach, then suf­fered chronic rotator-cuff inflam­ma­tion, but put together an annus mirabilis after his Prince­ton fresh­man year in 1992 to win both the Olympic 100-meter breast­stroke and the 4x100 med­ley relay gold in Barcelona.

• Four years after Garrett’s tri­umph in Athens, Frank Jarvis 1900 (a direct descen­dent of George Wash­ing­ton) won the 100-meter dash in 1900 in Paris. The first great Prince­ton sprinter, he already had won the national AAU title at 100 yards and two dif­fer­ent Inter­col­le­giate Asso­ci­a­tion of Ama­teur Ath­letes of Amer­ica (IC4A) titles.

• Bill Steven­son ’22, an Illi­nois cousin of his famed class­mate Adlai II ’22 and a Rhodes scholar, had won the national cham­pi­onship AAU title in the 440 yard race in 1921. He went to Paris for the 1924 games and ran on the U.S. gold-medal 4x400-meter relay team. He even­tu­ally became pres­i­dent of Ober­lin, then ambas­sador to the Philippines.

• Jed Graef ’64, whose high school didn’t have a swim­ming team, swam for the great Bob Clot­wor­thy in Dil­lon Pool and went on to win the 200-yard back­stroke at the NCAA and U.S. cham­pi­onships. Then he set a world record win­ning gold in the 200 meters at the 1964 Tokyo Olympics, beat­ing two Amer­i­cans who ear­lier had defeated him. He was inducted into the Inter­na­tional Swim­ming Hall of Fame in 1988.

• Then came the row­ers, prod­ucts of the ever-burgeoning pro­gram down on Lake Carnegie. The first cham­pion was Mike Evans ’81, whose gold medal in the 1984 Los Ange­les Olympics came, iron­i­cally, for Canada by 0.42 sec­onds over the United States, the first Prince­ton gold won for another coun­try. It also was Canada’s first win in the fea­tured men’s heavy­weight eights, estab­lish­ing a global stature that Cana­di­ans retain to this day. [Evans is now vice chair­man of The Gold­man Sachs Group, Inc.]

• Chris Ahrens ’98 waited six years after stroking the Prince­ton heavy­weight eight to national cham­pi­onships in 1996 and 1998 to win his gold in 2004 in the men’s eights in Athens, com­ing out of retire­ment in 2003 after a wrench­ing fifth-place fin­ish in Syd­ney in 2000.

AP Images

 

Car­o­line Lind ’06, stroke and heart of the mag­nif­i­cent 2006 women’s unde­feated – and prac­ti­cally unchal­lenged – national cham­pion open crew, rowed the No. 7 oar for the gold-medal-winning women’s eight in Bei­jing, their first Olympic cham­pi­onship in 24 years. She’s the first alumna to grab gold for the Tigers.

 

 

A search of our Senior The­sis Data­base shows there are 16 the­ses that have been focused on the Olympics. All the­ses can be viewed in our read­ing room.

In 1935 a travel agency adver­tised tours in the Daily Prince­ton­ian: “The steamship agency “Adri­atic Exchange Travel Bureau,” at 226 East 86th Street, New York City, spe­cial­ists in Ger­man travel since 1918, announces a num­ber of “Thrift Tours” for next year’s Olympics to be held in Berlin, Ger­many. These tours are rea­son­ably priced and are orga­nized to appeal to all stu­dents who are inter­ested in athletics.” 

The Olympic Flame trav­eled through the Prince­ton cam­pus in 1980 as a part of the Prince­ton Relays. Ali­son Carl­son ’77 held the honor of hold­ing the flame high.

The Prince­ton Alumni Weekly has put together a list of the Prince­to­ni­ans in the 2012 Olympics.

And from Prince­ton Uni­ver­sity Com­mu­ni­ca­tions: 16 past and cur­rent Prince­ton stu­dents ready to com­pete for gold at Olympics in London

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