Ethel Catherwood
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Olympic medalist | |||
Ethel Catherwood |
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Medal record | |||
Women's Athletics | |||
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Gold | 1928 Amsterdam | High jump |
Ethel Mary Catherwood (April 28, 1908 – September 26, 1987) was a Canadian track and field athlete.
Born in Haldimand County, Ontario, and raised and educated in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, she excelled at athletics, including baseball, basketball and track and field. In 1926 she equaled a Canadian record for high jump at the Saskatoon city track and field championships. On Labour Day of the same year, she broke the British held high jump world record. In 1928, she became a member of the Matchless Six, a group of 7 Canadian women who competed at the 1928 Summer Olympics in Amsterdam, the first Olympics to allow female competitors in athletics. Catherwood took home a gold medal in high jump, clearing 1.59 metres. There was considerable focus on her physical attributes during the Games earning her the nickname "Saskatoon Lily". As well, a New York Times correspondent dubbed her the "prettiest girl athlete" at the 1928 Olympics. However, much more than a pretty face Ethel Catherwood took home the world's first ever gold medal awarded to a female high jumper and holds the title as the only Canadian female athlete to have won an individual gold medal in an Olympic track and field event.
Upon her return to Canada, she was offered a movie contract, but declined the offer. She took a business course, was married, and moved to California.
In 1955, she was inducted into Canada's Sports Hall of Fame, the Saskatchewan Sports Hall of Fame in 1966, and the Saskatoon Sports Hall of Fame in 1986.
Catherwood had an enigmatic life. After the Olympics, where she was feted as the beauty of the games, she was surrounded in scandal. Her secret marriage to and speedy Reno divorce from James McLaren, and later marriage to Byron Mitchell (whom she divorced in 1960,) had the press following her every move. She later relocated to California, where she admitted she was really an American, born in Hannah, North Dakota in 1908 (later moving to Scott, Sask. in 1910.) She refused to give interviews and said she had sold all her medals and trophies. She even considered trying out for the US Olympic team in 1932. She died in California on Sept. 26, 1987.[1]
She is the subject of a short graphic (i.e. comic) biography by David Collier entitled "The Ethel Catherwood Story", collected in "An Anthology of Graphic Fiction, Cartoons, and True Stories", Ivan Brunetti ed. 2006
[edit] References
- ^ CBC Archives, Saskatchewan @ 100: Saskatoon Lily: record-breaker, scandal-maker
[edit] Further reading
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