Rebekah Colberg
Rebekah Colberg | ||
Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Competitor for Puerto Rico | ||
Central American and Caribbean Games | ||
Women's athletics | ||
Gold | 1938 Panama | Discus |
Gold | 1938 Panama | Javelin throw |
Women's softball | ||
Gold | 1946 Barranquilla | softball |
Dr. Rebekah Colberg (December 25, 1918 – July 8, 1995),[note 1] is known as "The Mother of Women's Sports in Puerto Rico".[1] Colberg paritcipated in various athletic competitions in the 1938 Central American and Caribbean Games celebrated in Panama where she won the Gold Medals in Discus and Javelin throw.
Early years
Colberg was born in Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico when her mother was only seven months pregnant. Little did anybody imagine then, that someday Colberg, whose birth weight was only four pounds, would break sports barriers for Puerto Rican women. Even though there used to be a lot of discrimination in sports against women, Colberg was to prove that women did have the potential to be great athletes, if given the chance.
Colberg graduated from the University of Puerto Rico with a Bachelors Degree in science and pharmacy. She received her Masters in physical education from Columbia University in New York and her Doctorate in medicine from the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM).
Sports accomplishments
From 1932-1946, for fourteen consecutive years, Colberg was Puerto Rico's tennis champion. In 1938, she won two gold medals at the IV Central American and Caribbean Games, celebrated in Panama, in the discus and javelin throw events. In 1946, when the games were celebrated in Barranquilla, Colombia, she won a gold medal in softball.[1] While studying for her Masters Degree at Columbia University, she was in the university's field hockey and lacrosse championship teams. She was also a member of the undefeated women's basketball team of the National Autonomous University of Mexico.
Later years
In 1952, Colberg was inducted into the Puerto Rican Athletic Hall of Fame and the Puerto Rican Tennis Hall of Fame. She is considered by many as the greatest woman athlete to have been born in Puerto Rico. Her cousin, the late Severo Colberg Ramirez, was the President of the Puerto Rican House of Representatives (Camara de Representantes) from 1980 to 1985. In 1993, Rebekah Colberg along with Eugenio Guerra and Manuel Luciano, the Puerto Rican silver medalists that participated in the 1930 Central American and Caribbean Games in Havana, handed the games torch to Puerto Rican basketball player Juan “Pachín” Vicéns during the official opening ceremonies of the 1993 Central American and Caribbean Games[2] Colberg died on July 8, 1985 in her native town and is buried in the Old San Juan Cemetery, Cementerio Santa Maria Magdalena de Pazzis.[3]
Honors
The City of Cabo Rojo honored Colberg's memory by naming a Coliseum after her (which became, in 1989, the home of what was Cabo Rojo's BSN team), and in Rio Piedras there is also a Rebekah Colberg Multi-sports Gym.
See also
- List of famous Puerto Ricans
- History of women in Puerto Rico
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 La mujer puertorriqueña en su contexto literario y social (in Spanish). Verbum Editorial. ISBN 84-7962-229-6.
- ↑ Meta Mayaguez 2010. 1993: Ponce, Puerto Rico: Historia de los Juegos. By Carlos Uriarte. 6 April 2010.
- ↑ PR Roots
Notes:
Further reading
- ZAMORA, F., & ESCABÍ, I. (1997). Autógrafo: seres ordinarios con vidas extraordinarias : guía del maestro. Colección Autógrafo, 1. [San Juan, P.R.], People Television - book of a TV series (in Spanish).