Athletics at the 1900 Summer Olympics

Athletics at the
1900 Summer Olympics
Track events
60 m   men
100 m men
200 m men
400 m men
800 m men
1500 m men
110 m hurdles men
200 m hurdles men
400 m hurdles men
2500 m steeplechase men
4000 m steeplechase men
5000 m team race men
Road events
Marathon men
Field events
Long jump men
Triple jump men
High jump men
Pole vault men
Standing long jump men
Standing triple jump men
Standing high jump men
Shot put men
Discus throw men
Hammer throw men

At the 1900 Summer Olympics, twenty-three athletics events were contested. Altogether, 117 athletes from 15 nations competed. A total of 68 medals (23 gold, 23 silver, 22 bronze) were awarded. In many countries, due in part to the conflagration of the Olympic Games and the World's Fair in Paris, the media discussed only the athletics events under the "Olympic" name while ignoring the incredible variety of other sports featured at the time.

The 23 events listed are those currently considered to have been of Olympic stature by the International Olympic Committee and most Olympic historians. They exclude all events that used a handicap system, as well as all events which were open to professional athletes.

Competitions were held on 14 July, 15 July, 16 July, 19 July, and 22 July. This included Bastille Day, which is a French holiday, and then Sunday, which many of the American athletes protested. Even with many Americans not competing in finals because of confusion caused by the organizers' decision to count scores achieved on Monday, 16 July for finals held on Sunday, 15 July and subsequent rescission of that decision, the United States won more than 4 times as many medals as any other nation, including 16 of the 23 gold medals.

The conditions of competition were also subpar compared even to those at the previous games in 1896. There was no track for the Paris Games, as a grass field dotted with trees and of unequal elevation was used. The course was 500 metres in length, an unusual distance for a track.

Medal summary

Event Gold Silver Bronze
60 metres
 Alvin Kraenzlein 7.0 s
United States (USA)
 Walter Tewksbury 7.1 s
United States (USA)
 Stan Rowley 7.2 s
Australia (AUS)
100 metres
 Frank Jarvis 11.0 s
United States (USA)
 Walter Tewksbury 11.1 s
United States (USA)
 Stan Rowley 11.2 s
Australia (AUS)
200 metres
 Walter Tewksbury 22.2 s
United States (USA)
 Norman Pritchard 22.8 s
India (IND)
 Stan Rowley 22.9 s
Australia (AUS)
400 metres
 Maxie Long 49.4 s
United States (USA)
 William Holland 49.6 s
United States (USA)
 Ernst Schultz 51.5 s
Denmark (DEN)
800 metres
 Alfred Tysoe 2:01.2
Great Britain (GBR)
 John Cregan 2:03.0
United States (USA)
 David Hall 2:03.8
United States (USA)
1500 metres
 Charles Bennett 4:06.2
Great Britain (GBR)
 Henri Deloge 4:06.6
France (FRA)
 John Bray 4:07.2
United States (USA)
Marathon
 Michel Théato 2:59:45
France (FRA) [1]
 Émile Champion 3:04:17
France (FRA)
 Ernst Fast 3:37:14
Sweden (SWE)
110 metres hurdles
 Alvin Kraenzlein 15.4 s
United States (USA)
 John McLean 15.5 s
United States (USA)
 Frederick Moloney 15.6 s
United States (USA)
200 metres hurdles
 Alvin Kraenzlein 25.4 s
United States (USA)
 Norman Pritchard 26.0 s
India (IND)
 Walter Tewksbury 26.1 s
United States (USA)
400 metres hurdles
 Walter Tewksbury 57.6 s
United States (USA)
 Henri Tauzin 58.3 s
France (FRA)
 George Orton 58.8 s
Canada (CAN)
2500 metres steeplechase
 George Orton 7:34.4
Canada (CAN)
 Sidney Robinson 7:38.0
Great Britain (GBR)
 Jacques Chastanié Unknown
France (FRA)
4000 metres steeplechase
 John Rimmer 12:58.4
Great Britain (GBR)
 Charles Bennett 12:58.6
Great Britain (GBR)
 Sidney Robinson 12:58.8
Great Britain (GBR)
5000 metres team race
 Mixed team (ZZX)
 Charles Bennett (GBR)
 John Rimmer (GBR)
 Sidney Robinson (GBR)
 Alfred Tysoe (GBR)
 Stan Rowley (AUS)
 France (FRA)
Henri Deloge
Jacques Chastanié
André Castanet
Michel Champoudry
Gaston Ragueneau
none awarded
Long jump
 Alvin Kraenzlein 7.185 m
United States (USA)
 Myer Prinstein 7.175 m
United States (USA)
 Patrick Leahy 6.950 m
Great Britain (GBR)
Triple jump
 Myer Prinstein 14.47 m
United States (USA)
 James Connolly 13.97 m
United States (USA)
 Lewis Sheldon 13.64 m
United States (USA)
High jump
 Irving Baxter 1.90 m
United States (USA)
 Patrick Leahy 1.78 m
Great Britain (GBR)
 Lajos Gönczy 1.75 m
Hungary (HUN)
Pole vault
 Irving Baxter 3.30 m
United States (USA)
 Meredith Colket 3.25 m
United States (USA)
 Carl Albert Andersen 3.20 m
Norway (NOR)
Standing long jump
 Ray Ewry 3.20 m
United States (USA)
 Irving Baxter 3.135 m
United States (USA)
 Émile Torcheboeuf 3.03 m
France (FRA)
Standing triple jump
 Ray Ewry 10.58 m
United States (USA)
 Irving Baxter 9.95 m
United States (USA)
 Robert Garrett 9.50 m
United States (USA)
Standing high jump
 Ray Ewry 1.655 m
United States (USA)
 Irving Baxter 1.525 m
United States (USA)
 Lewis Sheldon 1.500 m
United States (USA)
Shot put
 Richard Sheldon 14.10 m
United States (USA)
 Josiah McCracken 12.85 m
United States (USA)
 Robert Garrett 12.37 m
United States (USA)
Discus throw
 Rudolf Bauer 36.04 m
Hungary (HUN)
 František Janda-Suk 35.04 m
Bohemia (BOH)
 Richard Sheldon 34.50 m
United States (USA)
Hammer throw
 John Flanagan 51.01 m
United States (USA)
 Truxtun Hare 46.26 m
United States (USA)
 Josiah McCracken 43.58 m
United States (USA)

Medal table

These medals are retroactively assigned by the International Olympic Committee; at the time, winners were given a silver medal.

 Rank  Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1  United States (USA) 16 13 10 39
2  Great Britain (GBR) 3 [2] 3 2 8
3  France (FRA) 1 [1] 4 2 7
4  Canada (CAN) 1 0 1 2
 Hungary (HUN) 1 0 1 2
6  Mixed team (ZZX) 1 0 0 1
7  India (IND) 0 2 0 2
8  Bohemia (BOH) 0 1 0 1
9  Australia (AUS) 0 [2] 0 3 3
10  Denmark (DEN) 0 0 1 1
 Norway (NOR) 0 0 1 1
 Sweden (SWE) 0 0 1 1
* Total medals 23 23 22 68
Finish of the 800m

Daily summary

14 July

15 July

16 July

19 July

22 July

Participating nations

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Michel Théato was originally assumed to be French, before it was discovered that his nationality was Luxembourgish. The International Olympic Committee still credits this medal for France, however.
  2. 2.0 2.1 An additional gold medal was won by a mixed team composed of four athletes from Great Britain and one from Australia.

References