Today in History August 9th
OWENS WINS 4TH GOLD MEDAL:
August 9, 1936
At the 1936 Berlin Olympics, African American track star Jesse Owens wins his
fourth gold medal of the Games in the 4x100-meter relay. His relay team set a
new world record of 39.8 seconds, which held for 20 years. In their strong
showing in track-and-field events at the XIth Olympiad, Jesse Owens and other
African American athletes struck a propaganda blow against Nazi leader Adolf
Hitler, who planned to use the Berlin Games as a showcase of supposed Aryan
superiority.Born the son of Alabama sharecroppers in 1913, Owens emerged as a
major track talent while attending high school in Cleveland, Ohio. Later, at
Ohio State University, he demonstrated himself to be one of the greatest
athletes in the world. In a single day of competition--May 25, 1935--Owens broke
the world records for the 220-yard dash, the 220-yard low hurdles, and the
running broad jump, and equaled the world record for the 100-yard dash. The next
summer, Owens and 311 other American athletes, including 17 African Americans,
traveled to Nazi Germany to represent the United States at the XIth Olympiad.In
1931, the International Olympic Committee awarded the 1936 Summer Olympics to
Berlin. The choice was meant to signal Germany's return to the world community
after defeat in World War I. Two years later, however, Adolf Hitler came to
power. He transformed the democratic German government into a one-party
dictatorship, purged political opponents and suspected dissidents, instituted
anti-Semitic policies, and began the remilitarization of Germany.Hitler
initially held the Olympics in low regard because of their internationalism but
became an avid supporter after Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels
convinced him of their propaganda value. Seen as an opportunity to advance Nazi
ideology, Hitler provided extensive funding for the Berlin Games, which promised
to be the largest modern Olympics to date. The Nazi government used sport as
part of its drive to strengthen the "Aryan race," and "Non-Aryans"--Jewish,
part-Jewish, or Gypsy athletes--were systematically excluded from Nazi-sponsored
sports facilities and associations.By 1935, a number of athletic groups in the
United States were pushing for a boycott of the Berlin Games, but after a heated
debate U.S. participation was narrowly approved in December 1935. A number of
prominent Jewish athletes in the United States and other countries decided to
independently boycott the Games in protest of Nazi oppression of Jews. Spain
also planned an alternate "People's Olympics" to be held in Barcelona in July
1936, but the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War forced its cancellation. In the
end, 49 nations sent some 4,000 athletes to the Summer Olympics in Berlin.Under
international pressure, the Nazis agreed to allow one part-Jewish athlete on its
Olympic team: fencer Helene Mayer. However, Joseph Goebbels forbid the
Nazi-controlled German press from discussing the ethnicity of the blond-haired
Mayer.On August 1, 1936, Adolf Hitler opened the XIth Olympiad. The Olympic
ritual of a runner arriving bearing a torch carried by relay from Olympia,
Greece, occurred for the first time. The Nazis advertised this ceremony as a
symbol of the myth that German civilization was the inheritor of the glorified
culture of ancient Greece.Olympic flags and swastika-bearing Nazi banners hung
everywhere in Berlin. To prevent controversy, the anti-Jewish signs hung
throughout the city were removed during the Games, and Jewish athletes and
visitors from other countries were not subjected to anti-Jewish laws. Gypsies
were cleared off the streets and interned in a camp at the edge of Berlin. A
festive and hospitable atmosphere pervaded the German capital, and most tourists
left the city with positive memories of their stay there.With 348 athletes,
Germany had the largest national team and captured the most medals overall,
greatly pleasing Hitler. The Americans, however, dominated the popular
track-and-field events. On the first day of competition, Hitler, who had been
congratulating German and select other winners, left the stadium shortly after
three African Americans swept the high-jump event. Whether Hitler left to avoid
shaking hands with non-Aryans is unclear. In the aftermath of the incident,
Olympic organizers asked Hitler to either receive all the medal winners or none,
and he chose the latter. Contrary to the popular myth, Hitler never directly
snubbed Jesse Owens, but he did continue to privately receive German winners
throughout the Games.With his four gold medals, Jesse Owens was the star of the
Berlin Olympics. He equaled the world record (10.3 seconds) in the 100-meter
race and broke the world records in the 200-meter race (20.7 seconds) and in the
broad jump (26 feet 5 3/8 inches). He was enthusiastically applauded by the
largely German crowd and developed a friendship with German long jumper and
silver medalist Luz Long. However, he and other African American Olympians were
demeaned by a Nazi newspaper that wrote of them as the "black auxiliaries" of
the American team.On August 9, Owens won his fourth medal as a member of the
mixed-race 4x100-meter relay team. The world-record-breaking triumph was tainted
by the revelation that U.S. coaches had benched two American Jewish relay
runners the day before the event. Marty Glickman and Sam Stoller were replaced
with Owens and African American Ralph Metcalfe, the two best U.S. sprinters.
However, both Stoller and Glickman had out-run Foy Draper, a white American who
remained on the team, in a practice race. The coaches said Draper was more
experienced, but Glickman and others thought that anti-Semitism was involved.
Stoller, however, thought favoritism was to blame, as Draper and the fourth
runner, Frank Wykoff, had trained under one of the Olympic coaches at the
University of Southern California.Despite the embarrassment of seeing his best
Aryan runners bested by African Americans, Adolf Hitler hailed the Berlin
Olympics as a great success. He commissioned a German architect to design a
colossal, 400,000-seat stadium at Nuremberg that would host Olympics for "all
time to come." The outbreak of World War II in 1939 prevented the building of
the stadium, and by 1945 Hitler's plans for Nazi world domination had ended in
absolute defeat. In the decades of Cold War that followed, the United States and
the Soviet Union exploited the propaganda potential of the Olympic Games as
freely as the Nazis did at Berlin in 1936.Although only 23, Jesse Owens retired
from amateur competition shortly after the Berlin Olympics in order to
capitalize on his fame. This effectively brought his athletic career to an end.
He later engaged in boys'-guidance activities, made goodwill visits to Asia for
the U.S. Department of State, and served as secretary of the Illinois State
Athletic Commission. He died in 1980.
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