Jack London (athlete)

Jack London

Jack London in 1929
Personal information
Born 13 January 1905
Georgetown, British Guiana
Died 2 May 1966 (aged 58)
London, Great Britain
Height 1.83 m (6 ft 0 in)
Weight 75 kg (165 lb)
Sport
Sport Athletics
Event(s) 100 m, 200 m, high jump
Club Polytechnic Harriers
Coached by Sam Mussabini, Albert Hill
Achievements and titles
Personal best(s) 100 m – 10.6 (1928)
200 m – 22.2 (1928)
HJ – 1.88 m (1927)[1][2]

John Edward London (13 January 1905 – 2 May 1966) was a British athlete who competed mainly in the 100 metres. Born in British Guiana, now Guyana, he won a silver and a bronze medal at the 1928 Summer Olympics in Amsterdam, becoming the first black athlete to win Olympic medals for Great Britain.[3]

London moved to London as a child[1] and studied at the Regent Street Polytechnic, where he joined the Polytechnic Harriers and was coached by Sam Mussabini. He was elected captain of the sports club in October 1922. He was an early adopter of starting blocks rather than digging footholds in the cinder tracks.[4] He ran the 100 metres in 10.7 seconds to win the race at a competition between England and France at Stamford Bridge in July 1927, and then won both the 100 metres and the 200 metres at a competition in Paris in October 1927.

London competed for Great Britain in the 1928 Summer Olympics held in Amsterdam, Netherlands. After equalling the Olympic 100 metres record of 10.6 seconds in the semi-final, he won the silver medal in the 100 metres final, behind Canadian Percy Williams. He then won the bronze medal in the 4×100 metres relay with his team mates Cyril Gill, Edward Smouha and Walter Rangeley, behind the teams of the USA and Germany. He was the first to use starting blocks at the Olympic Games.[5] He was awarded the Polytechnic Harriers's S. A. Mussabini memorial medal (Mussabini having died in 1927) and the Studd Trophy in 1928.

He was later coached by Albert Hill. In July 1929, he became the first British sprinter to win the Amateur Athletic Association's 100 yards title since Harold Abrahams in 1924. He was also a leading British high jumper in this period. His athletic career was curtailed by a leg injury in 1930. He joined a 4×100 metre relay for England against Germany in 1931, but was not selected for the 1932 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles.[1]

After he retired from athletics, he became an entertainer, playing piano in the original cast of the Noël Coward's musical Cavalcade at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1931. He also appeared Will Hay's Gainsborough Pictures comedy Old Bones of the River in 1938.

He married at Marylebone register office in 1930, where his profession was recorded as "pianist". He was later divorced and remarried in 1938.

With athletics journalist Joe Binks, he co-wrote an athletics coaching manual in 1948, The Way to Win on Track and Field, but the book was not a commercial success.

He later worked as a porter at St Pancras Hospital, and died suddenly from a subarachnoid haemorrhage.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Jack London. sports-reference.com
  2. Jack London. trackfield.brinkster.net
  3. Martin Polley (January 1998). Moving the Goalposts: A History of Sport and Society Since 1945. Psychology Press. pp. 141–. ISBN 978-0-415-14216-8.
  4. Ernest Cashmore (1982). Black Sportsmen. Routledge & K. Paul. pp. 26–. ISBN 978-0-7100-9054-6.
  5. Tim Harris (30 June 2009). Sport: Almost Everything You Ever Wanted to Know. Random House. pp. 232–. ISBN 978-1-4090-7810-4.

Further reading

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