1948 SUMMER OLYMPICS


The '1948 Summer Olympics', officially known as the 'Games of the XIV Olympiad', were held in 1948 at Wembley Stadium in London, England. After a hiatus of 12 years caused by the outbreak of World War II, these were the first Summer Olympics to be held since the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin. The 1940 Games had been scheduled for Tokyo, and later Helsinki as WWII started; the 1944 Games had been provisionally planned for London.

Contents
Highlights
Venues
Medals awarded
Demonstration sports
Participating nations
Medal count
See also
External links

Highlights



★ With World War II in recent memory, Germany and Japan were not invited to the Games.

★ Dutch runner Fanny Blankers-Koen was the star of the Games, winning four gold medals on the track.

Fencer Ilona Elek (Hungary) and canoeist Jan Brzak (Czechoslovakia) successfully defended their Olympic titles they had won 12 years earlier.

★ In field hockey, India and Pakistan first participated as independent nations, and the homeland of the sport, Great Britain, played the triple Olympic champions from India for the first time and lost.

★ For the first time, Olympic diplomas were awarded to the six highest placed athletes.

★ In a dramatic finish in the marathon, Belgian Étienne Gailly entered the stadium first, but was so physically drained that he could barely walk around the track. Two men passed him before he finally crossed the line.

Duncan White of Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) won the first medal for his country, a silver, in the 400 meter hurdles.

Harold Sakata, who won a silver medal in weightlifting, later went on to portray Oddjob in the James Bond film Goldfinger.

Sweden, led by the Gre-No-Li trio, beat Yugoslavia 3-1 in the final to win the football tournament.

★ In the sprint athletics events the starting block was first introduced.

★ In the star class yachting events 2 father-son group competitors won gold and silver, Hilary and Paul Smart of the USA and Carlos de Cardenas and Carlos de Cardenas jr. of Cuba

Venues


Poster promoting the 1948 Olympics


★ Wembley Empire Exhibition Grounds


Empire Stadium - opening and closing ceremonies, athletics, football finals, hockey finals


Empire Pool - swimming, boxing


★ Palace of Engineering - fencing

★ Other Venues


Empress Hall, Earl's Court - boxing preliminaries, wrestling, weightlifting, gymnastics


Harringay Arena, Harringay - basketball


Royal Regatta Course, Henley-on-Thames - canoeing, rowing


Herne Hill Velodrome, Herne Hill - track cycling


Windsor Great Park - cycling road race


★ Central Stadium, Aldershot Military Headquarters - equestrian


★ Tweseldown Racecourse - equestrian


Arsenal Stadium, Highbury - football preliminaries


Selhurst Park - football preliminaries


Craven Cottage, Fulham - football preliminaries


★ Ilford - football preliminaries


Griffin Park - football preliminaries


Champion Hill, Dulwich - football preliminaries


Green Pond Road Stadium, Walthamstow - football preliminaries


White Hart Lane, Tottenham - football preliminaries


★ Lyons' Sports Club, Sudbury - hockey preliminaries


★ Guinness Sports Club, Park Royal - hockey preliminaries


★ Polytechnic Sports Ground, Chiswick- hockey preliminaries


National Rifle Association Ranges, Bisley - shooting


★ Finchley Pool, Finchley - water polo preliminaries


English Channel, Torbay - yachting


Goldstone Ground, Brighton - football preliminaries

Medals awarded


See the medal winners, ordered by sport:

Athletics
Basketball
Boxing
Canoeing
Cycling
Diving
Equestrian

Fencing
Football
Gymnastics
Hockey
Modern pentathlon
Rowing

Sailing
Shooting
Swimming
Water polo
Weightlifting
Wrestling

Demonstration sports


Lacrosse

Swedish gymnastics

Participating nations


participants

A total of 59 nations sent athletes to compete at the London Games. Fourteen nations made their first official Olympic appearance at these Games: British Guiana (now Guyana), Burma (now Myanmar), Ceylon (now Sri Lanka), Iran, Iraq, Jamaica, Korea, Lebanon, Pakistan, Puerto Rico, Singapore, Syria, Trinidad and Tobago, and Venezuela.




























































Medal count


These are the top ten nations that won medals at these Games. The host nation's team ''Great Britain'' was 12th in the medal rankings, with 3 gold and 23 total medals.
1 38271984
2 16111744
3 1061329
4 1051227
5 811827
6 87520
7 64212
8 62311
9 510520
10 57820

See also



International Olympic Committee

IOC country codes

External links



IOC Site on 1948 Summer Olympics

Exploring 20th century London - 1948 Olympics Objects and photographs from the collections of the Museum of London, London Transport Museum, Jewish Museum and Museum of Croydon.

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