'Wyndham Halswelle' (
May 30,
1882 –
March 31,
1915) was a
Scottish athlete, winner of the controversial 400
m run at the
1908 Summer Olympics.
Born in
London to London-born,
Edinburgh-trained artist Keeley Halswelle and Helen Marianna Elizabeth Gordon, he strongly identified with the
Scottish nationality of his maternal grandfather, General Nathaniel J. Gordon. Wyndham Halswelle had a notable athletic career at
Charterhouse School and the RC Sandhurst, before being commissioned into the
Highland Light Infantry. Halswelle's ability was recognised while the regiment was in
South Africa, where he participated in the
Second Boer War, but it was not until he returned to Britain in
1904 that he took up athletics seriously.
In
1905 he won the Scottish and
AAA 440
yard (402 m) titles, and a year later, in the
Athens Intercalated Olympics, he achieved a silver medal in the 400 metres and a bronze in the 800 metres. On his return to Scotland he came first in the 100, 220, 440 and 880 yard races (91, 201, 402, 805 m) - all on the same afternoon - at the Scottish championships. His season was cut short by a leg injury in
1907, but he came back the following year to set a world record of 31.2 for 300 yards (274 m).
He reached the final of the 400 metres at the
1908 Summer Olympics with the fastest qualifying time (an Olympic record 48.4 seconds). As Halswelle and the other three runners (all American) came into the final stretch,
William Robbins was first, followed by
John C. Carpenter, with Wyndham Halswelle coming in third, followed by
John Taylor. As Carpenter and Halswelle swung out to pass Robbins, umpire Roscoe Badger shouted "Foul!". Though Carpenter finished first, with Robbins in second and Halswelle in third, the British officials accused Carpenter of blocking Halswelle and voided the whole race. Picture evidence of the race indeed indicates Carpenter blocked Halswelle. While blocking was allowed under US rules at the time, the Olympic race was conducted under stricter, British rules. The race was ordered to be rerun in lanes without Carpenter, but since the American runners refused to redo the race, Halswelle ran the race all by himself to win the gold. It is the only occasion in Olympic history where the final was a walk-over. As a result of the controversy, from the next Olympics in
1912 onwards all 400 meter races were run in lanes, and the
International Amateur Athletic Federation was founded to establish uniform worldwide rules for athletics.
Wyndham Halswelle made a farewell appearance at the
1908 Glasgow Rangers Sports and never ran again. Captain Wyndham Halswelle was killed by a
sniper's bullet at the
Battle of Neuve Chapelle in
France, during
World War I.
References
★
The Fourth Olympiad, Being the Official Report, , Theodore Andrea, Cook, British Olympic Association, 1908,
★
Athletics 1908
★
Wyniki Igrzysk Olimpijskich