Arts & Culture

Stanisława Walasiewicz

American athlete
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Also known as: Stefania Walasiewicz, Stella Walsh
Original name:
Stefania Walasiewicz
Also called:
Stella Walsh
Born:
April 3, 1911, Rypin, Poland
Died:
December 4, 1980, Cleveland, Ohio, U.S. (aged 69)
Awards And Honors:
Olympic Games

Stanisława Walasiewicz (born April 3, 1911, Rypin, Poland—died December 4, 1980, Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.) was a Polish-American athlete who, during an unusually long career (over 20 years), won two Olympic medals and some 40 Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) championships and was credited with nearly a dozen world records in women’s running and jumping events. While on a shopping trip in 1980, she was tragically caught in the crossfire of an attempted robbery. This incident confirmed the suspicions of some of Walasiewicz’s opponents and cast doubt on the legitimacy of her medals and records.

Walasiewicz moved to the United States at the age of two and lived in Cleveland, Ohio. In 1930 she became the first woman to run the 100-yard dash in less than 11 seconds. Competing for Poland at the 1932 Olympic Games in Los Angeles, she tied a world record while winning the 100-metre dash and finished sixth in the discus throw. At the 1936 Olympics in Berlin, again racing in the 100-metre dash for Poland, she finished second to her American rival Helen Stephens.

MOSCOW, RUSSIA - AUGUST 17: Usain Bolt runs at the World Athletics Championships on August 17, 2013 in Moscow
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In the 100-yard dash Walasiewicz equaled her 1930 world record of 10.8 seconds several times, 8 times officially and 12 times unofficially. She set an indoor world record of 7.2 seconds in the 60-yard dash in 1934 and set a world long-jump record of 6.04 m (19 feet 9.75 inches) in 1938. Her 23.6-second 200-metre dash in 1935 was the longest-lasting world record in women’s track races, for it was not broken until the 1952 Olympics in Helsinki. Walasiewicz obtained U.S. citizenship in 1947 and continued to compete in track-and-field meets, winning her final AAU title in 1951, in the long jump.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.