Los Angeles 1932 Olympic Games
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- Date:
- July 30, 1932 - August 14, 1932
- Location:
- California
- Los Angeles
- United States
Los Angeles 1932 Olympic Games, athletic festival held in Los Angeles that took place July 30–August 14, 1932. The Los Angeles Games were the ninth occurrence of the modern Olympic Games.
Only about 1,300 athletes, representing 37 countries, competed in the 1932 Games. The poor participation was the result of the worldwide economic depression and the expense of traveling to California. The Los Angeles Games featured the first Olympic Village, which was located in Baldwin Hills, a suburb of Los Angeles, and covered 321 acres (130 hectares). The male athletes were housed in more than 500 bungalows and had access to a hospital, a library, a post office, and 40 kitchens serving a variety of cuisines. The female athletes stayed at a downtown hotel. The Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum was expanded to seat more than 100,000 people, and a new track was installed. Made of crushed peat, the new surface was exceptionally fast, resulting in 10 world records in the running events. Uniform automatic timing and the photo-finish camera were used for the first time at the 1932 Games.
The star of the Games was American Babe Didrikson (later Zaharias). She had won five events at the U.S. Olympic trials, but Olympic rules allowed women to compete in no more than three. Didrikson competed in the 80-meter hurdles, javelin, and high jump, winning two gold medals and a silver. The U.S. team returned to its dominance of the track-and-field events, winning 11 gold medals. American Eddie Tolan won the 100- and 200-meter runs. The first race-walking event was held at the Los Angeles Games. See also Sidebar: Stanislawa Walasiewicz: The Curious Story of Stella Walsh.
- United States: 110
- Italy: 36
- Finland: 25
- Sweden: 24
- Germany: 24
Note: Medal counts per the IOC website.
The Japanese swim team, composed almost entirely of teenagers, won five of the six men’s events. Kitamura Kusuo, who won the gold medal in the 1,500-meter freestyle at age 14, became the youngest male swimmer ever to win an Olympic event. American women dominated in swimming, taking four of the five gold medals; Helene Madison won gold medals in the 100- and 400-meter freestyle races and earned a third gold as part of the U.S. relay team.