Harry Jerome: The Story of the Legendary Canadian Athlete

Harry Jerome

Harry Jerome is the greatest Canadian sprinter and one of the greatest athletes of all time. Harry Jerome is famous for making triumphant and glorious comebacks from injuries.

In honour of Harry Jerome, who was once the fastest man on Earth, the Harry Jerome International Track Classic is held every year. The legendary British Columbian athlete has inspired a generation of Canadians and has left a long lasting legacy of athletic excellence and unwavering commitment towards youth and sport. He was named as one of the 150 noteworthy British Columbians on the 150th Canada Day. Let’s find out more about Harry Winston Jerome, who once held the title of the fastest man on the planet.

Harry Jerome: All You Need to Know

When was Harry Jerome born?

Harry Jerome was born in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan, in 1940. The son of a Pullman coach attendant on the Canadian National Railway, his family moved to Vancouver when he was 12. Upon entering North Vancouver High, his teachers encouraged him to run and he joined the local track club, the Optimist Striders. His success was immediate.

Which college did Harry Jerome go to?

When he was 18, he broke Percy Williams’ 31-one-year-old record in the 220 yards and the following year ran the 100 yards in what was then the phenomenal time of 9.5 seconds. Harry was offered an athletic scholarship at the University of Oregon. It was an offer that Harry accepted as perhaps the only way of getting a higher education and continuing his athletic training at the same time – an opportunity not available at that time in Canada.

Harry Jerome: Athletics Career

When did Harry Jerome set the 100 metres world record?

Under the expert coaching of Bill Bowerman, Jerome was on his way. At a meet in Saskatoon in 1959, at the age of 19, he ran the 100 metres in 10 seconds flat. The time was later confirmed as a world record, which he shared with the German runner, Armin Harry, and which remained unbroken until the 1968 Olympics.

Harry Jerome: Olympic Debut and Injury issues

As a member of the Canadian team to the Rome Olympics of 1960, Jerome’s performance was disappointing. He pulled a muscle in the semi-final heat of the 100 metres and did not qualify for the final. At the British Commonwealth Games in Perth, Australia, in 1962, the story was repeated; Jerome had to drop out of the final in the 100 metres when he ruptured a muscle in his left thigh.

Often moody and withdrawn before a race and sensitive to any discrimination, he seemed to the media sharp-tongued and arrogant. When the injury at Perth sidelined him for nearly a year, many of his detractors expected he would never run again.

Harry Jerome: Triumphant Comeback

Despite his injury setbacks and people writing him off, Harry Jerome made an incredible comeback. In the 1964 Olympics in Tokyo, he won the bronze medal in the 100 metres. Even more amazing for a man of his age, was his performance in Edmonton in 1966 when he ran the 100-yard dash in 9.1 seconds. He was unmistakably in the world class again. This world record, which he shared with US sprinter Bob Hayes and others, stood until early 1974. Further vindication came in the British Empire and Commonwealth Games in 1966, when he won his first gold medal in a photo finish with Tom Robinson of the Bahamas. He went on to win the 100 metres at the Pan American Games the following year.

Harry Jerome: Off Track Accomplishments

Harry Winston Jerome devoted his time to the well-being of children. A remarkable athlete, his renown in athletics tends to overshadow the work he did in other areas of his life. Besides his success in the athletic arena, he was a tireless promoter of sports among young people and is among the small number of Blacks across Canada to receive the Order of Canada. Perhaps some of those his career has inspired will find it easier reaching the top because of Harry Jerome.

In the meantime, Harry Jerome had become a physical education teacher at Templeton Secondary School in Vancouver. His own experiences at international meets had convinced him of the need to provide better training and facilities to our youngsters if Canada was to compete successfully with other countries. 

What did Harry Jerome do after retiring from athletics?

It was only natural, therefore, that after his retirement from competition in 1968, Harry Jerome should become an activist in promoting track and field to youngsters in high schools. Under the aegis of the Federal Fitness and Amateur Sports Directorate he set up cross-country sports clinics. Nicknamed “Harry Jerome and His Road Company,” six of Canada’s top athletes led by Jerome traveled more than 11,000 miles, giving demonstrations and holding coaching clinics at high schools across the country.

When did Harry Jerome receive the Order of Canada?

Harry Jerome was awarded the Order of Canada – one of Canada’s highest symbols of national recognition, in 1971. During the same year, he was named Athlete of the Century by the province of British Columbia. In 1975, he founded the Premier’s Sports Awards Program, which is still being used by school districts in the province. He also sat on the BC Human Rights Commission and spent much of his time agitating for better representation of visible minorities in the media and advertisements.

How did Harry Jerome die?

Harry Jerome’s statue in Vancouver

The great Harry Jerome died a sudden death in 1982. It was caused by a brain aneurysm. He was only 42 years old at that time. In 1988, the people of British Columbia commemorated his personal accomplishment and social contribution by erecting a nine-foot statue in Stanley Park. The statue stands a few hundred metres from Brockton Oval where Jerome trained for the world records he set and the medals he won.

What is the name of Harry Jerome’s book?

While Harry Jerome did not write an autobiography, a book on his life, “Running Uphill – The Short, Fast Life of Harry Jerome ” was published in 2006.

Was there a movie made on Harry Jerome’s life?

A movie made on Harry Jerome’s life called “Mighty Jerome” in October 2010. It mainly focused on his incredible comeback from injuries.

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