Fred Tootell
Frederick Delmont "Fred" Tootell (September 9, 1902 – September 29, 1964) was an American athlete who competed mainly in the hammer throw. He competed for the United States in the 1924 Summer Olympics held in Paris in the hammer throw where he won the gold medal.
Career and legacy
Though he attended medical school at Tufts University for a brief period of time, he enrolled at Bowdoin College before the 1924 Olympics. After Irish-born athletes had won the gold in the hammer throw for the United States for five straight Olympics, Tootell became the first American-born athlete to do so. Beginning in 1925, he began a 30-year-long coaching career at the University of Rhode Island. Today, the school's aquatic sports complex bears his name, and his home, the Tootell House, in Kingston, Rhode Island is on the National Register of Historic Places.
References
External links
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| 1876-1878 New York Athletic Club |
- 1876: William Curtis
- 1877: George Parmly
- 1878: William Curtis
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| 1879-1888 - NAAAA |
- 1879: James McDermott
- 1880: William Curtis
- 1881-2: Frank Lambrecht
- 1883: Wilson Coudon
- 1884-5: Frank Lambrecht
- 1886: Wilson Coudon
- 1887: Charles Queckberner
- 1888Note 1: Frank Lambrecht
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| 1888-1979 Amateur Athletic Union | |
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| 1980-1992 The Athletics Congress | |
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| 1993-onwards USA Track & Field | |
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| Notes |
- Note 1: In 1888 both the NAAAA and the AAU held championships
- OT: The 1920, 1928, 1932, 1992, 1996, 2000, 2004, 2008 and 2012 championships incorporated the Olympic Trials, otherwise held as a discrete event.
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