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Jack Beresford
(IOC)
Updated: 2007-07-25 20:13

 

 

Jack Beresford

Berlin, Grünau "Langer See", 14 February 1936: Jack BERESFORD (right) and Leslie SOUTHWOOD from Great Britain, 1st in the rowing double sculls event. Credit: IOC / Olympic Museum Collections

Other names: BERESFORD JR., Jack

Born: 1 January 1899

Deceased: 3 December 1977

Birthplace: Chiswick (Great Britain)

Nationality: Great Britain

Sport: Rowing

ATTENDANCE AT THE OLYMPIC GAMES

Antwerp 1920

Paris 1924

Amsterdam 1928

Los Angeles 1932

Berlin 1936

AWARDS

Olympic medals:

Gold: 3

Silver: 2

Other results:

Commonwealth Games

Silver: 1 (1930)

Five Olympics: Five Medals

British rower Jack Beresford's five Olympics medals is an Olympic record, only recently equalled among men by Britain's Steve Redgrave. Beresford won gold medals in the single sculls (1924), coxless fours (1932) and double sculls (1936), and added silver in the single sculls (1920) and the eights (1928).

His remarkable career spanned five Olympic Games and it was almost certainly only the cancellation of the 1940 Games that prevented a sixth Olympic appearance. He was awarded the Olympic Diploma of Merit in 1949.

At Henley, he won the Diamond Sculls four times (1920 and 1924-1926), the Nickalls Challenge Cup in 1928 and 1929 (coxless pairs with Gordon Killick), and the Double Sculls Challenge Cup in 1939 with Dick Southwood. He also won the Wingfield Sculls for seven consecutive years from 1920.

Beresford rowed for the Thames, Leander, and Kingston Clubs. He later managed the British rowing team at the 1952 Olympics. His father, Julius Beresford (né Wisniewski), won an Olympic silver medal in the eights in 1912.

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