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Use the menu below to read our biographies of the century's greatest sportswomen
and then tell us who you think should be No. 1. Also, be sure to check out our expanded home page and our new issue which is on newsstands now.
73. Alice Coachman, Track and
Field
1922-
First African-American woman to win an Olympic gold
medal
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Coachman reigned supreme in the high jump. AP |
Alice Coachman was born in Albany, Ga. in 1922. One of 10 children, she was a
talented athlete from an early age, no small feat considering that
African-Americans were excluded from all organized athletic activities in
Southern YMCAs and schools. Coachman trained for sprint events on dirt roads and
in fields, and practiced the high jump barefoot at a neighborhood playground. At
16, she received a scholarship to the Tuskegee Institute. Coachman was the
national high jump champion for 10 years (1939 to '48) though her chances to win
an Olympic medal were slimmed due to the cancellation of the 1940 and '44 Games
because of World War II. At the 1948 London Games, Coachman's jump of 5' 6"
earned her the gold. As the first African-American woman to win an Olympic
event, she was feted with parades and also given the opportunity to meet Charles
de Gaulle, Harry Truman and Eleanor Roosevelt. Count Basie even threw a party
for her in New York. She retired from track after the 1948 Olympics, earned a
degree from Albany State college and later worked as a teacher and track coach.
In 1994, she created the Alice Coachman Track and Field Foundation to help young
athletes pursue their dreams and former Olympians adjust to life after the
games.
They said it: "I never thought I'd be famous for running
track."
--Coachman
-- Susan
Brody
Athletes were selected by Sports Illustrated For Women, Sports Illustrated and
CNN/SI editors, writers and correspondents who considered the athletes' on-field
performance and achievements, plus their contributions to women's sports.
Because athletic achievement was a key criterion, women whose contributions were
made solely in administration and coaching are not
included.

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