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  1. Aug 3, 2012 · Betty Robinson won women's 100m gold at the 1928 Games in Amsterdam It was the first Olympics where women were allowed to compete Aged 16, Robinson became the first women's track and field gold ...

  2. Betty Robinson was an extraordinary woman, yet she retained modesty and humility despite the fame that her Olympic medals brought. Sadly, her story has been all but forgotten today. Ask most people to name a US athlete at the 1936 Olympic Games, and they will most likely mention sprinter Jesse Owens.

  3. www.bettyrobinson.org › legacyLegacy | Mysite

    But Betty Robinson was born to run. She refused to accept this prognosis and instead she vowed to run again. Bones healed, her muscles became stronger, and her mind was resolute. When the Olympic trials for the 1936 games came around she would not be able to start in a runner's crouch but she had regained her speed.

  4. www.bettyrobinson.orgHome | Mysite

    She was the first woman to win an Olympic gold medal in Track and Field. She transformed tragedy into triumph winning a second gold medal in the 1936 Olympic Games . At the age of 84, she carried the Olympic Torch as it blazed a path toward Atlanta, GA for the 1996 Olympic Games.

  5. May 18, 1999 · At the Trials she finished second to Elta Cartwright and at the Olympics, which was only the fourth meet at which she had ever competed, she beat the highly favored Canadians to take the 100m title and become America’s first woman track & field champion. On her return home, Robinson set a world record of 11.0 for 100y at Chicago in September ...

  6. Jun 9, 2020 · The second, UNBEATABLE BETTY, tells the real story of Elizabeth “BettyRobinson, who not only became the first woman to win Olympic gold for track and field, she literally came back from the dead to appear at the Olympics a second time in Hitler’s Germany.

    • Allison Crotzer Kimmel
  7. Betty Robinson: The Olympian Who 'Died' And Came Back To Win Gold. Summary by Ground News. Betty Robinson was the first U.S. woman to win a gold medal in the 100-meter dash. In 1931, she was killed in a plane crash while training for the Olympics. Robinson's story is told by Roseanne Montillo, who has researched and written about her.

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