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  1. Mar 18, 2015 · Betty Robinson Schwartz Bio -. As a 16-year-old high school student, Schwartz earned a place on the 1928 U.S. Olympic team by winning the 100-yard dash in tryouts. She won the gold medal in Amsterdam in 1932 in the 100-yard dash, equaling the world record, and came back after a severe accident to run on the 1936 Olympic gold medal 400-meter ...

  2. Elizabeth (Betty) Robinson Schwartz. Age: 87 became first woman to win an Olympic gold medal in track when she won the 100-meter dash in a then-world-record 12.2 seconds; injuries she sustained in a 1931 plane crash nearly ended her career; no longer able to crouch down for the sprint position, she switched to relays; won gold in 4x100m relay at 1936 games in Berlin; inducted into National ...

  3. Find a Grave Memorial ID: 152530878. Source citation. Olympian Athlete Often called Betty or Babe Was just 16 years old when she became the first woman to win a track event in an Olympic Games, capturing the 100 meters (gold) and the 4x100m (relay-team, silver) at the 1928 Games. Won the 4x100m (relay-team, gold) at the 1936 Olympics.

  4. In 1928, at age 16, Elizabeth “Betty” Robinson Schwartz became the first woman ever awarded an Olympic gold medal for track and field. A few years later, in 1931, Schwartz was in a plane crash. Mistakenly identified as dead, she was placed in the trunk of a car, and driven to the morgue where it was discovered that she was still alive but ...

  5. May 18, 1999 · Babe Robinson ran her first race on March 30, 1928, finishing second to the U.S. record holder, Helen Filkey. In her second race she equalled the world 100m record of 12.0 and then went to Newark for the Olympic Trials. At the Trials she finished second to Elta Cartwright and at the Olympics, which was only the fourth meet at which she had ever ...

  6. Nov 6, 2022 · ELIZABETH ROBINSON SCHWARTZ. The first woman to win an Olympic gold medal in track when she won the 100-meter dash in a then-world-record 12.2 seconds; injuries she sustained in a 1931 plane crash nearly ended her career; no longer able to crouch down for the sprint position, she switched to relays; won gold in 4x100m relay at 1936 games in Berlin; inducted into National Track & Field Hall of ...

  7. www.bettyrobinson.org › legacyLegacy | Mysite

    Betty Robinson grew up outside of Chicago. Born in 1911, she was a typical teenager who used the train to get to school every day. On one particular day in 1928, she was running late. Her Biology teacher, already boarding the train from the upper platform, noticed her from afar and knew that she would be late to class because there was no way ...

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