Databac

Jesse Owens.

Publié le 06/12/2021

Extrait du document

Ci-dessous un extrait traitant le sujet : Jesse Owens.. Ce document contient 306 mots. Pour le télécharger en entier, envoyez-nous un de vos documents grâce à notre système d’échange gratuit de ressources numériques ou achetez-le pour la modique somme d’un euro symbolique. Cette aide totalement rédigée en format pdf sera utile aux lycéens ou étudiants ayant un devoir à réaliser ou une leçon à approfondir en : Echange
Jesse Owens.
Jesse Owens (1913-1980), one of the greatest track-and-field athletes of all time. He was born James Cleveland Owens on September 12, 1913, in a small town in
Alabama, the son of a sharecropper. The young Owens was called J.C. as a child, and later, after the family moved to Cleveland, Ohio, a teacher heard his name as
"Jesse" and wrote it down. He remained Jesse Owens for the rest of his life.
Owens competed in interscholastic track meets while attending high school, excelling in the running broad jump, the 100-yd dash, and the 220-yd dash. After high
school he studied at Ohio State University. As a member of the university's track squad in 1935, he established a world record of 26 ft 8?in. for the running broad
jump; the next year he set a new world record of 10.2 sec for the 100-m dash.
In the 11th Olympic Games, held in Berlin, Germany, in August 1936, Owens won four gold medals for the United States. He won the 100-m dash in 10.3 sec, equaling
the Olympic record; set a new Olympic and world record of 20.7 sec in the 200-m dash; and won the running broad jump with a leap of 26 ft 5? in., setting a new
Olympic record. He was also a member of the U.S. 400-m relay team that year, which set a new Olympic and world record of 39.8 sec. Despite Owens's outstanding
athletic performance, German leader Adolf Hitler refused to acknowledge his Olympic victories because Owens was black.
Owens went on to play an active role in youth athletic programs and later established his own public relations firm. His autobiography, The Jesse Owens Story, was
published in 1970. Owens died on March 31, 1980, in Tucson, Arizona.

Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

↓↓↓ APERÇU DU DOCUMENT ↓↓↓

Liens utiles