Johnson in 1936
Cornelius Cooper "Corny" Johnson (August 28, 1913 – February 15, 1946) was an American athlete in the high jump . Born in Los Angeles in 1913, Johnson first competed in organized track and field events at Berendo Junior High School. He achieved greater athletic success as a student at Los Angeles High School , competing in the sprint and in the high jump . Before going to the Olympics as a junior, he won the CIF California State Meet in 1932. He had been second the year before.[ 1] In 2016, the 1936 Olympic journey of the eighteen Black American athletes, including Johnson, was documented in the film Olympic Pride, American Prejudice .[ 2]
Track and field
At the Los Angeles Olympics in 1932 , Johnson, who was then an 18-year-old high school student, placed fourth in the high jump under the existing tiebreaker rules. Had the current rules been in force, he would have won the silver medal .[ 3]
He won the high jump at the State Meet in 1932 and 1933.[ 1] During 1934-? Johnson attended Compton College and with coach Herschel Smith continued his high jump career.
His technique was described as a panther-like western roll. At the 1936 U.S. Olympic Trials , Johnson set the world record at 6 ft 93 ⁄4 in (2.07 m). After the bar was remeasured and everybody celebrated, Dave Albritton equalled Johnson's record.[ 4]
In 1936 Johnson was one of 19 African Americans at the Berlin Olympics , where he won the gold . Johnson's winning height of 2.03m was an Olympic record and he tried unsuccessfully for the world record .
Johnson was the co-holder of the outdoor world record for the high jump for the year 1936-37 and won eight career U.S. titles (five outdoor, three indoor).
After retiring from the high jump, he became a letter carrier for the U.S. Post Office in Los Angeles, and in 1945 he joined the U.S. Merchant Marine .
Johnson is a member of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity.[ 5]
In 1946, while working as a ship's baker on board the Grace Line's "Santa Cruz," Johnson developed bronchopneumonia . En route from the ship to a California hospital, Corny Johnson died, aged 32.
Cornelius Johnson was inducted into the USA Track and Field Hall of Fame in 1994, and the California Community Colleges Track and Field Hall of Fame in 1998.
Championships
1932 Olympics: High Jump (4th)
1936 Olympics: High Jump – 2.03 m (1st)
1932 AAU: High Jump (=1st)
1933 AAU: High Jump (1st)
1934 AAU: High Jump (=1st)
1935 AAU: High Jump (1st)
1936 AAU: High Jump (=1st)
References
^ a b "California State Meet Results - 1915 to present" .
^ Henderson, Odie (August 5, 2016). "Olympic Pride, American Prejudice movie review (2016)" . RogerEbert.com . Retrieved April 11, 2021 .
^ Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill ; et al. "Corny Johnson" . Olympics at Sports-Reference.com . Sports Reference LLC . Archived from the original on April 17, 2020.
^ "Archived copy" (PDF) . Archived from the original (PDF) on June 20, 2012. Retrieved June 18, 2015 .{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
^ "Alpha Athletes at the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin, Germany" . Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity. Retrieved January 10, 2010 .
External links
Standing high jump High jump
1906: Herbert Gidney
1907: Harry Porter
1908: Harry Porter
1909: Harry Porter
1910: Harry Grumpelt
1911: Samuel Lawrence
1913: John Johnstone
1914: Eugene Jennings
1915: Wesley Oler
1916: Jo Loomis
1917: Jo Loomis
1918: Egon Erickson
1919: Walter Whalen
1920: Walter Whalen
1921: Richmond Landon
1922: Leroy Brown
1923: Harold Osborn
1924: Harold Osborn
1925: Harold Osborn
1926: Harold Osborn
1927: Charles W. Major
1928: Anton Burg
1929: Charles W. Major
1930: Anton Burg
1931: Anton Burg
1932: George Spitz
1933: George Spitz
1934: Walter Marty, George Spitz
1935: Cornelius Johnson
1936: Ed Burke
1937: Ed Burke
1938: Lloyd Thompson
1939: Mel Walker
1940: Arthur Byrnes
1941: Mel Walker
1942: Adam Berry, Josh Williamson
1943: Bill Vessie, Josh Williamson
1944: Dave Albritton , Bill Vessie
1945: Ken Wiesner, Josh Williamson
1946: John Vislocky
1947: John Vislocky
1948: John Vislocky
1949: Dick Phillips
1950: John Vislocky
1951: John Heintzmann, Jack Razetto, Josh Williamson
1952: Lewis Hall
1953: Lewis Hall
1954: Herman Wyatt
1955: Lewis Hall, Ernie Shelton
1956: Ernie Shelton
1957: Phil Reavis
1958: Herman Wyatt
1959: John Thomas
1960: John Thomas
1961: Valeriy Brumel (URS ) , John Thomas (2nd)
1962: John Thomas
1963: Valeriy Brumel (URS ) , John Thomas (2nd)
1964: John Thomas
1965: Valeriy Brumel (URS ) , Gene Johnson (3rd)
1966: John Thomas
1967: John Rambo
1968: Valentin Gavrilov (URS ) , Steve Kelly (2nd)
1969: John Rambo
1970: Otis Burrell
1971: Reynaldo Brown
1972: Gene White
1973: Dwight Stones
1974: Tom Woods
1975: Dwight Stones
1976: Robert Forget (CAN ) , Bill Knoedel (2nd)
1977: Paul Underwood
1978: Dwight Stones
1979: Benn Fields
1980: Franklin Jacobs
1981: Jeff Woodard
1982: Dwight Stones
1983: Tyke Peacock
1984: Dennis Lewis
1985: Jim Howard
1986: Jim Howard
1987: Igor Paklin (URS ) , Jim Howard (2nd)
1988: Igor Paklin (URS ) , Jim Howard (2nd), Tom McCants (2nd)
1989: Troy Kemp (BAH ) , Tom McCants (2nd)
1990: Hollis Conway
1991: Javier Sotomayor (CUB ) , Hollis Conway (2nd)
1992: Hollis Conway
1993: Hollis Conway
1994: Hollis Conway
1995: Tony Barton
1996: Charles Austin
1997: Charles Austin
1998: Sam Hill
1999: Henry Patterson
2000: Matt Hemingway
2001: Nathan Leeper
2002: Nathan Leeper
2003: Charles Austin
2004: Jamie Nieto
2005: Tora Harris
2006: Adam Shunk
2007: Tora Harris
2008: Andra Manson
2009: Andra Manson
2010: Jesse Williams
2011: Jesse Williams
2012: Jesse Williams
2013: Dusty Jonas
2014 : Erik Kynard
2015 : Erik Kynard
2016: Erik Kynard
2017 : Erik Kynard
2018 : Erik Kynard
2019 : Jeron Robinson
2020 : Erik Kynard
2022: JuVaughn Harrison
2023: Shelby McEwen
2024: Shelby McEwen
Notes
1876–1878New York Athletic Club 1879–1888NAAAA
1879: William Wunder
1880: Alfred Carroll
1881: C.W. Durand
1882: Alfred Carroll
1883: Malcolm Ford
1884: J.T. Rinehart
1885–87: William Page
1888Note 1 : Tim O'Connor
1888–1979Amateur Athletic Union
1888Note 1 : Daniel Webster
1889: R.K. Pritchard
1890–91: Alvah Nickerson
1892–95: Mike Sweeney
1896: Charles Powell
1897–1900: Irving Baxter
1901: Sam Jones
1902: Irving Baxter
1903-4: Sam Jones
1905: Herbert Kerrigan
1906: Neil Patterson
1907: Con Leahy
1908: Harry Porter
1909: Egon Erickson
1910: Walter Thomason
1911: Harry Grumpelt/Harry Porter
1912: John Johnstone
1913: Alma Richards
1914: Jo Loomis
1915: George Horine
1916: Wes Oler
1917: Clint Larsen
1918: Carl Rice
1919–20OT : John Murphy
1921–22: Dewey Alberts
1923: LeRoy Brown
1924: Robert Juday
1925–26: Harold Osborn
1927: Robert King
1928OT : Robert King/Charles McGinnis
1929: Henry Lassalette
1930–31: Anton Burg
1932OT : Cornelius Johnson /George Spitz/Robert van Osdel
1933: Cornelius Johnson
1934: Cornelius Johnson /Walter Marty
1935: Cornelius Johnson
1936: Cornelius Johnson /Dave Albritton
1937: Dave Albritton
1938: Mel Walker/Dave Albritton
1939–40: Les Steers
1941: Bill Stewart
1942: Adam Berry
1943: Pete Watkins
1944: Fred Sheffield/Willard Smith
1945: Dave Albritton /Lester Howe/Richard Schnacke/Joshua Williamson
1946–47: Dave Albritton
1948: Tom Schofield
1949: Dick Phillips
1950: Dave Albritton /Jack Heitzman/Jack Razzeto/Virgil Severns
1951: Lewis Hall
1952–53: Walt Davis
1954: Ernie Shelton
1955: Charles Dumas /Ernie Shelton
1956–59: Charles Dumas
1960: John Thomas
1961: Bob Avant
1962: John Thomas
1963: Gene Johnson
1964: Ed Caruthers
1965–67: Otis Burrell
1968: Ed Hanks
1969: Otis Burrell
1970–71: Reynaldo Brown
1972: Barry Schur
1973–74: Dwight Stones
1975: Tom Woods
1976–78: Dwight Stones
1979: Franklin Jacobs
1980–1992The Athletics Congress
1980: Franklin Jacobs
1981: Tyke Peacock
1982: Milt Ottey
1983: Dwight Stones
1984: Jim Howard
1985: Brian Stanton
1986: Doug Nordquist
1987: Jerome Carter
1988: Doug Nordquist
1989: Brian Brown
1990–92OT : Hollis Conway
1993-onwardsUSA Track & Field Notes
Note 1: In 1888 both the NAAAA and the AAU held championships
OT: The 1920, 1928, 1932 and since 1992, championships incorporated the Olympic Trials, otherwise held as a discrete event.
2020 OT: The 2020 Olympic Trials were delayed and held in 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic .
Qualification Men's track and road athletes
Ed Ablowich (r)
Percy Beard
Bill Carr
Bill Chisholm
Ernest Crosbie
Frank Crowley
Glenn Cunningham
Glen Dawson
Daniel Dean
Hector Dyer (r)
Ben Eastman
Ivan Fuqua (r)
Edwin Genung
James Gordon
Lou Gregory
Norwood Hallowell
Glenn Hardin
Joe Healey
James Henigan
Ralph Hill
Harry Hinkel
Chuck Hornbostel
Jack Keller
Bob Kiesel (r)
Joe McCluskey
Ralph Metcalfe
Albert Michelsen
Hans Oldag
Tom Ottey
Eino Pentti
Walter Pritchard
Paul Rekers
George Saling
George Simpson
Morgan Taylor
Eddie Tolan
Emmett Toppino (r)
Edwin Turner
Karl Warner (r)
Frank Wykoff (r)
Men's field athletes
John Anderson
Dick Barber
Lee Bartlett
Jim Bausch
Sidney Bowman
Wilson Charles
Kenneth Churchill
Clyde Coffman
Frank Conner
Sol Furth
Ed Gordon
Bill Graber
Nelson Gray
George Jefferson
Paul Jessup
Cornelius Johnson
Henri LaBorde
Grant McDougall
Malcolm Metcalf
Bill Miller
Lambert Redd
Rolland Romero
Harlow Rothert
Leo Sexton
George Spitz
Bob Van Osdel
Pete Zaremba
Women's track athletes Women's field athletes Non-competing relay pool members Coaches
Lawson Robertson (men's head coach)
Eddie Farrell (men's assistant coach)
Harry Hillman (men's assistant coach)
Jack Magee (men's assistant coach)
George Vreeland (women's coach)
Qualification Men's track and road athletes Men's field athletes Women's track athletes Women's field athletes Non-competing relay pool members Coaches
Lawson Robertson (men's head coach)
Dean Cromwell (men's assistant coach)
Brutus Hamilton (men's assistant coach)
Billy Hayes (men's assistant coach)
Dee Boeckmann (women's coach)
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