Article
2 May 2024
THEY MAY NOT HAVE MEANT MUCH TO HIM, BUT JIMMY MCLANE STILL MANAGED TO WIN FIVE OLYMPIC MEDALS, INCLUDING FOUR GOLDS
He won his first Olympic Medals (one Silver and two Gold) at the age of 17 when he took part in the 1948 Games in London before heading to Helsinki to take Gold in the 4 x 200-metre freestyle relay in 1952, setting a new Olympic record of 8 minutes 31.1 seconds with his teammates.
But to swimmer Jimmy McLane (1930-2020), the prizes came second to the experience: “Medals are important to the average person. They are not important to me. When I remember my achievements, I remember the work and training not the medal. That’s what is most valuable,” he said.
James Price McLane Jr was born in Pittsburgh and raised by a single mother in Akron, Ohio. He won a swimming scholarship to the historic Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts, as a result of winning the 4-mile open-air swim at the national Amateur Athletic Union championships in 1943.
As a student at Phillips, mentored by Robert Kiphuth (1890-1967), the legendary coach of the Yale swimming team, McLane, known as ‘Fishy’ to his friends, set national high school records in the 200-, 220- and 440-yard freestyle events.
Between his upper and senior years at Phillips McLane earned a place on the USA national team that competed at the 1948 London Olympics, where, as a 17 year old he won a silver medal in the 400-metres freestyle and gold medals in both the 4 x 200-metre freestyle relay (with team-mates Wally Ris, Wally Wolf and Bill Smith) and the 1,500-metre freestyle events; in the latter, his time of 19 minutes 18.5 seconds was almost 13 seconds ahead of the Australian John Marshall, who placed second.
His success in the water continued with Kiphuth at Yale University, where he helped the Bulldogs swimming and diving team win two National Collegiate Athletic Association championships.
In 1952 McLane returned to Olympic competition at the Helsinki Games as the captain of Team USA. He placed fourth in the 1,500-metre race and took home his final gold medal when he anchored the 4 x 200-metre freestyle relay (with team-mates Wayne Moore, Bill Woolsey and Ford Konno) setting the new Olympic record.
He retired from swimming after winning three gold medals at the 1955 Pan American Games and, in 1970, was inducted into the International Swimming Hall of Fame.
In business McLane enjoyed a distinguished career, working for Life magazine and General Mills and retiring to Ipswich, Massachusetts, where he died at the age of 90.
This sale will offer McLane’s 1952 Olympic Games silver-gilt Winner’s medal by G. Cassioli. Showing Victory seated at left, holding a wreath, and the Colosseum at right, the reverse has a male athlete carried on the shoulders of team-mates. In good to very fine condition, it is extremely rare and has an estimate of £8,000-10,000.
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