1939 AAA Championships
Appearance
1939 AAA Championships | |
---|---|
Dates | 7–8 July 1939 |
Host city | London, England |
Venue | White City Stadium |
Level | Senior |
Type | Outdoor |
Events | 25 |
← 1938 1946 → |
The 1939 AAA Championships was the 1939 edition of the annual outdoor track and field competition organised by the Amateur Athletic Association (AAA). It was held from 7 to 8 July 1939 at White City Stadium in London, England. The attendance was 20,300.[1][2]
Summary
[edit]The Championships consisted of 25 events and covered two days of competition.
It was the last championships to be held for six years following the outbreak of World War II shortly after the 1939 championships. The 1939 competitors Arthur Sweeney and Julien Saelens were among those to lose their lives during the war.
Jack Emery broke the British record when winning the 3 miles event and Sydney Wooderson won his fifth consecutive 1 mile event.
Results
[edit]Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
100 yards | Arthur Sweeney | 9.9 | Cyril Holmes | inches | ![]() |
2 ft |
220 yards | Cyril Holmes | 21.9 | Arthur Sweeney | 1 ft | ![]() |
1 ft |
440 yards | Alan Pennington | 48.8 | Henry Pack | 49.4 | Rowland Palmer | 49.9 |
880 yards | Godfrey Brown | 1:55.1 | John Moreton | 1:55.1 | Austin Littler | 1:55.4 |
1 mile | Sydney Wooderson | 4:11.8 | Denis Pell | 4:12.0 | Arthur Collyer | 4:15.0 |
3 miles | Jack Emery | 14:08.0 BR | Peter Ward | 14:08.6 | Aubrey Reeve | 14:11.6 |
6 miles | ![]() |
30:06.4 | Reginald Walker | 30:09.4 | ![]() |
30:40.4 |
10 miles | ![]() |
51:56.0 | Lawrence Weatherill | 52:25.2 | Charles Carter | 52:54.0 |
marathon | ![]() |
2:35:37.0 | Squire Yarrow | 2:37:50.0 | ![]() |
2:44:01.0 |
steeplechase | ![]() |
10:22.4 | Anthony Etheridge | 10:29.0 | ![]() |
10:36.6 |
120y hurdles | ![]() |
14.7 | Thomas Lockton | ½ yd | Frederick Scopes | 4-8 yd |
440y hurdles | ![]() |
54.9 | ![]() |
2½-4 yd | Rowland Palmer | 6-7 yd |
2 miles walk | Harry Churcher | 13:50.0 | Bert Cooper | 14:05.4 | Hew Neilson | 14:11.2 |
7 miles walk | Harry Churcher | 52:37.0 | Eddie Staker | 53:31.4 | Joe Coleman | 54:32.2 |
high jump | John Lunn Newman | 1.880 | Hubert Stubbs | 1.829 | ![]() ![]() |
1.829 |
pole vault | Dick Webster | 3.73 | Douglas Redsull | 3.66 | ![]() |
3.50 |
long jump | William Breach | 7.21 | Harry Askew | 7.14 | Harry Lister | 7.13 |
triple jump | ![]() |
15.03 | ![]() |
14.58 | F. Whalston | 13.95 |
shot put | ![]() |
14.79 | Robert Howland | 13.74 | ![]() |
13.35 |
discus throw | ![]() |
49.12 | ![]() |
42.38 | ![]() |
41.76 |
hammer throw | ![]() |
49.28 | Norman Drake | 46.76 | ![]() |
44.19 |
javelin throw | ![]() |
56.88 | E. W. Hibbard | 50.64 | Charles A. Melchior | 50.01 |
Tug of war (catchweight) | ![]() |
Sharlston West Colliery | Royal Army Service Corps (Feltham) | |||
Tug of war (110st) | ![]() |
Royal Army Service Corps (Feltham) | ||||
440 yards relay | Blackheath Harriers | 43.4sec | Herne Hill Harriers | inches | Polytechnic Harriers | 2 yd |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Athletics". Birmingham Daily Post. 8 July 1939. Retrieved 13 July 2024 – via British Newspaper Archive.
- ^ "British Athletic Prestige enhanced in AAA Championships". Birmingham Daily Gazette. 10 July 1939. Retrieved 13 July 2024 – via British Newspaper Archive.
- ^ "AAA, WAAA and National Championships Medallists". National Union of Track Statisticians. Retrieved 13 July 2024.