Jack Dearlove
Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Men's rowing | ||
Olympic Games | ||
Representing Great Britain | ||
1948 London | Eight | |
British Empire Games | ||
Representing England | ||
1950 Auckland | Eight |
Jack Gilroy Dearlove (5 June 1911 – 11 July 1967) was an English rower who competed as coxswain for Great Britain in the 1948 Summer Olympics.
Early life
[edit]Educated at Lynton House school in Holland Park, West London, he suffered severe injuries in a road accident aged 13 which resulted in his right leg being amputated.[1]
Sporting career
[edit]At the 1948 Summer Olympics in England he was the coxswain of the British boat which won the silver medal in the Eights, and at the 1950 Empire Games in New Zealand he won the bronze medal as cox of the English boat in the Eights competition.
Personal life
[edit]His son Richard Dearlove went into the British Civil Service, becoming the British Government's Chief of the Secret Intelligence Service, and later Master of Pembroke College, Cambridge.[1]
References
[edit]- ^ a b "The Olympic hero they kept in hiding". Daily Telegraph. 4 July 2012. Retrieved 8 January 2013.
External links
[edit]
- 1911 births
- 1967 deaths
- English male rowers
- British coxswains (rowing)
- Olympic rowers for Great Britain
- Rowers at the 1948 Summer Olympics
- Olympic silver medallists for Great Britain
- Rowers at the 1950 British Empire Games
- Commonwealth Games bronze medallists for England
- Olympic medalists in rowing
- English Olympic competitors
- Medalists at the 1948 Summer Olympics
- Commonwealth Games medallists in rowing
- Medallists at the 1950 British Empire Games
- 20th-century English sportsmen
- British Olympic medallist stubs
- English rowing biography stubs