BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY Silvio Cator
Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Men’s athletics | ||
Competitor for Haiti | ||
Olympic Games | ||
Silver | 1928 Amsterdam | Long jump |
Sylvio or Silvio Paul Cator (October 9, 1900 – July 21, 1952)[1][2] was a Haitian athlete most successful in the long jump.
Born in Cavaillon, Haiti, Cator was a footballer who played for the Trivoli Athletic Club and the Racing Club Haitien. He participated in the1924 Summer Olympics in Paris in the high jump, where he finished 15th, and the long jump, where he came in 12th. In the 1928 Summer Olympics in Amsterdam he won a silver medal in the long jump.[3] His 7.58 m effort was 16 cm short of gold (Edward Hamm). A month later, on September 9, 1928, Sylvio Cator broke Edward Hamm's two-month-old world record with a 7.93 m jump at the 1924 Olympic stadium near Paris. He participated one more time in the long jump at the 1932 games in Los Angeles, where he took the 9th place.
To this present day, his silver medal is the best result of a Haitian athlete in the Olympics, with only one further (bronze) medal for the Haitian free rifle team in the 1924 Olympics. His world record long jump is still (2009) the Haitian national record and, with 79 years, the oldest standing national record in athletics.
In 1946 Cator was elected Mayor of Port-au-Prince.[4] Stade Sylvio Cator, a multi-use stadium in that city, was named after him and was finished in the year of his death in Port-au-Prince. In 1958, Haiti issued a series of seven stamps commemorating Cator's Olympic medal and world record 30 years before.
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