Personal information | |
---|---|
Nickname(s) | Dutch |
Born | June 22, 1915 Long Beach, California |
Died | November 13, 2001 Fresno, California |
(aged 86)
Height | 6 ft (183 cm) |
Weight | 170 lb (77 kg) |
Sport | |
Country | United States |
Sport | Track & Field |
Event(s) | Pole vault |
Updated on 1 June 2015. |
Cornelius ("Dutch") Warmerdam (June 22, 1915 – November 13, 2001) was an American track & field athlete and long-time pole vault world record holder who is considered to be among the all-time greatest vaulters. He is an inductee of the International Association of Athletics Federations' Hall of Fame.
Warmerdam was born in Long Beach, California, the son of Dutch emigrants Adrianus and Gertrude Warmerdam. He grew up in Hanford, California. Because of his ancestry he was more commonly known to both friends and, later, to the media as "Dutch".
Warmerdam got his start in pole vaulting in his backyard using the limb of a peach tree and landing in a pit of piled up dirt. He was discovered by the local track coach and vaulted for Hanford High School until his graduation in 1932, after which he attended and vaulted for Fresno State University.
Vaulting throughout his career with a bamboo pole, Warmerdam was the first vaulter to clear 15 feet (4.57 m), accomplishing that feat at UC Berkeley on April 13, 1940. However, that achievement was not ratified for a world record, and his later vault of 4.60 m on June 29, 1940 was the first ratified jump over 15 feet. During his career, Warmerdam vaulted 15 feet 43 times in competition, while no other vaulter cleared the mark a single time. Warmerdam surpassed the pole vault record seven times in a four-year span, and three of those marks were ratified as world records. His highest outdoor vault was 15' 7-3/4" (4.77 m), achieved at the Modesto Relays in 1942, a record which stood until 1957 when Bob Gutowski broke the mark using a metal pole. Warmerdam won the James E. Sullivan Award in 1942, but was never able to compete in the Olympics because the 1940 and 1944 games were cancelled due to World War II, and by 1948 he was coaching professionally and therefore ineligible. However he continued competing as an early practitioner of Masters athletics. He still is ranked in the world all-time top ten list in the M60 Decathlon.