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John Macionis

John Macionis
Personal information
Full name John Joseph Macionis
National team  United States
Born (1916-05-27)May 27, 1916
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Died February 16, 2012(2012-02-16) (aged 95)
Charlottesville, Virginia
Sport
Sport Swimming
Strokes Freestyle
College team Yale University

John Joseph Macionis (May 27, 1916 – February 16, 2012) was an American competition swimmer who represented the United States at the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin.

The family pronounces its name "mə-SHOH-nis". Born in Philadelphia, Macionis swam for Big Brothers, Germantown Y.M.C.A., and Central High School, where he captained the swim team and set a world's record in the 200-yard freestyle in 1933. He spent the next year at Mercersburg Academy ('34), where he swam under the famous coach John "King" Miller (1924–1953), and set two additional national freestyle records: According to school legend – as reported in the Mercersburg Magazine in Summer 2008 – it was Macionis who gave Coach Miller the nickname "King". Continuing his swimming career at Yale University ('38), he swam under their legendary coach Bob Kiputh.

Macionis was interviewed for the Mercersburg Academy oral history project in 2008 and vividly recalled his single year at the academy. John said he was the son of working class Lithuanian immigrants, who, in the midst of the Great Depression, could not afford the cost of tuition at the private boarding school. However, "I was able to go to Mercersburg because the people at Big Brothers thought I was a good kid" and academy swim coach John Miller wanted Macionis on his team: “And the head of the board, who was a Princeton man, said that it would be wonderful if someone from Big Brothers went to a good college. So they came up with $200 for Mercersburg. The minimum for Mercersburg was $400 at the time, but John Miller talked to the headmaster (Dr. Boyd Edwards) about my background.” Eventually, because Dr. Edwards was so impressed with John, the fee was reduced, and Mercersburg gained one of the greatest athletes in its history. The transition from Philadelphia's Central High School to Mercersburg was not easy: “I had to take all the College Board subjects and I flunked them all. No one at Central had even heard of the College Boards.” Macionis said all he did in the 1933–34 academic year was swim and study, doing both well enough to gain acceptance at Yale University and, soon after, to win a spot on Yale's championship swim team.


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