Nora Eveline Callebout (1895 – 1995) was a British track athlete who won ten medals across two Women's World Games, a precursor to women's sports entering the Olympics and was part of the record-setting 4x110 yds relay team in 1922.
Life
Callebout graduated from Holloway College, University of London, in 1917 with a Class I BA in mathematics.[1]
At the first Women's World Games in Paris in 1922, originally called the 'Women's Olympic Games' until objections from the Olympic Committee, Callebout won six medals in track events.[2] She took bronze in the 60-metre dash, silver in the 4x100 m relay, and gold in four events: the 60m, 4x1 175 m laps, 100 yards, and the 4x110 yards.[3][4] In that event she set a world record of 51.8 seconds along with Gwendoline Porter, Daisy Leach, and team captain Mary Lines.[5]
A week after the Games, Callebout travelled to Brussels with the London Olympiades Athletic Club to compete in eight events against Femina Sports Club of Brussels and the Paris Club Femina AC. The London Olympiades dominated the match, with Callebout setting two Belgian records (10.6 seconds in the 80m and 45.4 seconds in the 300m).[6]
Returning to the second World Games in Monte Carlo in 1923, Callebout again won four golds, this time in 60m, 200m, 4x100m and 4x1 laps. In 1923, she returned to university and gained an MA.[1]
^Robinson, Lynne (1996). "'Tripping Daintily into the Arena': A Social History of English Women's Athletics 1921-1960". p. 87. doi:10.7287/peerj.preprints.1711v2/supp-3. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |url= (help)
^"The Scotsman". Girls' 100 Yards CHampionship. 5 June 1922. Retrieved 1 December 2024 – via British Newspaper Archive.