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Doctor Pat as he was affectionately known in his native Duhallow,
was born on the 28th of January 1907 at Derrygallon, 3 miles south
west of Kanturk town. Pat was the third and youngest son of
Paddy O'Callaghan
and Jane Healy.
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GOLD
Dr Pat O'Callaghan
- Hammer Amsterdam 1928
Dr Pat O'Callaghan
- Hammer Los Angeles, 1932
Bob Tisdall -
400m hurdles Los Angeles, 1932 |
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Doctor Pat's mother
was Jane Healy, eldest daughter of John Healy and Julia Vaughan of
Cloonteens, Castlemagner. Her brother Tim was a National Sprint
champion and played on the 1893 Cork/Dromtariffe football team. Jane
was of average height and build with a quiet competent manner. A
qualified Nurse, she was also Midwife for the district. She ran the
family with a firm hand and was a resolute damper on the wild and
vigorous nature of her boys. Her priority was their education and
she tolerated their sporting activity only in so far as it did not
interfere with study. A quiet maternal pride was evident only in her
glittering Trophy Room where their cups, medals and other prizes
were on show for very special visitors.
Her eldest son Sean
was known locally as Jack Lissie in accordance with the tradition in
the family. He took after his mother's people and had a blockier
build than the other two. He was a hardy boy on and off the football
field and a fine athlete whose successes included a National
440yards Hurdles title. On leaving school, he was kept at home and
in due course he inherited the family farm. He also inherited his
father's flair for salmon-poaching and lost three fingers of his
right hand when dynamiting a kill hole in the Arrigle river.
The middle son Con
was the lightest of the three and experts rated him the best one of
the Callaghans . After college he served in the Garda Siochana
before purchasing the Bantry Bay Hotel in Bantry. He was a natural
athlete and excelled as a runner, jumper and thrower. A renowned
Decathlete, in his career he won championships embracing almost
every discipline.
Pat, the youngest
son, was the tallest and heaviest of the brothers. He was a
precocious child and entered Derrygallon National School at the
infant age of 2 years and 4 months. His passions were hunting,
poaching and playing football in nearby Cronin's Field.
The spell of
athletics was cast for him by the exploits of the colourful Denis
Horgan at Banteer Open Sports. Pat progressed to secondary school in
Kanturk and at the age of 15 won a scholarship to the famed
Patrician Academy in Mallow. He matriculated and passed the entrance
examination for the Royal College of Surgeons when just over 16
years old. During his year in the Academy he daily cycled the
32-mile round trip from Derrygallon and never missed a class. A
brilliant scholar, he also represented the Academy in Colleges
sports.
In
the red Banteer AC vest he was a feared and popular competitor in
local Parish Sports and in Open Sports within a bicycle-range 30
mile radius. He selected his events according to the value of the
prizes, taking account of the ever-vigilant handicappers and the
designs of the opposition. Local opposition was strong - siblings
Jack and Con, the Guiney brothers of Kanturk, John Joe Horgan of
Pallas (Castlemagner) and Connie Sullivan of Cloonteens (a future
National High Jump champion), were always lurking for a kill. The
cut-glass tableware, teapots and household items that Pat won
were usually sold
on the way home to pay for books, fees and other expenses.
From an early age
he made friendships with his mother's relatives in and around
Castlemagner that he was to cherish all his life. The family farm of
her cousin Lizzie Donoghue nee Healy in Knockardsharrive was a
favourite hit for holidays that offered a heady mixture of sport,
farm-work and youthful companionship. His other close associates
were the Ludgates from nearby Rathnee, keen weight-throwers of
national championship standing.
He was a legendary
centre-forward and midfielder on the Dromtariffe Football team-
displaying his father's qualities of great passion and physical
presence on the field. He also played at full-forward on the
Castlemagner hurling team. In an incident in a football match in
Cronin's Field in Derrygallon he shouldered an aggressive opponent
so hard that the airborne recipient crushed a pram parked well
beyond the sideline. Luckily, the pram was unoccupied at the time.
The local PP scolded Pat for a disgrace to the parish and chased him
off the field with an umbrella.
In Dublin, lectures
and study were always the first priority for Pat. But ever open to
new experiences, he got involved in all types of sport including
Senior club Rugby. Among his incognito exploits with the oval ball
was a penalty converted from 75 yards.
At the old UCD
sportsground in Terenure he got a first taste of Hammer-throwing and
developed an immediate interest in the event. While training for the
University Boxing championships at the Garda gym in the Coombe, he
fell in with Superintendent Dinny Carey, trainer of the Garda team.
Dinny was from Kilfinnane and introduced Pat to a golden circle of
friends. Tipperary Garda Ned Tobin was a National 56lb
Without-Follow champion and later the national record holder, whom
Pat frequently met in competition.
Paddy Ryan, a
farmer in Pallasgreen, was the World record holder for the Hammer.
The family were involved in the poultry business and had the
nickname Chicken to distinguish them from the many other Ryans in
the locality. He threw for USA at Antwerp in 1920, winning a Gold in
the Hammer with 173' 4" and a Silver in the 56lb DWF with 35' 11"
before returning to Ireland at the age of 45.
John Flanagan from
Kilmallock, in his prime the leading all-round athlete in the world,
was another friend. At one time he held World records in seven
events. Before 1900, under the rules of the lethal Unlimited Run and
Follow he moved the Hammer record 14 times to over 185 feet. Tom
Barry of Castlemagner, a contemporary county sprinter, described him
Flanagan "six foot and fourteen and a half stone & the ground
shaking under him people stopped to look at him & Holy Jee he was
like a tiger ! I threw him a banana to keep him quiet !" .
Exceptionally fast, John Flanagan was the first to win an Olympic
Hammer title from a 7 circle and had won 3 Olympic Gold Medals for
USA by 1908. He had also a Silver for the 56lb DWF with a cast of 33
4 at Missouri in 1904. In 1909 he introduced a 3rd turn to the
hammer-throw and set a World record at 173' 3".
Dinny Carey's
golden circle also included Matt McGrath, a Nenagh farmer and winner
of the Gold medal at Stockholm in 1912 with a throw of 179' 7". He
took his third Olympic medal for the USA with a Silver at Paris in
1924 at the age of 47.
In the fine summer
of 1926 Pat arrived in Knockardsharrive with a plan of campaign to
master the Hammer. Aided by local enthusiasts he manufactured a
hammer by boring a 1" hole through a 16lb Shot and filling it with
the ballbearing-ed core of a bicycle pedal to release torque from
the rigid bar-wire handle. The core was secured in lead which also
provided for adjustment of the weight.
He set out a
throwing circle in the Front Field and with the determination and
total concentration that was his trademark, he worked-up his new
technique. It was an exhilarating time for all concerned as the
assembly came in for rough handling, frequently breaking to threaten
nearby life and limb and involving many tedious searches in heavy
summer undergrowth for the elusive ball.
The
training was regularly interrupted for farm work interspersed with
impromptu cross-country
races, fiercely
contested over hedges and 5-bar gates for the exhilaration of
competition. When he introduced quantities of raw eggs and bloody
raw steak to his diet, the charm of his deep blue eyes and shock of
fair hair was not enough to offset the disgust of the women of the
household. Pat also travelled to Limerick to work with Paddy
'Chicken' Ryan whose 1913 World Record of 189' 6" he would later
exceed but which officially was to stand for 25 years until broken
by Ernst Blask of Germany with a throw of 193' 6" in 1938.
Returning to
Dublin, Pat came to prominence on the national athletics scene when
he won the Hammer championship of 1927 with a modest throw of 142'
3" . At that time premier national athletics events took place in
June/July in the Phoenix Park - the Garda Sports, the National
Championships and the quatrenniel Tailteann Games. Cork City had the
best track and field arena in the country and hosted the popular
Cork City Drapers Sports and international athletics matches.
Premier meetings were attended by all the top athletes and by huge
partisan crowds of 10,000 and more, wildly encouraging their heroes
of parish and county.
In those cauldrons
of competition, the throwing surface was often wet and yielding and
the win was more important than distance achieved. In 1928 Pat
retained his National title with a throw of 162' 6" and qualified
for the Olympics. His brother Con won the Shot Putt and the
Decathlon the same day and also qualified for the Olympics in the
Decathlon. Pat went on to improve on his mark at the RUC Sports in
Belfast and at an Invitation match at Athlone where he threw 166'
11". He competed in two International matches, on both occasions
finishing behind Malcolm C Nokes, darling of the British Press and
the leading thrower in Europe at the time.
Pat
had graduated as a Surgeon Doctor before his 21st birthday and was
finishing post-graduate studies. The evolution of his new hammer
throwing technique challenged the convention that hammer-throwers
were huge men of towering stature. The older Irish Whales powered
the throw with immense body strength, completing one or two turns in
two-footed hops. They anchored the throw with body weight and
released the ball at shoulder level with arms bent
At 5 '11" , Pat was
short by conventional standards though his big-boned
well-proportioned frame made him look smaller than he actually was.
His main focus was on the principles of Physics laid out by Dinny
Carey - that power is lost when contact with the ground is broken
and that the faster the speed of the ball at release, the further
the throw. He emulated the fast action of John Flanagan and the
controlled accelerating wind-up used by Paddy Ryan - both men were,
like himself, relatively short of the conventional stature. He also
perused articles and publications by academicians and technical
experts in Europe who were pioneering the application of scientific
principles to Hammer throwing and other sports. In Dublin he came
under the influence of John Tallon a mysterious tailor who made a
private study of the theory of hammer-throwing. Tallon later coached
the Mayoman Bert Healon, a top thrower of the 1940s, as well as
Doctor John Lawlor who threw 213' 0" for fourth place in the 1960
Rome Olympics.
By
mid-1928, Pat had more or less perfected his technique. From a
relaxed slow start he smoothly moved into a fast accelerating
rotation through three turns keeping ahead of the weight and pulling
down on the wire in the downward arcs. The 1-ton centrifugal pull
was taken by his powerful legs alternately on heel and toeball, with
pronounced
lean-back of upper body and head, the action sweeping upward to a
high straight-armed position where he gathered himself for release
in a high 45° delivery. This still remains the classic style in
modern Hammer-throwing. The spectacular increase in distances
achieved after 1950, sprang more from improvements in the throwing
surface, from advances in equipment design and materials and from
increased turning speed acquired through scientifically tailored
weight-training regimes, than from any advancement on Pat's original
technique.
In the summer of
1928 Pat and Con, with their brother Jack paid their own way to the
Games in Amsterdam. Con's progress in the Decathlon was halted by a
Games romance and he recorded a Did Not Finish . Pat was still a
relatively untried novice at international level and was not
expected to get beyond the preliminary stage. However, he got
through in 6th place and started the Final with a throw of 155' 9"
to lie 3rd and almost 13ft behind the polished Swede Oissian Skoeld
- but ahead of the favourite Malcolm Nokes of Britain. A master of
the psychological games of competition, Pat made his second throw
using the Swede's own finely-machined hammer. The ball soared out to
168' 7" to beat the Swede by 4' . It won a 1st Olympic Gold Medal
for Pat and for his newly independent country.
The result was
reported with less than warmth by the jingoistic British Press; the
podium presentation also featured the Irish Tricolour and the
playing of Amhrain na bFiann - both of which were still illegal
emblems of subversion under British law. Pat came home to a
tumultuous welcome in Kanturk but there was no State or civic
recognition. He went on to attend sports meetings and social events
around the country as a guest of honour. His warmth of personality
and unequivocal love of all things Irish endeared him to people
every where he went. Shortly afterwards he secured an appointment as
a Surgeon Doctor in Clonmel Mental Hospital and he later settled in
that area when he married Miss Kitty O'Reilly of Clonmel and
Kilmallock, a lady who was a popular leading connection in the
greyhound business in her own right.
Through 1929 - 1932
Doctor Pat's performances peaked at a level never achieved by any
other athlete since or before. In the national championships of 1930
he won the Hammer, Shot, 56lbs Without-Follow, 56lb Over-the-Bar,
Discus and High Jump. He also regularly represented Ireland in
international matches in a variety of events. His performance in
each was to a high international standard.
He won 3 National
titles in High Jump, clearing over 6 foot on each occasion, with a
personal best of 6' 2" . At Cork in 1930, from a grass track and a
shallow pit fit only for a braced two-footed landing, he tucked his
great knees under his chin and hurled his 16-stone over the bar set
at 6' 4" - a mere handbreadth below the World record. The jump was
wrongly disallowed as it was adjudged to have breached the then
obsolete foot first rule. He regularly cleared 22 feet in Long Jump
and putt the Shot over 49 foot -well up to Olympic qualifying
standards. His winning Discus throw at the 1931 championships was
152' 7" - a fraction of an inch short of the European record.
In the summer of
1930 he took part in a 2-day Invitation event in Stockholm where
Oissian Skoeld was confidently expected to prove that the Irishman
had caught him on an off day at Amsterdam. Throwers from Britain,
Germany, Norway, Denmark, Finland and Japan also took part. In the
first-day competition, Skoeld, doyen of a great school of Swedish
throwers, was on form and broke his own European record with his
very first throw to take the lead. Undaunted, Pat overtook him with
his second throw, breaking the new record and once again beating the
local star into second place. On the second day Pat and Skoeld were
neck-and-neck in a demonstration of world-class throwing. With his
last throw, Pat set another European record at 178' 8" to win.
The stunning
performance confirmed him as an international champion. The huge
Swedish crowd gave him a rousing prolonged ovation generously
recognising the extraordinary skill of the young Irishman. The
British favourite had again failed to deliver and the British Press
were silent on the event. Through the next few years Doctor Pat's
analytical understanding of athletics and the human body won him the
respect of leading trainers and performers and he was in demand for
international athletic meetings, symposiums and conferences. When
the 1932 Olympics came around he was consistently throwing over 170
feet and was in fine form to defend his Olympic title in the USA.
The Irish camp were
better organised for this trip and was funded by a successful church
gate collection organised by the Olympic Committee of Ireland.
Following Trials at Croke Park, the team trained at Ballybunion for
3 weeks and competed in the National Championships, at which the
irrepressible Doctor Pat won a 5th National Hammer title, before
starting out on the long and debilitating 6,000-mile boat and train
journey to the Games.
In Los Angeles he
came near to disaster. The surface of the Hammer circle had always
been of grass or clay and throwers wore field shoes with steel
spikes set into the heel and sole for grip. In Los Angeles an
impenetrable cinder surface was to be provided. For some unexplained
reason the Olympic Committee of Ireland had failed to notify Doctor
Pat of this. Consequently he came to the arena with three pairs of
spiked shoes for a grass or clay surface and time did not permit a
change of shoe. He wore his shortest spikes but found that the
spikes caught in the hard gritty slab and impeded his crucial 3rd
turn. Never a man to panic, he drew on his matchless competitive
temperament to qualify for the Final stage with a spectacular
all-or-nothing third throw of 171' 3" - only 3 inches behind the
leader, a friendly oak-like Finn named Ville Porthola. Doctor Pat
knew that to win he had to get rid of the spikes. While the Final
was delayed for the 400m Hurdles, he hunted down a hacksaw and a
file in the groundkeeper's shack and he set to cutting off the
spikes. Presently he was joined by Bob Tisdall who had just won a
Gold medal for Ireland in the 400m Hurdles.
The Final was under
way and he was being called to the circle when the last of the 20
offending spikes fell to the stalwart pair. The result was less than
ideal but it promised a much surer footing. His first throw was
short of his earlier mark but he was satisfied that the hacksaw had
done the trick. In the second, he focussed all his tremendous
courage and power and with perfect technique he fired the missile
out to 176' 11" to retain his Olympic title and to win Ireland's 2nd
Gold medal of the day.
On return to
Ireland the two Gold Medalists were feted by a now more mature and
self-confident State. An official Welcome was laid on in Dublin and
in Cork City. The two golden heroes were paraded behind Army and
Garda bands to Civic Receptions with huge crowds thronging the
streets. The young Doctor arrived home in Kanturk to a monster
reception with upwards of 200,000 people choking every street in the
town. His response to the formal platform Address of Congratulations
was a pithy flamboyant speech that delighted the great host of his
friends and admirers. Over the next year, the celebration of his
Olympic triumph distracted from athletics activities and he did not
take part in the 1933 Championships.
He continued to
work on his hammer-throwing and he experimented with a 4th turn to
set a new European record at 178' 9" in 1933. He was then rated the
top thrower in the world by the leading international Sports
journalists and he had yet to reach his best.
The year 1933 found
Irish athletics struggling with the issue of an Ireland versus a 26
county jurisdiction for its controlling body. Controversy had raged
since Independence when the British AAA laid claim to jurisdiction
over athletes in Northern Ireland. After 1922 the National Athletic
and Cycling Association of Ireland - NACAI was the Irish controlling
body and claimed jurisdiction in Ireland without any reference to
political or partition boundaries After the 1932 Olympics, the
British AAA and Olympic Committee led by Lord Burghley intensified
their claim and pressed the British-dominated IAAF to disqualify the
NACAI. Burghley, a dyed-in-the-wool British Imperialist, lost his
400m Olympic title to Bob Tisdall at the 1932 Games and had
challenged the eligibility of the Ceylon-born London-based Irishman.
The controversy came to a head in the lead-up to the 1936 Olympics
when the IAAF finally disqualified the NACAI. Within the NACAI the
Council was dominated by a majority group that would not concede on
the Ireland claim. True to his commitment to an undivided Ireland
and to the principles of former great Irish athletes who denied
legitimacy for any British authority in Ireland, Doctor Pat stayed
with NACAI and closed his last door to international competition.
No
Irish team travelled to the 1936 Olympics. Doctor Pat travelled to
Berlin as a private spectator. He watched the Games from the VIP
Stand, attended the IOC banquets and was presented to the President
and other senior officials of the IOC as well as to the German
Chancellor one Adolf Hitler.
After Berlin,
Doctor Pat's international career was over. Probably the greatest
competitor to ever grace the international Athletics stage, he was
not yet 30 years old. He declined to join the new 26-County AAUE and
with the overwhelming (90%) majority of athletes in Ireland, he
continued to compete under NACAI rules. At Fermoy in 1937 he threw
195' 4" - more than 7ft ahead of the World record set by his old
friend Paddy 'Chicken' Ryan in 1913. The AAUE and the
British-dominated IAAF saw to it that this new world record did not
receive official recognition. The throw was not exceeded until Imre
Nemeth of Hungary threw 196' 5" in 1950.
While throwing at
Mallow in 1938, a hammer struck and fatally injured a young boy. The
incident shocked Doctor Pat, though it was not due to any fault on
his part, and he gave up athletics shortly after.
He went on a
private visit to America where he was persuaded to get involved in
professional wrestling and even won a few minor purses. The
wrestling World champion West-Corkman Danno Mahony refused to fight
him and Doctor Pat was given an option on the American Wresting
Circuit ahead of Mahony and the Kerry-born champion Steve Casey. He
was also offered the part of Tarzan in a Hollywood film. But his
heart was not in it.
In 1939 he set up a
General Practice in Clonmel that was to prosper and bring him a huge
clientele for his popularity with people in all walks of life,
including children with whom he had an unconditional natural
affinity. Over the years he accumulated an amount of land and raised
a successful family. He attended every Olympic Games 1928-1990 and
drew a huge circle of friends from international athletics and
national governments. He was a regular visitor to America, usually
as the private guest of a senior US statesman or a national public
figure. A keen recreational sportsman from childhood, through middle
and old age he regularly tramped the slopes of the Comeraghs and the
Knockmeldowns in pursuit of game.
Doctor Pat finally gave up his Practice in 1984 - for the life of a
country gentleman and his favourite pastimes of hunting and fishing.
He died in 1991, having lived a long and very exceptional life. His
mortal remains lie in Powerstown Cemetery in Saint Mary's Parish
Clonmel. His memory lies in the hearts of the Irish nation whose
unconquerable spirit he so well personified.
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