Harold Barron Explained

Birth Date:August 29, 1894
Birth Place:Berwyn, Pennsylvania, United States
Death Date:October 5, 1978 (aged 84)
Death Place:San Francisco, United States
Height:1.83m (06feet)
Weight:64kg (141lb)
Sport:Athletics
Event:110 m hurdles
Club:Meadowbrook Club, Philadelphia
Pb:120 ydH – 15.0 (1917)
Alma Mater:Pennsylvania State University
Show-Medals:yes

Harold Earl Barron (August 29, 1894 – October 5, 1978) was an American sprinter.[1] He specialized in the 110 m hurdles, in which he won a silver medal at the 1920 Summer Olympics.

Nationally Barron won the AAU hurdles title in 1917 and 1920 and the NCAA title in 1922. After graduating from Pennsylvania State University he worked as an athletics coach at Mercersburg Academy, then Cascadilla School in New York, and finally at Georgia Institute of Technology.

In 1930 Barron, along with Earl Thomson and Harry Hillman, was involved in the design of a new safer hurdle, with a view to reducing the danger of bad falls and injuries.[2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Harold Barron . Olympedia . 15 July 2021.
  2. Coaches Design New Track Hurdle to Prevent Falls, Alton Evening Telegraph, July 8, 1930