Jacinta Sandiford Amador (9 April 1932 – 1 January 1987) was an Ecuadorian female track and field athlete who competed in the high jump.
Born in the Eloy Alfaro area of Durán, Ecuador,[1] she was the daughter of an Englishman who worked as an engineer for Ecuador's state railway.[2] She took up athletics and in her teens she won the gold medal at the inaugural Pan American Games in 1951,[3] recording a height of and beating out Chile's Lucy López and Brazilian Elizabeth Müller on countback. This made her Ecuador's first ever medallist at the competition.[2] She remained the only South American woman to have won that title until Solange Witteveen of Argentina did so in 1999.[4]
Upon the Ecuadorian delegation's return, Sandiford was the first athlete off the plane which led to images of her receiving national attention.[2] That same year she also won high jump gold at the Bolivarian Games with a mark of, and is still the only Ecuadorian to have won that title.[5] Her career came to a close shortly afterwards, however, as a result of a leg injury and acute apendicitus.[2]