George Burleigh (swimmer)
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| Personal information | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1914 |
| Died | 1984 (aged 69–70) |
| Height | 1.70 m (5 ft 7 in) |
| Sport | |
| Sport | Swimming |
| Strokes | Freestyle |
George Burleigh (1914–1984) was a Canadian swimmer. He won gold at the Commonwealth Games in 1930 and 1934. and held Canadian freestyle swimming records in the 1930s.
Career
From 1930 to 1938, Burleigh held every Canadian record in freestyle swimming ranging from the 50 yd freestyle to the mile freestyle.[1] During this time period, he won a total of 7 medals at the British Empire Games.[2]
1930 British Empire Games
At the inaugural British Empire Games in 1930 in Hamilton, Ontario Burleigh, aged 16, became the youngest swimmer to represent Canada.[3] He won bronze in both the 440 yard freestyle and 1500 yard freestyle events.[4][5] He also won gold, along with teammates Munroe Bourne, Bert Gibson, and Jimmy Thompson, in the 800 yard (4 x 200 yard) freestyle relay.[6] Only two teams entered this event, with England winning silver, only 2 yards and 0.4 seconds behind Canada's time of 8 minutes and 42.4 seconds.[7][8]
1934 British Empire Games
At the 1934 British Empire Games in London Burleigh won three gold medals, later describing it as "my finest hour".[1] Burleigh won individually in the 100 yard freestyle event, and as anchor in the 330 yard (3 x 110 yards) medley relay (with Ben Gazell and Bill Puddy) and the 800 yard (4 x 200 yards) freestyle relay (with George Larson, Robert Hooper, and Bob Pirie).[1][9][10][11] A new games record was set in all three events.[9][10][11]
1938 British Empire Games
The 1938 British Empire Games in Sydney was Burleigh's last major competition.[1] The Canadian team travelled from Vancouver, with stops at Honolulu, Fiji, and New Zealand, where the team took part in exhibition meets.[1]
In the 880 yard (4 x 220 yards) freestyle relay Burleigh, along with teammates Gordon Devlin, Robert Hooper, and Bob Pirie, won silver.[12] He also competed in the 110 yard freestyle competition but was not placed.[13] The gold medal was won by fellow Canadian Bob Pirie.[13]
