Penn Biographies

 

Alvin Christian Kraenzlein (1876-1928)

  • D.D.S. 1900
  • Varsity track
  • Record accumulation of intercollegiate track points
  • Member of Psi Omega and Edwin T. Darby Dental Society

  • Winner of four gold medals at the 1900 Paris Olympics
  • Track coach
  • Alvin Kraenzlein in a detail from a photograph of Penn 1899 track team's intercollegiate point winners

     

    Alvin Christian Kraenzlein was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on December 22, 1876. When he began competitive running and jumping at Milwaukee's East Side High School, his special talents quickly caught the eye of local athletes. After enrolling at the University of Wisconsin in 1895, he dominated his intercollegiate opponents in many speed events. Mike Murphy, Penn's famed track coach, soon noticed Kraenzlein and influenced him to come to Penn. Murphy would later describe Kraenzlein as the "world's best all around athlete of his time."

    In the fall of 1897, Kraenzlein came to the University of Pennsylvania as a student in the Dental School. He became a member of Psi Omega dental fraternity and the Edwin T. Darby Dental Society, but his primary extracurricular activity centered on the track and field. During his tenure at the University of Pennsylvania, Kraenzlein set world records for the 120 meter high hurdles and the 220 meter low hurdlesphotograph of Kraenzlein jumping over a hurdle, lead leg extended; he developed a new form of gliding over the hurdles, clearing the hurdles with the lead leg extended, which became the standard technique for modern hurdlers. By the time Kraenzlein graduated from Penn, his versatility and skill had helped the Red and Blue win four straight intercollegiate championships while setting records in the process. His records in the hurdles would last for decades both on the intercollegiate and world level and many of his feats would live on in Penn track and field lore.

    As a member of the Penn track teams of 1898, 1899 and 1900, Kraenzlein set nine records in intercollegiate and Olympic competition. In the 1900 Olympic Games, Alvin set a record by winning four championships: the 60-meter run, the 110 meter hurdles, the 200 meter hurdles and the long jump. This feat would not be duplicated until Jesse Owens won five gold medals at the 1936 Olympics in Berlin. Kraenzlein's record accumulation of 18 points at the 1900 Intercollegiate Championships, propelling the Penn team to another victory in that arena, was just as noteworthy as his Olympic achievements in the eyes of his contemporaries.

    After receiving his dental degree, Alvin coached track teams at Mercersburg Academy and the University of Michigan and led both teams to very successful programs. In 1913 he signed a five-year contract to coach the German Olympic team for a reported salary of $50,000, but with the onslaught of World War I he instead became an army physical instructor. After the war his coaching positions included time with the Cuba track and field team. In August of 1927, Dr. Kraenzlein fell seriously ill with heart disease and within five months, on January 6, 1928, he succumbed to his illness. Upon his death he was still revered as the best athlete ever to wear the Red and Blue of the University of Pennsylvania and, in some people's view, the best athlete of their time.

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