US Olympian Harold Connolly, Gold Medalist in Hammer Throw, Honored with a Statue in Boston’s Brighton Neighborhood

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Harold Connolly with his statue

One of Boston’s most notable Olympic champions, Harold Vincent Connolly, has a statue in his honor in Brighton, the neighborhood in which he grew up. The statue captures Connolly’s pinnacle of success, as a gold medalist in the 1956 Olympics in the hammer throw.

His rise to stardom, from a frail and partially paralyzed child to an Olympian, has inspired generations of Bostonians and athletes around the world.

In 1999, Brighton native and State Representative Kevin Honan started the Harold Connolly Committee to design, commission and dedicate a statue to Brighton’s most famous athlete. “To win an Olympic gold and overcome that physical challenge is such an extraordinary feat, and people need to know about it,” Honan said.

In 2005 a statue of Connolly was unveiled in Brighton, created by sculptor Pablo Eduardo. Connolly and his family attended the ceremony, along with his friends and the many athletes he knew in his illustrious career.

“I am externally grateful to all of you,” Connolly said at the unveiling, which was attended by more than 250 people. “I am here today, filled with intense pride for being a member of this community that made me into the man I became.”

Born in Somerville on August 1, 1931, Connolly was raised in Boston’s Brighton neighborhood. He suffered from severe nerve paralysis as a child and spent most of his youth in physical therapy. He compensated for his illness by training diligently with strength conditioning, weightlifting and athletics at Brighton High School, where he graduated in 1949, and later at Boston College, where he graduated in 1953.

Harold Connolly

Connolly set numerous American, world and Olympic records in the hammer throw, and was a four-time Olympian. In 1956, he won the gold medal in the hammer throw at the 1956 Olympics in Melbourne, beating defending world champion Mikhail Krivonosov of Russia. Throughout his career, Connolly won nine U.S. titles in the hammer throw, and three in the indoor 35 pound hammer throw.

In 1984, Connolly was elected to the Track & Field Hall of Fame.Following his athletic career, Connolly was a successful high school and college coach, teaching the hammer throw at Georgetown University and Boston University. He served as the executive director of US programs for the Special Olympics from 1988 to 1999.

 
Connolly died on August 18, 2010 in Catonsville, Maryland. 
 

Connolly’s statue is located along Boston’s Irish Heritage Trail in the neighborhood section. Read more about Harald Connolly here.

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