Dorothy recognised by
British honours system at last!
In our book, ‘A Proper Spectacle’ we wrote:
"Dorothy Tyler was the first woman to
qualify in Great Britain as a jumps coach, and coached several athletes to
international honours. She gave much of her life to athletics and it is an
extraordinary omission that her work for British athletics has never been
recognised by the British Honours System."
Two years after we sent off our attempt to
rectify this injustice, Dorothy was at last recognised! On January 31st 2001
we received a call from Dorothy to tell us that she was to be awarded an
MBE. She visited Buckingham Palace in May 2001 to receive her honour from
His Royal Highness, Prince Charles. Dorothy only waited 66 years after her
first Olympic medal in Berlin - and how much she longed for this
recognition!
Here is an excerpt from ‘A Proper Spectacle’
about Dorothy’s amazing career:
"When I came back from the Olympics in
1936, no-one was interested. A
few neighbours asked me how I got on. In 1939 I broke the world record in
the middle of a school field. Even then I only got two lines in the Stop
Press. I think there would have
been more about it if I had been a man. Women weren’t given much press
coverage."
Dorothy’s amazing athletics career did not
end there and she competed in three more Olympics - London in 1948 (when she
won another silver medal), Helsinki in 1952 and Melbourne in 1956. |