Team Canada participates in the opening ceremonies at the 1932 Lake Placid Olympics

Lake Placid 1932

Team Canada Medal Count

Gold medal icon 1
Silver medal icon 1
Bronze medal icon 5

Flag Bearers

Opening Ceremony

Games Summary

III Olympic Winter Games

The small village of Lake Placid in upstate New York beat out several other American towns as well as Montreal for the right to host the 1932 Olympic Winter Games. The worldwide depression made planning difficult, but with funding from the New York State Legislature the first bobsleigh run in North America was built along with a 60-metre ski jump and the first indoor skating rink in Winter Olympic history. The depression also led to decreased attendance, as several nations withdrew and others sent very small teams due to the cost of travel to the United States.

For the fourth straight Olympic Games, Canada (this time represented by the Winnipeg Hockey Club) won ice hockey gold. With only four teams entered, the tournament became a double round robin. Having defeated the United States 2-1 in their first game, the Winnipegs needed a win or tie in the rematch to claim gold. Down 2-1 with less than six minutes to play, Romeo Rivers scored to even it up. After three scoreless overtime periods the game was called a draw.

1932 Lake Placid Mens Hockey Gold

For the first time at the Olympic Winter Games, that wasn’t the only medal won by Canadian athletes. Three speed skaters, Alexander Hurd, William Logan, and Frank Stack combined for five medals across four events. For the only time in Olympic history, the speed skating competition used the North American system of pack-style racing instead of against the clock. Tactics and strategy were more important than pure speed, leading to low attendance from traditional European speed skating powerhouses. The Dutch didn’t send any competitors while Sweden and Finland only had one competitor each. As predicted, North American racers dominated as the United States won all four gold medals and only two medals were not taken by Americans or Canadians.

Canada also reached the podium for the first time in figure skating as Montgomery Wilson won bronze in the men’s event. Canada’s seven total medals placed the country behind only the United States and Norway and was a national Winter Olympic record that went unmatched until 1992.

Ski Team

 

Canadian Medallists

Event Athlete Finish Sport
MenWilliam Cockburn, Clifford Crowley, Albert Duncanson, George Garbutt, Roy Hinkel, Victor Lindquist, Norman Malloy, Walter Monson, Kenneth Moore, Romeo Rivers, Harold Simpson, Hugh Sutherland, Stanley Wagner, Alston WiseGoldIce Hockey
1,500m - MenAlexander HurdSilverSpeed Skating - Long Track
1,500m - MenWilliam LoganBronzeSpeed Skating - Long Track
5,000m - MenWilliam LoganBronzeSpeed Skating - Long Track
500m - MenAlexander HurdBronzeSpeed Skating - Long Track
10,000m - MenFrank StackBronzeSpeed Skating - Long Track
Singles - MenMontgomery WilsonBronzeFigure Skating

Overall Medal Count

Rank Country Gold Silver Bronze Total
1United States64212
2Norway34310
3Canada1157
4Sweden12 - 3
5Finland1113
6Austria11 - 2
7Germany - - 22
8France1 - - 1
9Switzerland - 1 - 1
10Belgium - - 11

Teams