Cornelius Johnson
School Record Holder in the High Jump
Olympic Gold Medalist

Born August 28, 1913, in Los Angeles. Died February 15, 1946.  At the 1932 Olympics, Cornelius Johnson, at the time an 18-year old high school student, placed fourth in the high jump under the existing tiebreaker rules. Had the current rules been in effect, "Conny" Johnson would have been a silver medalist.  Four years later, Johnson, brimming with confidence, took the gold in Berlin. He cleared every attempt through 6-8, keeping his sweats on until the bar went up to 6-6 3/4 Johnson's winning height was an Olympic record and he tried unsuccesfully for the world record. Ironically, it was Johnson --- and not Jesse Owens, as widely believed --- who was snubbed by Adolf Hitler at the Berlin Games. On the day of Johnson's triumph, Hitler had congratulated the winners of the day's first two events, a German and a Finn. But before Johnson and silver medalist Dave Albritton, both African Americans, went to the awards platform, Hitler left the stadium. Johnson was the co-holder of the world record for the high jump for a year (1936-37) and won eight career U.S. titles (five outdoor, three indoor). In early 1946, while working as a ship's baker on board the Grace Line's "Santa Cruz," Johnson was stricken with a sudden illness. Enroute from the ship to a California hospital, Corny Johnson died at the age of 32.