On This Date in Sports July 31, 1948: Photo Finish
American Harrison Dillard captures the Gold Medal in the 100-meter race at the London Olympics. Dillard wins the closest race in Olympic history while equaling Jesse Owens' Olympic record by running the race in 10.3 seconds. Harrison Dillard crossed the finish line nearly simultaneously with fellow American Barney Ewell, as a photograph had to be reviewed to be determined the winner. It was the first photo finish in Olympic history.
William Harrison Dillard was born in Cleveland, Ohio, on July 8, 1923. While at Baldwin-Wallace College, Dillard was drafted into the Army, where he served in the 92nd Infantry Division. The unit was composed entirely of African Americans, better known as the Buffalo Soldiers.
After the war, Harrison Dillard returned to school. He continued to compete in track and field, hoping to follow in the footsteps of qualifying for the 1948 Summer Games in London like his idol Jesse Owens, a fellow native from Cleveland. Dillard’s best event was the 110-meter hurdles, but during the Olympic trials, he failed to qualify; instead, he qualified third in the 100-meter race.
Harrison Dillard and Barney Ewell combined efforts later in the 1948 games to win the Gold Medal in the 4×100-meter relay. Ewell would also lose a close finish in the 200-meter to American Mel Patton. Dillard meanwhile added two more Gold Medals at the Helsinki Olympics in 1952, claiming individual success in the 110-meter hurdles and again winning as part of the 4×100-meter relay. With his hurdle Gold Medal in 1952, Harrison Dillard is one of three men, along with Walter Tewksbury and Harry Hillman, to win a sprinting and hurdle gold medal.