Background
John Flanagan was born in Kilbreedy, County Limerick, Ireland on January 9, 1873.
John Flanagan was born in Kilbreedy, County Limerick, Ireland on January 9, 1873.
He emigrated to the United States in 1896. At that time he already held the world record for the hammer throw. He competed for both the New York Athletic Club and the Irish American Athletic Club.
He was part of a group of Irish-American athletes known as the "Irish Whales."
In 1900 Flanagan represented his new country at the Olympic Games in Paris, France.
Flanagan, the only non-college man to medal for the Americans, outdistanced American athlete Truxtun Hare by 4.75 meters in the hammer throw. Hare and Josiah McCracken, both college football players from Pennsylvania, took silver and bronze.
Flanagan also competed in the discus throw, finishing seventh. Flanagan joined the New York City Police Department in 1903.
His first assignment was the Bureau of Licenses, where he had little to do and could take time off to train and compete.
In 1904, sporting the Winged Fist of the Irish American Athletic Club in Saint Louis, Missouri Olympic Games Flanagan set a new world record of 168 feet, 1 inch. He placed second to Etienne the Gendarme in the 56-pound throw event. In 1905, while attached to the 37th Precinct, Flanagan competed in the Police Athletic Association games held at Celtic Park Queens, New New York
In the 1908 Olympics in London, Flanagan broke his own record with a hammer throw of 170 feet, 4.5 inches.
The silver that year went to another New York City police officer, the former record holder Matt McGrath. John Flanagan competed in the tug-of-war as well.
On July 24, 1909, Flanagan set his last world record in the hammer, with a throw of 56.18 meters. Flanagan quit the police force in 1910, after his "public office" squad was abolished and he was transferred to the West 68th Street Station and forced to walk a beat along Central Park West.
That gave him no time to compete, and kept him up late.
He left the United States. in 1911. When his father died in 1924, Flanagan went back to Kilmallock, County Limerick, in the Ireland. He died there on June 3, 1938.
In the 1928 Amsterdam Olympics, the United States. lost for the first time in the hammer throw event - to an Irishman, Doctor Patrick O"Callaghan, who had been trained by John Flanagan.