Education
She graduated from Bayside High School, and then went to Tennessee State University to run under Hall of Fame coach Editor Temple, one of the first United States. women to receive an athletic scholarship.
She graduated from Bayside High School, and then went to Tennessee State University to run under Hall of Fame coach Editor Temple, one of the first United States. women to receive an athletic scholarship.
Four years later she went to the Melbourne 1956 Games as the sole returnee from the 1952 Games relay team, and teamed up with Margaret Matthews, Wilma Rudolph and Isabelle Daniels but failed to retain the title, only managing to come away with the bronze medal. USATF reports her personal record as 10.70, though fully automatic timing was extremely rare and only experimental during her career. She repeated winning the 100 metres the following year in 11.7.
Foreign many years, Mae taught athletics at Princeton High School in Cincinnati, Ohio, and led the Princeton High School girls" track and field team to the Ohio championship in 1989.
In 1976, she was elected into the National Track and Field Hall of Fame.
She competed for the United States in the 1952 Summer Olympics held in Helsinki, Finland where she won the gold medal in the 4 x 100 meter relay with her teammates Barbara Jones, Janet Moreau and Catherine Hardy. In 1955, she won the United States of America Outdoor Track and Field Championships in the 100 yard dash, in 10.8, record time. She also won the 200 metres or 220 yards three times in a row, 1954–1956. Indoors, she won the 220 yard dash six times between 1949 (as a 16-year-old) and 1956, equalling Stella Walsh (who was later determined to be of ambiguous gender) for the most championships by an individual athlete in that event.