Decima Norman, Jean Coleman and Eileen Wearne win gold, silver and bronze medals for Australia in the 220 yard sprint, Empire Games, Sydney, 11 February 1938 / photographer Sam Hood

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Decima Norman, Jean Coleman and Eileen Wearne win gold, silver and bronze medals for Australia in the 220 yard sprint, Empire Games, Sydney, 11 February 1938 / photographer Sam Hood

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A little over two weeks after Australia's Sesqui-Centenary Day, the extraordinary Decima Norman, winner of five gold medals at the 1938 Empire Games, on the winner's dais after the 220 yard sprint event. With her are Australian team mates J. Coleman and E. Wearne, who came second and third. To the embarrassment of race officials, there were insufficient flags to accommodate three placegetters from one country, and a New Zealand flag had to be substituted for third place! ..Format: Negative. .Notes: Find more detailed information about this photographic collection: 23742 ( http://23742 ) ..Search for more great images in the State Library's collections: ( http:// ) . .From the collection of the State Library of New South Wales ( )

The State Library of New South Wales' major subject strengths are Australian history, culture and literature, including Aboriginal studies, Antarctic exploration, family history and genealogy, business and management, social sciences, applied science, biography, health and law. The State Library is home to one of Australia’s most significant historical and heritage collections. As well as nearly 11 kilometres of manuscripts – from nine 1788 First Fleet journals through to the archives of contemporary organisations and writers – the Library holds more than one million photographs. From the earliest surviving photograph taken in Australia – in January 1845 – through to digital photographs taken last month, the Library’s unrivalled photographic collections document with powerful clarity the way Australians have lived their lives over two centuries. You can find out more about the State Library's photographic collections on our website: www.sl.nsw.gov.au/about/collections/photographs.html More broadly the Library’s collecting reach spans a multitude of platforms: the Library’s mission is to collect, preserve and make accessible the documentary heritage of New South Wales. It holds over 5 million items including books, oil paintings, watercolours, architectural plans, engravings & lithographs, magazines and periodicals, posters, ephemera, sheet music, talking books, maps, CD-ROMs, newspapers, microfilm and microfiche, films and videos, computer software, kits, sound recordings, photographs, coins, postage stamps and other objects.

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1938
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State Library of New South Wales
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