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They Called It ‘Improper’ to Have Women in the Olympics. But She Persisted.

Jul 12, 2024 | News

It was 1922, two years before the last time the Olympics were held in Paris. On a warm August day, about 20,000 people came to Pershing Stadium to watch 77 athletes in track and field, including a team from the United States. There was a parade of nations. There were world records. There were 27 journalists and news coverage around the world.

And at the start, a 38-year-old woman named Alice Milliat welcomed the world to Paris. She was the founder of the International Women’s Sports Federation, known in her native France as the Fédération Sportive Féminine Internationale.

Every competitor that day was a woman.

“I hereby declare the first female Olympic Games open,” she said.

Read full article (nytimes.com)