Artistic
Gymnastics History
Gymnastics,
as an activity, has existed for over 2,000 years,
but its development as a competitive sport began
just a little more than 100 years ago. During
the 1800s, mass and individual exhibitions were
conducted by various school clubs, athletic
clubs and ethnic organizations such as the Turnvereins
and Sokols.
Although
slow to catch on in the schools, gymnastics
did flourish in the Turnvereins and Sokols.
It was introduced to the United States and its
school systems in the 1830s by such immigrants
as Charles Beck, Charles Follen and Francis
Lieber.
The
International Gymnastics Federation (FIG) was
formed in 1881, then called the Bureau of the
European Gymnastics Federation, opening the
way for international competition. In the United
States, the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) assumed
control of gymnastics, along with most other
amateur sports, in 1883. Prior to this time
gymnastics championships were held by various
clubs and organizations.
The
first large-scale meeting of gymnasts was the
1896 Olympics, where Germany virtually swept
the medal parade. Gymnasts from five countries
competed in events which included men's horizontal
bar, parallel bars, pommel horse, rings, and
vault.
The
first international gymnastics competition outside
of the Olympics was held in 1903 in Antwerp,
Belgium, and gymnasts from Belgium, France,
Luxembourg and the Netherlands competed in what
is now considered the first World Championships.
At St. Louis in 1904, the men's team combined
competition was added to the Olympic program.
At
the ninth World Championships in 1930 at Luxembourg,
the competition included the pole vault, broad
jump, shot put, rope climb and a 100-meter sprint.
Track and field did not fully disappear from
the World Gymnastics Championships circuit until
the 1954 competition.
At
the 1924 Games in Paris, the basis of modern
Olympic gymnastics competition was firmly established.
The athletes (men) began to compete for individual
Olympic titles on each apparatus, as well as
in combined individual and team exercises. The
1928 Games witnessed the debut of the first
women's event, the team combined exercise, won
by the Netherlands. The U.S. women first competed
in the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin, Germany.
The
United States Gymnastics Federation, now known
as USA Gymnastics, became the national governing
body of the sport in the United States in 1970
and remains as such today.
Rhythmic
Gymnastics History
In 1962, the International Gymnastics Federation
(FIG) officially recognized rhythmic gymnastics
as a sport. The first Rhythmic World Championships
took place in 1963 in Budapest, Hungary, where
28 athletes from 10 European countries competed.
The United States sent their first delegation
to the Rhythmic World Championships in 1973.
The
rhythmic individual all-around competition was
added to the Olympic Games in 1984. In 1996,
the rhythmic group event was added as a medal-sport
at the Olympic Games for the first time.
Trampolining
and Tumbling
Trampoline and tumbling can be traced to
archaeological drawings in ancient China, Egypt
and Persia. Over the years a number of methods
have been devised to allow man to gain time
in the air and perform a variety of skills.
The trampoline is one of these methods. Trampoline
was not actually a competitive event until after
its invention by an American, George Nissen
as a portable unit in 1936. From 1947 through
1964, trampolining was included as an event
in gymnastics competitions by both the AAU and
NCAA.
The
first Trampoline World Championships were held
in 1964, and trampoline was first recognized
as a sport in its own right in the United States
in 1967. Trampoline will make its debut as an
Olympic sport at the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney,
Australia.
Power
Tumbling, first performed on simple mats, has
had U.S. National Championships dating back
to 1886. A number of different surfaces have
been used for power tumbling, including mats,
ski floors, spring floors and today's fiber-glass
rod floors, invented by Randy Mulkey.
Double
Mini-Trampoline competition was added in 1978.
The first double mini-trampoline began as two
individual mini-tramps, separated by a small
table covered by a mat. Later, a one-piece unit
was developed by Bob Bollinger and is used today
as the official equipment for that event.
Sports
Acrobatics
The roots of Sports Acrobatics can be traced
back to ancient Greece. Modern-day Sports Acrobatics
began in the Soviet Union in the 1930's, and
emerged in the United States in the 1970's with
the acrobats on Muscle Beach, California. The
first national organization, United States Sports
Acrobatics Federation (USSAF), was founded in
1975 to be followed by a change to the United
States Sports Acrobatics (USSA) in the 1990's.
USSA merged with USA Gymnastics in 2002, making
it the fifth discipline, and the connection
between sports acrobatics and gymnastics continues
to grow today. The United States was first represented
in Moscow in 1974 by tumblers only. Representation
at World Championships has been on the rise
ever since. In fact, the United States won its
first gold medal at a World Championships in
Riesa, Germany, in 2002.
From
USA
Gymnastics Online