Word: vaulting
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...will be open only to the Connecticut National Guard: 50 yards dash, handicap; one mile relay race, boxing, tug-of-war. The following events, all handicap, will be open to all amateurs: 50 yards dash, 50 yards hurdle, 600 yards run, one mile run, putting 16 pound shot, pole vault, running high jump. Other events may be arranged later. The first two men in each event will receive silver cups and the companies which win the relay race and the tug-of-war will have trophies presented to them...
...Pole vault.- Bullard '97, first: Barrows '98, second. Height...
...winner of second place in the broad jump in Cambridge and New York; L. W. Redpath, winner of second place in both sprints in the dual games; M. G. Gonterman, winner of third place in the 100 yards at Cambridge; W. W. Hoyt, who won first prize in pole vault in the Yale games and second at New York; N. B. Marshall, winner of second place in the quarter mile at Cambridge; W. R. Mansfield, winner of third place in the quarter mile at New York; J. D. Phillips, who won third place in walk at Cambridge and New York...
...Munroe, J. C. Rice, H. L. Williams and F. Mason, for the hurdles; H. Foote and F. C. Hinkley, for the mile; C. H. Williams and J. Bordman, for the half mile; M. J. Connor, for hammer and shot; N. P. Hallowell and A. Emmons, for the pole vault; W. E. Putnam, for the high jump; J. Staab, for the walk; V. H. Smith, S. Bryant and J. G. Clarke for the broad jump, and A. B. Holmes, H. C. Burdett and W. R. Brinckerhoff, for the bicycle race...
...Pole vault-H. W. Bowles, 4 in. Distance 10 ft., actual vault...