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Changed the date back. According to historical records, he was 41 in 1920, so he MUST have been born in 1879. :P
Corrected his date of birth & confirmed date of death. Added references. Changed his age at the 1920 games.
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'''Charles Sydney Smith''' (26 January 1879 – 6 April 1951) was born in [[Wigan]], the ninth of eleven children born to Thomas Smith and Elizabeth née Sayer. He was a [[United Kingdom|British]] [[water polo]] player who competed as goalkeeper for the England Water Polo team which won gold medals in the [[1908 Summer Olympics|London games of 1908]], and the [[1912 Summer Olympics|Stockholm games of 1912]]. After the [[World War I|Great War]] he returned, at the age of 41, as part of the Great Britain team to win a third Gold Medal at the [[1920 Summer Olympics|Antwerp games]] in 1920. He was still in the team four years later competing in the [[1924 Summer Olympics|Paris games]] of 1924 where the team was knocked out in the first round by the [[Hungary|Hungarian]] team after extra time.
'''Charles Sydney Smith''' (26 January 1876 <ref>St James, Poolstock, Wigan, Lancashire, England. Register: Baptisms 1864 - 1887, Page 89, Entry 708. Source: Original register at Wigan Archives</ref> &ndash; 6 April 1951<ref>The National Probate Calendar 1951. Page 346</ref>) was born in [[Wigan]], the ninth of eleven children born to Thomas Smith and Elizabeth née Sayer. He was a [[United Kingdom|British]] [[water polo]] player who competed as goalkeeper for the England Water Polo team which won gold medals in the [[1908 Summer Olympics|London games of 1908]], and the [[1912 Summer Olympics|Stockholm games of 1912]]. After the [[World War I|Great War]] he returned, at the age of 44, as part of the Great Britain team to win a third Gold Medal at the [[1920 Summer Olympics|Antwerp games]] in 1920. He was still in the team four years later competing in the [[1924 Summer Olympics|Paris games]] of 1924 where the team was knocked out in the first round by the [[Hungary|Hungarian]] team after extra time.


Smith was chosen to represent the country as the flag bearer at the [[1912 Summer Olympics]] in [[Stockholm]], [[Sweden]]. This made him the first competing athlete to [[List of flag bearers for Great Britain at the Olympics|carry the flag for Great Britain]].
Smith was chosen to represent the country as the flag bearer at the [[1912 Summer Olympics]] in [[Stockholm]], [[Sweden]]. This made him the first competing athlete to [[List of flag bearers for Great Britain at the Olympics|carry the flag for Great Britain]].
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==External links==
==External links==
*[http://www.databaseolympics.com/players/playerpage.htm?ilkid=SMITHCHA01 Charles Sydney Smith's Olympic medal statistics] at DatabaseOlympics.com
*[http://www.databaseolympics.com/players/playerpage.htm?ilkid=SMITHCHA01 Charles Sydney Smith's Olympic medal statistics] at DatabaseOlympics.com

===References===

<references />


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| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = Water polo player
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = Water polo player
| DATE OF BIRTH = 1879
| DATE OF BIRTH = 26 January 1876
| PLACE OF BIRTH =
| PLACE OF BIRTH =
| DATE OF DEATH = 6 April 1951
| DATE OF DEATH = 6 April 1951

Revision as of 16:00, 16 August 2012

Olympic medal record
Men's Water Polo
Gold medal – first place 1908 London Team competition
Gold medal – first place 1912 Stockholm Team competition
Gold medal – first place 1920 Antwerp Team competition

Charles Sydney Smith (26 January 1876 [1] – 6 April 1951[2]) was born in Wigan, the ninth of eleven children born to Thomas Smith and Elizabeth née Sayer. He was a British water polo player who competed as goalkeeper for the England Water Polo team which won gold medals in the London games of 1908, and the Stockholm games of 1912. After the Great War he returned, at the age of 44, as part of the Great Britain team to win a third Gold Medal at the Antwerp games in 1920. He was still in the team four years later competing in the Paris games of 1924 where the team was knocked out in the first round by the Hungarian team after extra time.

Smith was chosen to represent the country as the flag bearer at the 1912 Summer Olympics in Stockholm, Sweden. This made him the first competing athlete to carry the flag for Great Britain.

References

  1. ^ St James, Poolstock, Wigan, Lancashire, England. Register: Baptisms 1864 - 1887, Page 89, Entry 708. Source: Original register at Wigan Archives
  2. ^ The National Probate Calendar 1951. Page 346

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