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DETROIT OLYMPIC HISTORY




THE HISTORY OF THE CITY'S OLYMPIC BIDS AND A VISION OF THE FUTURE.




President Kennedy introduces Detroit’s

bid for the 1968 Olympic Games


SCROLL DOWN TO CONTINUE




OLYMPIC TRANSPORT


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MATTHAEI AND
BRUNDAGE



The Story of a Betrayal?

Fred Matthaei Sr was responsible for organizing all of the bids from 1944 to
1968. Matthaei needed the support of Avery Brundage, who was first President of
the USOC and then President of the IOC. Born in Detroit, his support might have
seemed assured, but in the end he let the city down. He also appears to have
been a racist and misogynist. The correspondence between the two over the years
reveals a difficult relationship, and perhaps points to where the bid finally
failed. The major row over the chaotic American cities’ bids for the 1956 games
led to acrimonious words between the two, and although Brundage continued to
offer encouragement to Detroit’s bids, and even came to the Detroit Athletic
Club to deliver a speech, the poor relationship between the two men may have put
paid to Detroit’s chances.


THE CITY OF CHAMPIONS

 The inspiration for the Olympic bids

In 1935 the Detroit Tigers at last won their first World Series. In the same
year the Detroit Lions won their first NFL championship and in April 1936 the
Detroit Red Wings won their first Stanley Cup. The Governor of Michigan declared
April 18th to be Champions Day in the state, and the Detroit Times organized a
celebratory dinner at the Masonic Temple with Joe Louis as the guest of honor.
Staged during the middle of the Great Depression, the event represented a
celebration of a sports-mad city and a focus of civic pride. Talk of hosting an
Olympics can be traced back as far as 1920, but it was Champions Day that
inspired a group of citizens led by the architect, George Graves, to begin
exploratory talks with the US Olympic Association about the possibility of
Detroit becoming host of the games. 


1935 




DETROIT
TIGERS

League

American League



Season Record

93W-58L-1T



Word Series

W 4-2 Over

Chicago Cubs

Stats



1936 




DETROIT
RED WINGS

League

American Division



Season Record

24W - 16L - 8T



Stanley Cup

 W 3-1 Over

Toronto Maple Leafs

Stats



1935 




JOE
LOUIS

Boxing Class

Heavy Weight



Career Record

66W - 3L - 52KOs



World Champion

 August 1936 Over

Jack Sharkey

Stats



1935 




DETROIT
LIONS

League

National Football League



Season Record

7W - 3L - 2T



Championship

 W 26-7 Over

New York Giants

Stats








The Governor of Michigan declare that April 18 will be designated “Day of
Champions” in the state in recognition of the achievements of the athletes of
Michigan and Detroit.

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The City of Champions
Matthaei and Brundage
Detroit Olympic Bid History


PRESENTING DETROIT TO THE WORLD – THE BID DOCUMENTS

Each time Detroit presented a bid for the Games it produced a bid document. Each
represents a snapshot in the history of the city. The choice of images shows how
the bid organizers wanted to project the city. These include buildings where
events would be hosted, open spaces such as Belle Isle, landmarks which focused
mainly on the city’s industrial strength. The text of the bid documents is also
revealing. It focuses on the city’s commitment to the Olympic Games, its
industrial strength, and over time, the demand for recognition of its
persistence in bidding. The documents are also revealing for what they do not
show. Probably the biggest obstacle to winning the Games was the failure to
build an Olympic Stadium. More importantly, the documents show little awareness
of the changing face of the city, the growing significance of the Black
population, and no concern for addressing their interest in the Olympics. 





1944


1964





1952




1968




1960




1972

Presenting Detroit to the World


DETROIT
OLYMPIC
VENUES





DETROIT OLYMPIC STADIUM PLANS

The IOC was always afraid that the Olympics would be awarded to a city on the
promise of building an Olympic Stadium and then the city would not keep its
promise. This problem dogged Detroit’s Olympic bids. Over the years many plans
were produced, but there were always problems relating to funding and location.
The city was reluctant to underwrite the cost – even though in relative terms
the cost would have been much lower back then. In the 1950s there were arguments
about whether it might cost $10 million or $20 million. Even allowing for the
effect of inflation, this would have been much cheaper than the equivalent
project today. What would happen to a stadium after the Games? It was not clear
back then that a stadium with 100,000 capacity, a figure often mentioned, could
be fully utilized.

Location proved to be just as big a problem. Three main sites usually came up
for discussion – The State Fairgrounds (Woodward Avenue and Eight Mile Road),
Midtown (close to Wayne State University) and the Riverfront. Different factions
lobbied for different alternatives, and a consensus never emerged.

The images below show some of the designs created for the Detroit Olympic bids.
Most were the creation of architects Giffels, Vallet, and Louis Rossetti.
Rossetti remains one of the largest architectural firms in Detroit.



Detroit Olympic Venues


“WHAT IF DETROIT HAD BEEN CHOSEN TO HOST THE 1968 OLYMPICS?

"With the Olympics only a year away, would the riots of 1967 have happened, or
happened in the same way, or would the Cavanagh administration have reacted more
effectively to prevent or control them? Unanswerable, but worth pondering. And
then consider 1968, with the racial dynamics of that year, and the call for a
black athlete boycott that almost rocked the Games, and the historic gloved-fist
black power salute of sprinters Tommie Smith and John Carlos on the medal stand,
and how all that would have played out had the Olympics not been in Mexico City
but in Detroit, a city at the center of the long and complicated story of race
in America." - from Once in a Great City: A Detroit Story, by David Maraniss
(2015)

The proponents of the Detroit Olympics were convinced that it would be of great
benefit to the city, and devoted a lot of effort to promoting it



Rather than emphasisizing economic benefits to the city, most of the arguments
focused on the pride and pleasure it would bring to Detroiters. There was even a
specially written song








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What If Detroit Hosted the 1968 Olumpics?


MICHIGAN OLYMPIANS



Peter

Vanderkaay

2004, 2008, 2012 

Olympic Swimmer




Jessica
Kooreman

2014, 2018

Olympic Speed Skater

209

Athletes born in the state of Michigan have participated in the Olympic Games. 



Michigan Olympians



IMAGINING A DETROIT OLYMPICS



Is it too fanciful to imagine Detroit as an Olympic city? Is it worthwhile to do
so? The Olympics are not a panacea for economic and social problems. There’s
also plenty of evidence the money spent on Olympic facilities does not produce
any long term benefits, as the facilities lie idle or underutilized after the
Games.

For a city like Detroit, hosting an Olympic Games requires reimagining how they
are organized. Here is an imagined path to a 2048 Detroit Olympics.

Suppose the ignominy of yet another scandal forced the International Olympic
Committee to rethink its policies, its practices, and its priorities. Following
a lengthy internal review, the IOC’s leadership decided they could no longer
lean on host cities to provide ever more lavish facilities with no practical use
after the event. It was time to return to the Games’ roots, the simple idea of
athletes from around the world coming together to compete. Too much of Olympic
razzmatazz had come to focus on brand new extravagant showcases rather than on
the humanity of the athletes. The stage had become more important than the play.

Once the IOC recognized that it had to change its ways, the power balance
flipped and it was now the Committee that had to make the offer, and the city
that had to be persuaded. The world would still want to watch the athletes, but
the Games would be scaled down to human proportions. Suppose the IOC decided to
stop ferreting out cities that were prepared to spend money on white elephants.
Instead, they turned to a city that had a proven commitment to sport, at a scale
that served the community. 

All of a sudden, Detroit would look near perfect. As a world-class sports city,
it was well endowed with facilities of all kinds, including venues to practice.
The partnership between Detroit and Windsor to create a cross-border Games was a
key factor for the IOC. So in the end, the two countries created a fifty-mile
Olympic zone around Detroit, taking down the border for the duration of the
event. 

At the time, many cities had bowed out of the Olympic bid business—too
expensive, too inconvenient. But Detroit’s citizens were behind it from the
start: Motown is known for its sports, after all, with a long and proud history.
A City of Champions would now bring the champions to the city. But the final nod
also came as belated recognition of the many times Detroit had offered and had
been turned down: a bit of restitution for the shenanigans of the past. 

For a few summer weeks every four years, one city becomes the center of the
world of sports—it is second only to the FIFA World Cup in global viewership.
The State of Michigan, which had treated Detroit as a stepchild for so long,
finally saw a city worth investing in: suddenly, there was money for public
transportation systems that linked Detroit to its suburbs—and the suburbs, in
turn, were happy to claim Detroit as their own for once. 

To be sure, there were critical voices as well. For some, any investment in
America’s cities is wasteful by definition and must always be opposed.
Elsewhere, skeptics were wondering if the money could not be spent on better
things than a two-week jock party. But the Olympics were changing, and the new
model prioritized the city over the glitz. The supporters won the debate
handily. 

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Detroit 2048

- COMMENT -






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Thanks for submitting!

This exhibition was created by Frederic Culpepper, Amanda Krugliak, Stefan
Szymanski and Silke-Maria Weineck

in collaboration with the Michigan Detroit Center.



The material in this exhibition is predominantly drawn from the Detroit Olympic
Committee archive in Detroit Public Library, to whom we are grateful both for
access and for their support. We thank the University of Illinois for access to
the Avery Brundage archive,  the University of Michigan Bentley Library for
access to the Fred Matthaei Jr. archive, and the Detroit Historical Society for
their support.

We are grateful for the financial support of various units at the University of
Michigan: the College of Literature, Science and the Arts; the Office for
Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion; the School of Kinesiology; the Departments of
Comparative Literature and of History; the Rackham School of Graduate Studies;
the Detroit Center, 

 

We also extend our appreciation for their support and advice to Ketra Armstrong,
Kerstin Barndt, Mark Bowden, Andrew Crocker, Ben Dettmar, Jeremy Dimmick,
Kathryn Dowgiewicz, Dawn Eurich, Jordan Field, Atiim Funchess, Chelsea Hendrus,
Gidon Jakar, Gregory Kinney, Jason Krol, Jiangyun Li, Anna Moga, Shengyuan Liu,
Feodies Shipp III, Rob Sellers, Joel Stone, Bradley Taylor, Ron Wade, Rebecca
Salminen Witt, Tracey Wyatt

 

Stefan is also grateful to all the students who took his course on Detroit
Sports and the Detroit Olympics for their ideas and engagement.


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