A Sizeable Batch of Olympic Mysteries

Today on Oldest Olympians, we wanted to present a new batch of Olympic mysteries that have been solved thanks to the research efforts of Connor Mah. The first is an update to an Olympic mystery that we already provided an update for: 1948 Portuguese sport shooter Abílio Brandão. We noted previously that he was born on October 15, 1910, but it now seems that he was born one year earlier, on October 15, 1909, and that he died August 24, 1971. Another mystery Portuguese sport shooter from that year, José da Silva, was discovered to have been born November 19, 1914 and died January 19, 2001.

(António Serôdio, pictured at Amigos da Reprise da Escola de Mafra)

Continuing with Portugal, we have two more updates from among that country’s Olympic mysteries. First, Mah learned that 1948 equestrian António Serôdio was born December 25, 1903, and thus is certainly deceased. He also discovered that 1948 fencer Manuel Pinheiro Chagas was born on October 20, 1918 and died May 27, 2015 at the age of 96.

Mah was also able to solve one of our oldest Olympic mysteries, that of Walter Heinzl, who represented Czechoslovakia as a member of one of its four-man bobsleigh teams at the 1936 Garmisch-Partenkirchen Olympics and came in 12th. An anonymous user on Wikipedia suggested that he was shot down over Japan during World War II, but Mah discovered that this was not the case. Heinzl was actually Walter Heinzel, born June 5, 1907, and although he did fight during World War II, he survived the conflict and later moved to Canada, where he died January 11, 2002 at the age of 94.

Finally, we had seen hints that javelin thrower Dick Miller, born February 14, 1929, who represented Great Britain in that event at the 1952 Helsinki Olympics, had died at some time in the early 2020s. We were able to confirm that this was true, as he died January 7, 2021 at the age of 91.

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