The State Historical Society of Missouri

Famous Missouri Athletes

Helen Stephens (1918 – 1994)

Introduction

Helen Stephens was an Olympic champion from Missouri. She won two gold medals at the 1936 Olympics. She did this many years before schools had athletic programs for girls. Helen Stephens successfully competed in a variety of sports throughout her life.

Signature of Helen Stephens

Early Years and Training

Helen Herring Stephens was born on February 3, 1918, to Frank Elmer and Bertie Mae Herring Stephens. She grew up on a farm in Callaway County near Fulton, Missouri. She had a younger brother named Robert Lee. As a child, Helen loved to run, jump, and climb. She also had to work hard on the family farm. “From the time I was a small child I was in training, only I didn’t know it,” Helen once said. “I was walking, running, doing chores, building up my body, my lung capacity, my wind, my endurance, everything that people have to train for today.” A horse also helped her. Helen’s cousin always rode horseback to school and Helen would trot beside them. “I would grab the stirrup and run with the horse.”

When she was eight, Helen dreamed that she was the fastest runner in the world. Helen attended Middle River School, a one-room school in Callaway County, and then Fulton High School. Neither school had athletic teams or facilities for girls. Luckily, Helen’s high school physical education teacher, Coach W. Burton Moore, knew how to train athletes for track and field events. When he discovered how fast Helen could run, he helped her make her dream come true.

In 1934, Helen was fifteen and nearly six feet tall. Coach Moore clocked Helen running the 50-yard dash. Her time was 5.8 seconds. This time tied the world record held by Elizabeth Robinson. Coach Moore clocked Helen again to check his stopwatch. The second time was 5.9 seconds. Coach Moore taught Helen the basic forms of running on the cinder road outside Fulton High School. Helen also trained at home on her farm with her brother.

On March 22, 1935, Coach Moore took Helen to St. Louis for her first official race. Helen ran against Stella Walsh, a Polish gold medalist from the 1932 Olympics. Helen was dressed in sweats and running spikes borrowed from male friends. She beat Stella in the 50-meter dash at 6.6 seconds, setting a new indoor record on a dirt track. The press gave Helen the titles “The Missouri Express” and “The Fulton Flash.” Fulton High School celebrated Helen’s victory when she returned. Years later, Helen admitted, “That’s when I learned everybody likes a winner.”

An Olympic Champion

In the summer of 1936, Helen Stephens and the other Olympic team members sailed to Germany to compete in the IX Olympiad in Berlin. During the voyage, Stephens received letters asking her not to compete. Some Americans wanted her to protest the mistreatment of Jews by Adolf Hitler and the Nazis. Stephens cared about this problem, but she also wanted to fulfill her responsibilities as an athlete.

On August 4, 1936, eighteen-year-old Helen Stephens set the Olympic world record for the 100-meter event at 11.5 seconds. Her record stood for twenty-four years until Wilma Rudolph beat it in the 1960 Olympics. On August 9, Stephens was the anchor in the 400-meter relay team that also set a world record time of 46.9 seconds. She received a gold medal for each event. Stephens had fulfilled her childhood dream. She was the fastest woman runner in the world.

Afterwards, Stephens returned to Fulton, where she earned a college degree from William Woods College. She played for the All-American Red Heads Basketball Team before becoming the first woman to create, own, and manage her own semi-professional basketball team. Stephen’s team, the Helen Stephens Olympics Co-Eds, played from 1938-1940, and then after World War II from 1946-52.

During the war, Stephens worked at an aircraft plant in St. Louis before enlisting in the Women’s Reserve of the U.S. Marines. Afterwards, she became a research librarian for the Defense Mapping Agency Aerospace Center in St. Louis. She held this job for thirty years, until her retirement in 1976.

A Lifelong Athlete

Helen Stephens competed in a variety of sports during the rest of her life. She enjoyed bowling, golf, and swimming. She competed in multiple events in several Senior Olympics and clocked the fastest speeds and longest distances in her age category. At age sixty-eight, Stephens ran the 100-meter dash in 16.4 seconds, just 4 seconds slower than when she was eighteen. She carried the torch for the first nine Show-Me State Games in Columbia, Missouri, as well as the Senior Olympic games.

Helen Stephens paved the way for future female athletes of all ages. She is in the National and United States Track and Field Halls of Fame as well as the Women’s Hall of Fame. Helen Stephens died on January 17, 1994. She is buried in Fulton, Missouri.




Text by Carlynn Trout
Intern Research by Jillian Hartke

Meets Show-Me Standards SS: 2, 6, 7; 4th grade GLE 2a.A.; and MSIP equity in gender and racial/ethnic awareness.

References and Resources

For more information about Helen Stephens and her career, see the following resources:

Society Resources
  • Selected Bibliography

    A selected list of books and articles about Helen Stephens in the library of The State Historical Society of Missouri. The Society's call numbers follow the citations in brackets.
  • Western Historical Manuscript Collection
    http://www.umsystem.edu/whmc/invent/3552.html
    This Web site offers an excellent short biography of Helen Stephens. It outlines the collection that contains Stephens’ Olympic diary, letters, clippings, and other materials related to her long athletic career as well as her working career.
Outside Resources

These links, which open in another window, will take you outside the Society’s Web site. The Society is not responsible for the content of the following Web sites:

  • Famous Missouri Women
    http://www.emints.org/ethemes/resources/S00001142.shtml
    This site includes a brief biography of and links to sites about other famous Missouri women.
  • 1936 Berlin Olympics
    http://www.olympic.org/uk/games/past/index_uk.asp?OLGT=1&OLGY=1936
    This official Olympic site provides interesting information about and visuals from the 1936 Olympics held in Berlin, Germany.
  • Biography Summary
    http://www.siu.edu/~siupress/titles/s04_titles/hanson_helen.htm
    This site provides a summary of Sharon Kinney Hanson’s authorized biography of Helen Stephens.
  • William Woods University
    http://www.wmwoods.edu
    This site provides information on Helen Stephens’s alma mater, William Woods University.
  • Callaway County Public Library
    http://callaway.county.missouri.org/Stephens.html
    This site offers information on Helen Stephens and a photograph of her with Olympian Jesse Owens.
  • Kingdom of Callaway Historical Society
    http://history.fulton.missouri.org/
    This site offers information about Fulton and Callaway County, Helen Stephens’s hometown and native county.
  • The USA Track and Field Hall of Fame
    http://usatf.org/athletes/hof/stephens.asp
    This site offers a brief summary of Helen Stephens’s career.
  • The National Women’s Hall of Fame
    http://www.greatwomen.org/women.php?action=viewone&id=151
    This site provides a brief summary of Helen Stephens’s life.
Unless otherwise noted, © The State Historical Society of Missouri