Margaret Harriman

Margaret Harriman is a Paralympic athlete from South Africa. She was born in Great Britain.[1]

Margaret Harriman
Rhodesia at Rome 1960
Personal information
Birth nameMargaret Webb
Nationality Rhodesia
 South Africa
BornGreat Britain
Medal record
Paralympic Games
Representing  Rhodesia
Archery
1960 Rome Women's Windsor Round Open
1960 Rome Women's FITA Round Open
1964 Tokyo Women's Albion Round Open
1964 Tokyo Women's FITA Round Open
Dartchery
1964 Tokyo Mixed Pairs Open
Swimming
1960 Rome Women's 50 m Crawl Incomplete class 4
1960 Rome Women's 50 m Backstroke Incomplete class 4
1960 Rome Women's 50 m Breaststroke Incomplete class 4
Representing  South Africa
Archery
1968 Tel Aviv Women's Albion Round Open
1968 Tel Aviv Women's FITA Round Open
1972 Heidelberg Women's FITA Round Open
Dartchery
1976 Toronto Women's Pairs Open
Lawn Bowls
1972 Heidelberg Women's singles
1972 Heidelberg Women's pairs
1976 Toronto Women's singles Wh
1976 Toronto Women's pairs Wh
1996 Atlanta Women's singles LB2

She was the only lady to compete in the netball tournament of the second Stoke Mandeville Games in 1949 under her maiden name of Margaret Webb.[2] From 1960 to 1976 she competed in the Summer Paralympics in many sports, including archery, athletics, dartchery, lawn bowls and swimming. She represented Rhodesia in her first two Paralympics and then South Africa since 1968, winning eleven gold medals.

Between 1960 and 1968 she won an impressive eight gold medals in archery.

In 1976 she became ineligible to compete after South Africa was banned from the games because of its policy on apartheid.

She made a long-awaited return to the competition at the 1996 Summer Paralympics in Lawn Bowls after the fall of apartheid which led to the lifting of the ban on South African competitors. In this edition she won her 17th and last medal, a bronze.

References

  1. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 September 2018. Retrieved 16 September 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. "September 2012".


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