Columbia fencers are no strangers to the Olympics.
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Columbia fencers are no strangers to the Olympics.
Columbia fencers are no strangers to the Olympics. From the first modern Games, in Athens in 1896, to the most recent, in Rio de Janeiro in 2016, the College has had 24 fencers compete for a spot on the coveted podium; four captured medals. With the Summer Olympics scheduled to start on July 23 in Tokyo, we thought we’d take the opportunity to look back at some of the standouts who’ve fenced at Columbia and competed for the United States.
Samuel George Fitzhugh Townsend CC 1893, SEAS 1896: After majoring in physics, Townsend got a second degree in electrical engineering and taught that subject at Columbia until his death in 1906. Competing in the 1904 Olympics in St. Louis under the name Fitzhugh Townsend, he was a member of the U.S. team that won the silver medal in team foil competition. He also competed in individual foil but was eliminated in the first round, and in individual épée, where he finished fifth. Townsend was the first Ivy League fencer to compete in the modern Olympics.
IMAGES COURTESY COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY ATHLETICS
Hugh Alessandroni CC 1929, SEAS 1931: Another athlete who learned to fence at Columbia under coach Murray, Alessandroni was a two-time U.S. foil champion and a member of seven teams that won national titles. He earned a bronze medal with the U.S. foil team in the 1932 Olympics at Los Angeles and competed for the U.S. foil team that finished fifth in the 1936 Olympics at Berlin. A chemical engineer, Alessandroni led a team that invented the electrical épée scoring device, first used in the 1936 Olympics.
Caitlin “Katy” Bilodeau ’87: The top-ranked women’s foil fencer in the U.S. from 1985 to 1992, Bilodeau was a four-time national champion and four-time All-American. She won the NCAA women’s foil title in 1985 and 1987, becoming the first woman to capture two NCAA fencing crowns. Bilodeau competed in the 1988 Olympics at Seoul and the 1992 Olympics at Barcelona. Among her many honors, she was named the NCAA Athlete of the Decade for the 1980s in fencing and Columbia’s Athlete of the 20th Century, also for fencing. She was inducted into the U.S. Fencing Association Hall of Fame in 2002 and the Columbia University Athletics Hall of Fame in 2006.
Ann Marsh-Senic ’94: Marsh-Senic was a three-time All-American in foil who never lost a match in her Ivy League career, compiling a 48–0 record and leading the Lions to two Ivy crowns. She became Columbia’s first female athlete to appear in three Olympic Games, competing in 1992 at Barcelona, in 1996 at Atlanta and in 2000 at Sydney. Marsh-Senic completed medical school at the University of Rochester while still fencing, is an emergency physician in suburban Detroit and assists her husband, Anatolie Senic, in managing the Renaissance Fencing Club in Troy, Mich.
Alex Sachare ’71 took fencing to satisfy part of his PE requirement and is a former sports editor of Spectator and editor-in chief of CCT.
Samuel George Fitzhugh Townsend CC 1893, SEAS 1896:
1904 Olympics in St. Louis (silver medal, team foil)
Millard J. Bloomer Jr. CC 1920, LAW 1923:
1920 Olympics in Antwerp
Steddiford Pitt CC 1911:
1920 Olympics in Antwerp
Harold Bloomer CC 1924:
1924 Olympics in Paris
Norman Armitage CC 1927, SEAS 1929:
1928 Olympics in Amsterdam; 1932 Olympics in Los Angeles; 1936 Olympics in Berlin; 1948 Olympics in London (bronze medal, team sabre; U.S. flag bearer); 1952 Olympics in Helsinki (U.S. flag bearer); 1956 Olympics in Melbourne (U.S. flag bearer)
Hugh Alessandroni CC 1929, SEAS 1931:
1932 Olympics in Los Angeles (bronze medal, team foil); 1936 Olympics in Berlin
Robert Driscoll CC 1933:
1952 Olympics in Helsinki
Alfred Skrobisch CC 1933, SEAS 1934, SEAS 1935:
1952 Olympics in Helsinki; 1956 Olympics in Melbourne
James Margolis ’58:
1960 Olympics in Rome
James Melcher ’61:
1972 Olympics in Munich
Tom Losonczy ’75:
1976 Olympics in Montreal; 1980 Olympics in Moscow (U.S. team boycotted)
Joel Glucksman ’70:
1984 Olympics in Los Angeles
Steve Trevor ’86:
1984 Olympics in Los Angeles; 1988 Olympics in Seoul
Caitlin “Katy” Bilodeau ’87:
1988 Olympics in Seoul; 1992 Olympics in Barcelona
Robert Cottingham Jr. ’88:
1988 Olympics in Seoul; 1992 Olympics in Barcelona
Anne Marsh-Senic ’94:
1992 Olympics in Barcelona; 1996 Olympics in Atlanta; 2000 Olympics in Sydney
Jed Dupree ’01:
2004 Olympics in Athens
Emily Jacobson ’08:
2004 Olympics in Athens
Dan Kellner ’98:
2004 Olympics in Athens
James Williams ’07, GSAS’09, BUS’17:
2008 Olympics in Seoul (silver medal, team sabre); 2012 Olympics in London
Sherif Farrag ’09, GSAS’18:
2012 Olympics in London
Jeff Spear ’10:
2012 Olympics in London
Nicole Ross ’13:
2012 Olympics in London
Published three times a year by Columbia College for alumni, students, faculty, parents and friends.
Columbia Alumni Center
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Columbia Alumni Center
622 W. 113th St., MC 4530, 4th Fl.
New York, NY 10025
212-851-7488
ccalumni@columbia.edu