How the Paralympic movement evolved into a major sporting event
First founded as an archery contest for 16 disabled veterans, the games now rival the Olympics as an athletic spectacle.
Jessica Long is one of the most decorated athletes in the United States. The 32-year-old swimmer won five medals at the 2020 Tokyo Paralympic Games, bringing her total count to 29. For years, the games have given her the chance to compete at the highest level—and something to look forward to every four years.
“Since I was 12, when I won my first gold in Athens, I wanted people to know what the Paralympic Games were,” says Long, whose lower legs were amputated when she was a baby due to a congenital condition. “Each year the excitement and the build-up for the Paralympic Games has grown more and more.”
(Why swimming might just be the best exercise out there.)
Participation in the Paralympics is at an all-time high. At the Paris games, which began on August 28 after the conclusion of the Olympics, more than 4,400 athletes from countries around the world are taking part.
But how did the Paralympics begin? Here's a brief history of the games.
The first Paralympic Games
The Paralympic Games are relatively new compared to the Olympics. But the event has evolved dramatically from its beginnings. Every four years the International Paralympic Committee (IPC) has included more athletes with a wider array of disabilities, and from a larger number of countries, playing more sports.
The first Paralympic Games were played in 1948, although sporting activities for athletes with physical impairments had existed for at least 60 years before that. Deaf athletes created their own sports clubs in Berlin as early as 1888.
But the idea of competitions for disabled athletes didn’t spread widely until World War II, when it became a way to assist injured veterans and civilians. Ludwig Guttmann, a doctor who ran a spinal injury center in Great Britain, spearheaded the movement. He believed that participating in athletics would be a form of mental and physical rehabilitation. Concerned that people with disabilities were often neglected, Guttmann saw sports as part of “the social reintegration of the paralyzed into society.”
(How wheelchair basketball changed these women's lives.)
“I found that sport for the disabled has a tremendous effect on the social point of view,” Guttmann said in an interview on the IPC website. “When I saw how sport is accepted by the paralyzed it was logical to start a sports movement.”
In 1948, on the same day as the opening ceremonies for the Olympic Games in London, Guttmann organized the first contest for impaired athletes, which he named the International Wheelchair Games. Sixteen ex-servicemen and women in wheelchairs competed in archery during the games.
The games became an annual event, each year expanding to more athletes. Javelin throwing was soon added to the lineup. The name changed to the Stoke Mandeville Games, after the hospital where Guttman worked, and in 1952 the Netherlands sent a team, making the competition international.
In 1960 the Stoke Mandeville Games officially became the Paralympic Games. That year, more than 400 athletes with disabilities from 23 countries gathered at the Olympic Stadium in Rome following the conclusion of the Summer Olympics. They competed in archery, basketball, swimming, fencing, javelin, shotput, club throwing, swimming, table tennis, pentathlon, and even snooker.
Since then, the Paralympics have been held immediately after the Olympics in the same host city. The name “Paralympics” reflects the games’ parallel nature: It comes from the Greek preposition "para," which means "beside.” The Olympics and Paralympics exist in tandem.
The explosive growth of Paralympics popularity
The growth of the Paralympics was swift. At the 1976 games in Toronto, over 1,500 athletes from 40 countries participated in 13 different sports. That year also saw the first Winter Paralympic games, which were held in Sweden. By the 1988 Paralympics in Seoul, the Paralympics were using the same facilities as the Olympics. By 1996, the Atlanta games were billed as “The World’s Second Largest Sporting Event” and the games were televised.
The increased exposure to the event led to more inclusivity. Guttman’s games had been designed for veterans with spinal injuries. Eventually the games opened to civilians, but they were still limited to participants with spinal injuries. By in 1976, athletes with disabilities beyond spinal cord injuries—for instance, amputees and those with vision impairments—were invited to compete.
That raised the question of how to make contests fair—so the least-disabled person wouldn’t always win. Paralympics organizers started to classify competitors by the extent and type of their disabilities. The classifications fall into three broad categories—physical, visual, and intellectual—and determine whether athletes are eligible to compete in a sport and how competitors are grouped together for events.
For Long, the games have been a gift. She is one of the most decorated Paralympians—and has more medals than Olympic swimmer Michael Phelps. “I don’t know where life is going to take me,” she says, “but the Paralympic movement has given me this entire, wild, amazing journey.”
Related Topics
You May Also Like
Go Further
Animals
- What would the world look like without mosquitoes?What would the world look like without mosquitoes?
- Social media loves to villainize dolphins. Here's why it's wrong.Social media loves to villainize dolphins. Here's why it's wrong.
- How did wolves evolve into dogs? New fossils provide cluesHow did wolves evolve into dogs? New fossils provide clues
- This unorthodox method is saving baby parrots from extinctionThis unorthodox method is saving baby parrots from extinction
- A deadly disease that affects cats big and small found in U.S.A deadly disease that affects cats big and small found in U.S.
Environment
- ‘Corn sweat’—and other weird weather phenomena—explained‘Corn sweat’—and other weird weather phenomena—explained
- A sea tornado sank a yacht. We might see them more often.A sea tornado sank a yacht. We might see them more often.
- How billions of dollars are revolutionizing ocean explorationHow billions of dollars are revolutionizing ocean exploration
- Where to go stargazing in Chile according to a local astronomer
- Paid Content
Where to go stargazing in Chile according to a local astronomer
History & Culture
- Did Babe Ruth really ‘call’ this legendary home run?Did Babe Ruth really ‘call’ this legendary home run?
- The real history behind the legend of China's Monkey KingThe real history behind the legend of China's Monkey King
- How new technology transformed the American workforceHow new technology transformed the American workforce
- This secret Civil War sabotage mission was doomed from the startThis secret Civil War sabotage mission was doomed from the start
- This rare burial site reveals secrets about the Sahara's lush pastThis rare burial site reveals secrets about the Sahara's lush past
Science
- Why some say tennis is 'the world's healthiest sport'Why some say tennis is 'the world's healthiest sport'
- Your body ages rapidly at 44 and 60. Here's how to prepare.Your body ages rapidly at 44 and 60. Here's how to prepare.
- How do gold nuggets form? Earthquakes may be the keyHow do gold nuggets form? Earthquakes may be the key
- Astronauts getting stuck in space is more common than you thinkAstronauts getting stuck in space is more common than you think
Travel
- These are the must-see sights of Italy's Veneto regionThese are the must-see sights of Italy's Veneto region
- A guide to St John's, Atlantic Canada's iceberg capitalA guide to St John's, Atlantic Canada's iceberg capital