| The Badges for the Officials and Competitors
1912:
On the 14 November, 1910, the Swedish Olympic
Committee accepted for the badge to be given to the officials and competitors
present at the Games, a design by Erik Lindberg, representing the head
of Pallas Athene, as the principal figure, resting on a four-sided plinth
adorned with the Three Crowns of Sweden. The plinth bore the following
inscription in Swedish: “The Olympic Games of Stockholm, 1912”. About 5,000
examples of the badge were struck in oxidized silver-plated metal, in addition
to which, some 50 were struck, made of silver-gilt, the last-mentioned
being for the members of the Swedish and the International Olympic Committees.
As the badge for the officials and the competitors
was to entitle the wearer to admission to all the places where competitions
were to be held, and as places had been reserved in various sections of
the Stadium for the different groups of functionaries, the Swedish Olympic
Committee determined on the following system of mounting and distributing
the badge in question: The badge, in silver-gilt and attached to a blue
and yellow ribbon, was to be worn by the members of the Swedish Olympic
Committee, and was to entitle the wearers to admission to the box in the
Stadium north of, and next to the Royal box; to a reserved seat at all
the other places where the Olympic competitions were being held; to the
seats on the northern slope of the Stadium and to all the evening entertainments
at the Stadium during the period July 6—July 15. The same badge, unmounted,
was distributed to the members of the International Olympic Committee,
and conferred the same privileges as were attached to that worn by the
Swedish Olympic Committee. The same badge unmounted and in silver-gilt,
was presented to the ladies of the members of the Swedish and the International
Olympic Committees, and entitled the bearers to the same privileges as
those possessed by the said members.
The presidents of the special committees,
and the leaders of the teams of the various nations, were presented with
the badge mounted on a blueand- yellow cockade. This badge, together with
a blue identificationcard, entitled the wearer to admission to the Committee-box
at the Stadium; to a reserved seat at all the other places where Olympic
Competitions were being carried on, and to the northern slope of the Stadium.
The competitor’s badge, attached to a small
yellow cockade, and accompanied by a yellow identification-card, admitted
the higher officials and the assistant leaders of the various nations to
the Committeebox at the Stadium, and to the northern slope of the Stadium.
The other functionaries of the various nations received a competitor’s
badge mounted on a blue-and-yellow bow and riband, this entitling them
to admission to the northern slope of the Stadium, but not to the competing
places other than the Stadium, unless the wearer also possessed an official’s
card for the branch of athletics that might be going on at any of the said
places.
Those persons acting as “hosts” of the various
nations, were given the competitor’s badge attached to a bow in the colours
of the respective nations. Together with a blue identification-card, these
badges admitted the bearer to all the competitions. The competitor’s badge,
which was presented to all the active competitors, gave admission to the
northern slope of the Stadium, but not to any other competing ground, unless
the bearer of the badge also possessed a competitor’s card for one or other
of the competitions carried on at these places.
The journalists present officially at the
Games were presented with a special badge in the form of a metal button,
with the inscription “Stadion. Pressen”, in gold letters on a blue enamel
ground. This badge entitled the wearer to free admission to the Press-box
at the Stadium and, if he also possessed a special correspondent’s-card,
to the other competing grounds.
(Source document: Official
Report 1912, page 162) |