Elem teacher Evelyn Kawamoto Konno was an Olympic athlete

Elementary teacher Evelyn Kawamoto Konno was an exceptional swimmer who once competed in the 1952 Olympics. Photo credit: Hawaii Sports Hall of Fame

There are numerous outstanding classroom teachers who have also become accomplished athletes. One of these is Evelyn Kawamoto Konno, an exceptional swimmer who once competed in the Olympics.

Evelyn was born in Honolulu, Hawaii, on Sept. 17, 1933. She was raised in poverty. Her mother, Sadako, was a single parent. To support the family, Sadako took in laundry and ironing.

As a teenager, Evelyn attended McKinley High School in Honolulu. In 1949, she helped lead the Hawaii Swim Club to the National Amateur Athletic Union Team championship in San Antonio, Texas. Although she was only 15 years old, she set American records in both the 300-meter individual medley and the 200-meter breaststroke in that competition.

In 1952, Evelyn represented the United States at the Olympics held in Helsinki, Finland. She garnered bronze medals in the 400-meter individual freestyle and the 4×100-meter freestyle relay events. At the same event, she placed second in the 110-yard breaststroke and was on the winning 880-yard relay. In fact, she became the first Japanese American woman to win an Olympic medal. For these accomplishments, in 2000 she was inducted into the Hawaii Sports Hall of Fame.

In 1956, Evelyn married her fellow Olympian from Hawaii, Ford Konno, who won four medals at the 1952 Games. Several months after their wedding, Ford won a silver medal in the 4 x 200 freestyle relay at the Melbourne Olympic Games. Two daughters were born to the couple.

When she was 30 years old, Evelyn enrolled in courses at the University of Hawaii. After earning her degree, she worked as an elementary school teacher in Kaneohe, a city in Honolulu County. Later she worked in Wailupe, until her retirement from the teaching profession.

Sadly, Evelyn passed away on Jan. 27, 2017 in her native state of Hawaii. She was 83 years old.