American swimmer who won 5 Olympic gold medals and set 67 world records before becoming famous as Tarzan in Hollywood films during the 1930s and 1940s
Born in Freidorf, Austria-Hungary (now Romania) on June 2, 1904, Peter Johann Weißmüller immigrated to the United States as an infant with his family, settling in Pennsylvania before moving to Chicago. Growing up near Lake Michigan, he learned to swim at an early age and joined the Illinois Athletic Club, where his natural talent quickly became apparent. His family name was Americanized to Weissmuller during his youth. Weissmuller's competitive swimming career reached its zenith during the 1920s, establishing him as the dominant freestyle swimmer of his generation. At the 1924 Paris Olympics, he captured three gold medals in the 100-meter freestyle, 400-meter freestyle, and 4×200-meter freestyle relay. Four years later at the 1928 Amsterdam Olympics, he successfully defended his 100-meter freestyle title and earned another gold in the 4×200-meter freestyle relay, bringing his Olympic total to five gold medals and one bronze. Throughout his competitive career, Weissmuller revolutionized freestyle swimming technique and set an unprecedented 67 world records across various distances. His powerful stroke, exceptional breathing technique, and natural speed in the water made him virtually unbeatable in freestyle events. He never lost a race in either the 100-meter or 400-meter freestyle during his amateur career, which spanned from 1921 to 1929. Following his retirement from competitive swimming, Weissmuller transitioned to Hollywood, where he achieved even greater fame portraying Tarzan in twelve films between 1932 and 1948. His athletic physique and swimming prowess made him the definitive screen Tarzan for a generation. Beyond entertainment, his impact on competitive swimming endures through his technical innovations and the standard of excellence he established. Weissmuller's combination of natural ability, revolutionary technique, and sustained dominance cemented his status as one of swimming's greatest champions and helped elevate the sport's profile internationally.
Five Olympic gold medals and multiple world records in freestyle swimming
How They Played
Powerful freestyle technique with revolutionary high stroke rate
Lasting Impact
Dominated sprint freestyle swimming in 1920s, later became famous as Tarzan actor
Career Honours
- Olympic Gold Medal 100m Freestyle Paris 1924
- Olympic Gold Medal 400m Freestyle Paris 1924
- Olympic Gold Medal 4x200m Freestyle Relay Paris 1924
- Olympic Bronze Medal Water Polo Paris 1924
- Olympic Gold Medal 100m Freestyle Amsterdam 1928
- Olympic Gold Medal 4x200m Freestyle Relay Amsterdam 1928
- World Record 100m Freestyle 57.4s 1922
- World Record 100m Freestyle 51.0s 1934
- AAU National Championship 100 Yards Freestyle multiple titles 1921-1928
- Associated Press Swimmer of the Year recognition
- Inducted into the International Swimming Hall of Fame 1965
- Inducted into the United States Olympic Hall of Fame 1983
- Set 67 world records across freestyle distances during career