Hjalmar Andersen (born March 12, 1923, Rødøy, Norway—died March 27, 2013, Oslo) was a Norwegian speed skater who dominated the longer speed-skating distances in the early 1950s, winning three gold medals at the 1952 Olympic Games in Oslo and setting several world records.
Andersen, who was considered one of the most powerful speed skaters of all time, began skating as a boy, but the World War II Nazi occupation of Norway delayed his entry into international competition. In the early 1950s he set world records in the 5,000 metres (8 min 7.3 sec [January 1951]) and the 10,000 metres (16 min 32.6 sec [February 1952]); the latter record stood for eight years. As a three-time world and European champion (1950–52), he arrived at the 1952 Winter Olympics as a preemptive favourite in the longer distances, but he captured a surprise victory in the 1,500-metre event. In the 5,000-metre final he set an Olympic record (8 min 10.6 sec) and won by 11 seconds, the largest margin of victory in the history of the event. He capped off his Olympic performance with the most decisive victory in the men’s 10,000-metre event in Olympic history, crossing the line in an Olympic-record time of 16 min 45.8 sec, almost 25 seconds ahead of the second-place finisher. Andersen’s three gold medals in one Olympics matched a record for men’s speed skating that lasted until the 1980 Winter Games in Lake Placid, New York, where American Eric Heiden earned five.
Andersen officially retired from competition after the Oslo Olympics, but he returned to the ice in 1954 to win his fourth Norwegian title in five years and a silver medal at the European championships. He qualified for the 1956 Winter Olympics in Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy, but failed to medal. The Norwegian government paid tribute to Andersen by erecting a statue of him in the Vikingskipet, the speed-skating venue for the 1994 Olympic Games in Lillehammer, Norway. At the 1994 Games countryman Johann Olav Koss duplicated Andersen’s 1952 feat by winning gold medals in the 10,000-, 5,000-, and 1,500-metre events.