Pat McCormick (born May 12, 1930, Seal Beach, California, U.S.—died March 7, 2023, Santa Ana, California) was an American diver who was the first athlete to win gold medals in both the springboard and platform diving events at two Olympic Games.
Growing up in Long Beach, California, McCormick established a reputation as a daring athlete, performing dives that few men attempted and that were outlawed for women in international competition until 1952. In 1949 McCormick won her first national championship with a victory in the outdoor platform competition. She dominated the indoor national championships in the springboard and platform events in 1951–55 and won outdoor championships in 1949–51 and 1953–56.
At the 1952 Olympic Games in Helsinki, McCormick won gold medals in the platform competition and the springboard. Five months after giving birth to her son, she qualified for the 1956 Games in Melbourne, where she defended her titles, again winning gold medals in the springboard and platform. McCormick was the first two-time Olympic winner of both diving events.
The police were often called on McCormick during her teenage years for diving off Long Beach’s Naples Canal Bridge, trying to splash boaters for fun.
After the 1956 Olympics McCormick retired from competition and was offered movie deals, which she turned down in favor of modeling for a swimsuit company and opening a diving camp. She also became a motivational speaker and established the Pat McCormick Educational Foundation, which focused on helping students complete high school and achieve a college education. McCormick’s adventurous spirit continued well after her diving career ended, with activities that included climbing Mount Kilimanjaro, traveling down the Amazon River, and obtaining a pilot’s license.
Her daughter, Kelly McCormick, was also a springboard diver, and she won a silver medal at the 1984 Games in Los Angeles, for which her mother was on the organizing committee, and a bronze medal at the 1988 Games in Seoul. Both Pat and Kelly McCormick were inducted into the International Swimming Hall of Fame in 1965 and 1999, respectively. In addition, Pat McCormick was inducted into the USA Diving Rings of Honor Hall of Fame in 2012.