Melbourne 1956 Olympic Games, athletic festival held in Melbourne that took place November 22–December 8, 1956. The Melbourne Games were the 13th occurrence of the modern Olympic Games.
The 1956 Olympics were the first held in the Southern Hemisphere. Because of the reversal of seasons, the Games were celebrated in November and December. The remoteness of Australia and two international crises accounted for the low number of participants; fewer than 3,500 athletes from 67 countries attended the Games. Egypt, Lebanon, and Iraq boycotted in protest of the Israeli invasion of the Sinai Peninsula in October. Moreover, a few weeks before the opening of the Games, the Soviet army had entered Budapest, Hungary, and suppressed a popular uprising against the government (see also Sidebar: Hungary v. U.S.S.R.: Blood in the Water); the Netherlands, Spain, and Switzerland boycotted in protest against the Soviet invasion. East and West Germany competed as a single team, a practice that would last through the 1964 Games. Because of Australian quarantine restrictions, the equestrian events were held in Stockholm during June. The Melbourne Games introduced the practice of athletes marching into the closing ceremonies together, not segregated by country.
The track-and-field competition was held at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. The U.S. team won 15 of the 24 men’s events. Sprinter Bobby Joe Morrow earned three gold medals, and Al Oerter won the first of his four consecutive gold medals in the discus. Soviet distance runner Vladimir Kuts won two gold medals. Australian Betty Cuthbert was the star of the women’s competition, winning the 100- and 200-meter runs and picking up a third gold medal as a member of the Australian 4 × 100-meter relay team.
Note: Medal count per the IOC website.
Led by Murray Rose and Dawn Fraser, the Australians won 8 of the 13 swimming events. Swedish modern pentathlete Lars Hall won his second consecutive gold medal. The 1956 Games featured the first gold medal performances of Soviet gymnast Larisa Latynina, Soviet weightlifter Arkady Vorobyev, German equestrian Hans Günter Winkler, and Soviet rower Vyacheslav Ivanov.