Great Britain at the 1912 Summer Olympics

The inclusion of Isabelle White on the British team made Great Britain one of three nations (along with Austria and host Sweden to send a woman to the first Olympic diving competition open to women.

They remained true to form, winning all three matches in 1912 to take their third gold medal.

The toughest match of the tournament for the British side was the first one, against a Belgium team that Great Britain needed extra time to defeat.

The luck of the draw was that the matches got easier from there, with the British team beating Sweden 6–3 in the semifinals and Austria 8–0 in the final.

It was the fifth appearance of the nation in athletics, which Great Britain had competed in at each Games.

Grubb, along with the next three fastest English cyclists, had a combined time that won another silver medal.

One member of that team, Seligman, had the best individual placements with a pair of sixth-place finishes.

Quarterfinals Semifinals Gold medal match Twenty-three gymnasts represented Great Britain.

(The scoring system was point-for-place in each of the five events, with the smallest point total winning.)

Eleven tennis players, including three women, represented Great Britain at the 1912 Games.

The women fared better, with Hannam and Parton meeting in the semifinals before taking the gold and silver medals, respectively, in the indoor singles.

The layout of the draw resulted in gold and silver medals and a fifth-place finish for the three pairs.

Barrett and MacKenzie were the only two wrestlers to win any matches, taking one bout each.

The team of Great Britain at the opening ceremony.