Gustav Flatow

As Germany won both those events (the horizontal bar unchallenged), Gustav earned two gold medals.

After the Nazi takeover in Germany in 1933, he fled to the Netherlands to find refuge but he was caught ten years later.

[4] In 1986 journalists discovered his urn, which is now entombed in Terezín near the site of the concentration camp.

[5] In 1997 Berlin honoured Alfred and Gustav Flatow by renaming the Reichssportfeldstraße (a lane) near the Olympic Stadium to Flatowallee (Flatow-avenue).

The Deutsche Post issued a set of four stamps to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the modern Olympic games.

Gustav and Alfred Flatow on a German stamp