At the 1904 Summer Olympics, a water polo tournament was contested, with three club teams of seven players each. A German team tried to enter, but its entry was refused because their players did not play for the same club.

The event took place in an artificial lake in Forest Park, the location of both the Olympics and the World's Fair. Two of the Olympians died of typhoid fever soon after the competition, possibly from contamination caused by livestock at the opposite end of the lake.

Previously, the International Olympic Committee and International Swimming Federation (FINA) considered the water polo event at the 1904 Olympics as a demonstration sport.

Medal summary

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|<br>New York Athletic Club<br>David Bratton <br> George Van Cleaf <br> Leo Goodwin <br> Louis Handley <br> David Hesser <br> Joe Ruddy <br> James Steen

|<br>Chicago Athletic Association<br>Rex Beach <br> Jerome Steever <br> Edwin Swatek <br> Charles Healy <br> Frank Kehoe <br> David Hammond <br> Bill Tuttle

| <br> Missouri Athletic Club<br>John Meyers <br> Manfred Toeppen <br> Gwynne Evans <br> Amedee Reyburn <br> Frank Schreiner <br> Augustus Goessling <br> Bill Orthwein

|}

References

Sources

  • PDF documents in the LA84 Foundation Digital Library:
  • Official Report of the 1904 Olympic Games (download, archive)
  • Water polo on the Olympedia website
  • Water polo at the 1904 Summer Olympics (men's tournament)
  • Water polo on the Sports Reference website
  • Water polo at the 1904 Summer Games (men's tournament) (archived)