Sandy MacDonald

Biographical information

RolesCompeted in Olympic Games
SexMale
Full nameSamuel Alexander "Sandy"•MacDonald
Used nameSandy•MacDonald
Born7 September 1904 in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island (CAN)
Died21 October 2003 in Victoria, British Columbia (CAN)
Measurements172 cm / 68 kg
AffiliationsRoyal St. Lawrence YC, Dorval (CAN)
NOC Canada

Biography

Sandy MacDonald was captain of both the ice hockey and football teams at Prince of Wales College and, as a student at the University of Edinburgh Medical School, was selected to represent Great Britain in the former sport at the 1928 Winter Olympics, although he was eventually dropped from the team because he was a Canadian citizen. He settled gradually on sailing as his athletic pursuit of choice, having already competed in the sport as a medical student at McGill University, and eventually became a member of the Royal St. Lawrence Yacht Club. Thirty-two years after his first selection for the Olympics he was granted a second chance, this time as a member of Canada’s entry to Dragon class sailing at the 1960 Summer Games. There, alongside teammates Gordon Norton and Lynn Watters, he finished fifth among 27 teams. Four years later he again represented Canada at the Games, this time in the 5.5 metre class, where he, Bernard Skinner, and Doug Woodward were seventh among 15 yachts.

In-between his Olympic appearances, MacDonald won a gold medal in the Dragon class at the 1963 Pan-American Games, alongside Watters and the non-Olympian Peter Dorion, and took numerous other national and international accolades over his lengthy career. By profession MacDonald worked as a surgeon in several cities and also served in the Royal Canadian Navy as a medical officer. He was inducted into the Prince Edward Island Sports Hall of Fame in 1974 and, when he died at the age of 99 years, 44 days in October 2003, he was the longest-lived Canadian Olympian, having surpassed Robert Zimmerman, who died one day after his 99th birthday in 1980.

Results

Games Discipline (Sport) / Event NOC / Team Pos Medal As
1960 Summer Olympics Sailing CAN Sandy MacDonald
Three Person Keelboat, Open (Olympic) Argo II 5
1964 Summer Olympics Sailing CAN Sandy MacDonald
5.5 metres, Open (Olympic) State VI 7

Special Notes