Doris Batter

Biographical information

RolesCompeted in Olympic Games
SexFemale
Full nameDoris Megan•Batter (-Hatton)
Used nameDoris•Batter
Born22 April 1929 in Brentford, England (GBR)
Died23 April 2002 in ?, Hampshire (GBR)
AffiliationsLondon Olympiades, London (GBR)
NOC Great Britain

Biography

Doris Batter took up running to help improve her speed as a hockey player, and within 12 months found herself at the 1948 London Olympic Games. She won her opening heat in the 100 metres, but was then drawn in a semi-final containing Fanny Blankers-Koen and Shirley Strickland, the eventual gold and bronze medalists, and she failed to qualify for the final. Batter went to the Olympics as a member of London Olympiades, the oldest women’s athletic club in Britain, formed in 1921. She also went to the Games as the reigning WAAA 60 metres champion, a title she retained in 1949.

Batter represented England at the 1950 Empire Games and, despite finishing fifth in her respective heats in the individual 100 and 220 yards, won a silver medal in the 660 yards relay along with Dorothy Hall, Sylvia Cheeseman and Margaret Walker. After the Games, Cheeseman and Batter were banned from representative athletics for a year by the Women’s AAA, because they were: “Not amenable to discipline during the Games”. The ban barely lasted two months, when they were cleared after an appeal. A keen squash player, Batter married the useful half-miler Len Hatton in the summer of 1951.

Personal Best: 100y – 11.1 (1949).

Results

Games Discipline (Sport) / Event NOC / Team Pos Medal As
1948 Summer Olympics Athletics GBR Doris Batter
100 metres, Women (Olympic) 4 h1 r2/3
4 × 100 metres Relay, Women (Olympic) Great Britain DNS

Special Notes