THE
RISE AND FALL OF THE FIRST PAN-AMERICAN GAMES’ DESIGN
Francesco Davide Ragno*
Universidad de Bologna
* francesco.ragno3@unibo.it
Recibido: 20 de
febrero de 2024
Aceptado: 30 de
junio de 2025
Abstract: The organization
of the First Pan American Games encountered significant challenges. Initially
scheduled for 1942, the event was postponed —and ultimately held in 1951— due
to the Americas’ involvement in World War II. This article argues that the
postponement was rooted in three major crises: two political and one sporting,
revealing the underlying tensions that shaped the planning process. These
issues must be examined within the broader historical context of the Western
Hemisphere at the time, including national political dynamics, inter-American
relations, and the evolution of the Olympic movement in Latin America.
Keywords: Pan-Americanism;
Pan-American Games; Good Neighbor Policy, Sport, Olympism.
EL AUGE Y EL FRACASO DE LA ORGANIZACIÓN DE LOS PRIMEROS JUEGOS
PAN-AMERICANOS
Resumen: La organización de
los Primeros Juegos Panamericanos enfrentó obstáculos sumamente complejos.
Inicialmente planificados para 1942, fueron pospuestos —y finalmente celebrados
en 1951— debido a la implicación del continente americano en la Segunda Guerra Mundial.
Este artículo sostiene que las razones de dicho aplazamiento fueron profundas y
se relacionan con tres crisis: dos de índole política y una de carácter
deportivo, lo que evidencia las dificultades que surgieron durante el proceso
de planificación de estos juegos. Estas deben analizarse en el contexto
histórico del hemisferio occidental en ese momento, tanto en términos de las
situaciones políticas de cada país como de las relaciones interamericanas y del
desarrollo del movimiento olímpico en América Latina.
Palabras clave:
Pan-Americanismo; Juegos Pan-Americanos; Política de Buena Vecindad; deporte; olimpismo.
I. Introduction
On February 25,
1951, Juan Domingo Perón inaugurated the first edition of the Pan-American
Games. Marked by the mass participation typical of the Peronist regime, this
sporting event was intended to showcase the success of the so-called “New
Argentina” to the Americas and the wider world. As Eva Perón stated during the
closing ceremony: “From here, from this corner of America, illuminated by the
star of the Peronist doctrine that seeks to offer the world a new solution —the
'justicialist' solution— we affirm our faith in the eternal values of man”[1].
Eva suggested that Argentina served as a model, offering, through the “Third
Position” a worldview very different from the political cultures of the Cold
War emerging at that time. This stance, appealing to the common roots of a
segment of the international community —specifically, the grassroots of Latin
civilization— already had a rich foundation in Latin America. Its ideological
origins dated back to the 1930s, influencing politicians and thinkers such as
Víctor Haya de la Torre and Getúlio Vargas, whose political cultures had found
significant success in their respective countries, Peru and Brazil (Zanatta
2012; Rein 2015; Kidd and Torres 2016).
Similarly, the design
of the First Pan-American Games also had a long history, originating in the
late 1930s, though it developed within a different ideological and cultural
framework. Specifically, the Games were part of a new policy initiated by
Franklin Delano Roosevelt in the Western Hemisphere during the 1930s, known as
the “Good Neighbor Policy”. From the U.S. perspective, Pan-American ideology
functioned as a tool to advance its strategic goals in Latin America: primarily
the consolidation of free market principles and, once World War II began, the defence
of hemispheric security. This understanding of Pan-Americanism dominated the
Pan-American conferences of the 1930s.
Emerging in this
cultural and political context, the organization of the First Pan-American
Games in Buenos Aires was initially planned for 1940 and then postponed to
November 1942. However, just months before their scheduled start, the Games
were cancelled. Several factors contributed to this outcome, foremost among
them the Western Hemisphere's involvement in World War II, particularly between
1941 and 1942. On December 7, 1941, the Imperial Japanese Navy attacked Pearl
Harbor, prompting the United States to join the Allied forces against the Axis
powers. Following the U.S. declaration of war, many Latin American countries,
at varying times, severed diplomatic relations with Nazi Germany and its
allies.
Yet two additional
crises contributed to the failure of the original plan for the Pan-American
Games, and these are the focus of this article. The first concerned the tension
between Pan-American ideals and the nationalistic political culture prevalent in
Latin American public opinion at the time[2].
The second crisis involved the Olympic movement itself, caught in transition
between the death of President Henri Baillet-Latour in 1942 and the appointment
of Sigfrid Edström as his successor. During this period, many Latin American
countries faced challenges in establishing and consolidating their National
Olympic Committees.
As a result, the
project for the First Pan-American Games was abandoned, while other
inter-American cultural initiatives continued to be implemented during the same
years, as Richard Cándida Smith showed (Cándida Smith 2017, 111-168).
II. Pan-Americanism and the “Good Neighbor
Policy”
A new phase in
inter-American relations began even before Franklin D. Roosevelt assumed the
presidency[3].
Roosevelt's policy rebranded Herbert Hoover's earlier conciliatory approach
toward Latin America (Smith 2005, 93-94). In his inaugural address on March 4,
1933, Roosevelt declared: “In the field of world policy, I would dedicate this
nation to the policy of the good neighbor — the neighbor who resolutely
respects himself and, because he does so, respects the rights of others”[4].
In this context, a
new concept of Pan-American solidarity emerged[5].
Several factors explained the profound shift in the United States' attitude.
First, the deep economic crisis triggered by the 1929 crash. Despite the
turmoil in the U.S. capitalist system, the absence of European powers enabled
the U.S. to strengthen its presence in the southern part of the hemisphere
(Drinot and Knight 2014). Second, Latin America came to be viewed as a region
that could be 'elevated' and integrated into the U.S. hegemonic project
(Ninkovich 1999, 106-111). The United States sought to build a hemispheric
system capable of addressing economic, security, and political challenges.
While the Good Neighbor Policy offered a break from formal interventions,
informal pressure and influence persisted for nearly a generation (Rosen 2008,
31). This moment arguably marked the only period in U.S. history when the terms
“Americas” and “Americans” were used to project a vision of a united family of
twenty-one republics (Sadlier 2012, 2; Grandin 2012). In this spirit, the
Roosevelt administration approved the abrogation of the Platt Amendment in 1934
and withdrew U.S. Marines from Haiti.
As tensions in
Europe escalated, the Inter-American Conference on Inter-American Solidarity
and Cooperation was held in Buenos Aires in 1936. The central theme was
hemispheric security and the need to counter fascist influence and potential
German and Italian interference in South American affairs (Friedman 2003).
Beyond promoting “the cause of permanent peace on this Western continent”
(Roosevelt 1942, 92), the conference resulted in the Declaration of Principles
on Inter-American Solidarity and Cooperation, affirming democracy as a shared
cause. The declaration also acknowledged the power and economic imbalances
between the United States and other American republics and explicitly
prohibited direct or indirect intervention in internal or external affairs of
the Western Hemisphere Countries (Shifter 2002, 86-88). The Buenos Aires
Conference consolidated pre-existing relations as mentioned below, particularly
in the economic sphere, which had gradually developed over the course of
successive Pan-American conferences held since 1889
The Good Neighbor
Policy was multifaceted and far-reaching. As Secretary of Agriculture Henry
Wallace stated in 1939: “We are challenged to build here in this hemisphere a
new culture which is neither Latin American nor North American but genuinely
inter-American Undoubtedly it is possible to build an inter-American consciousness and
an inter-American culture which will transcend both its Anglo-Saxon and its
Iberian origins” (cited in Pike 1992, 273). The Good
Neighbor policy was a response to the widespread anti-American sentiment caused
by decades of military interventions (McPherson 2014; Patel 2016, 10-44). The
United States promoted Pan-American ideology to draw Latin America's southern
region —especially its European-leaning segment— toward values like political
democracy and the free market. This ideology stood in stark contrast to the
nationalist, fascist, and corporatist ideologies then spreading from the Old
Continent.
President
Roosevelt elaborated on this vision during Pan-American Day on April 12, 1933: “The essential
qualities of a true Pan-Americanism must be the same as those which constitute
a good neighbor, namely mutual understanding, and through such understanding, a
sympathetic appreciation of the other’s point of view. It is only in this
manner that we can hope to build up a system of which confidence, friendship
and good will are the cornerstones” (Roosevelt 1937,
130).
Between 1933 and
1942, a dense network of inter-American interactions developed. In addition to
regular Pan-American conferences held every five years (Montevideo 1933; Lima
1938), there was the 1936 Inter-American Conference for the Maintenance of
Peace (Buenos Aires) and three annual meetings of the foreign ministers of
American countries during the early years of World War II (1939-1942) (Whitaker
1954, 144-150; see also Salvatore 2016).
Pan-American
institutions began to emerge during this period. While proposals for a League
of American Nations and an Inter-American Court of Justice, presented at the
Lima conference in 1938, were not approved (due to opposition from both the
U.S. and Argentina), other initiatives succeeded. These included the
establishment of the Inter-American Financial and Economic Institute in 1938
and the Provisional Inter-American Commission in 1941, created during the
Foreign Ministers' Meeting in Havana. Despite attempts to spread Pan-American
ideals —especially the free-market economy and democratic governance— their
success was uneven (Shifter 2002; Scarfi 2017).
Reactions from
Latin American countries to Roosevelt's hemispheric initiatives were mixed.
Some, like Mexico, feared these moves were rhetorical devices meant to impose
U.S. dominance. Others, such as Argentina, preferred to maintain foreign policy
independence during a period of relative freedom. These debates played out
during Pan-American conferences, starting in 1933. It was evident that the
matters discussed during intergovernmental meetings among the States+ààà of the
American hemisphere had profound implications for domestic political affairs.
Accordingly, the stances adopted by the respective countries were, to a certain
extent, influenced not only by international diplomatic considerations but also
by internal political dynamics.
During the 1930s,
the United States aimed to shield the Western Hemisphere from European
influence. This goal was reflected in Secretary of State Cordell Hull's
rejection of a proposal to invite non-American nations or institutions (such as
Spain, Portugal, and the League of Nations) to the next Pan-American
Conference. In this regard, the forms of cultural rapprochement and
international policy initiatives undertaken by European countries toward Latin
American nations must be taken into consideration (De Lima Grecco and Pereira
Gonçalves, 2022; Fotia, 2019). Conversely, a ‘universalistic’ definition of
Pan-Americanism began to take shape. As Argentine Foreign Minister José María
Cantilo stated at the 1938 Lima Conference:
We feel in close solidarity with Europe
because of the immigration we received from it [...] for the European capital
that financed our agriculture, railroads, and industries. [...] The
universalist, ecumenical spirit is the tradition of the homeland of the one
who, one day in Washington, presented as the motto of Argentina's international
politics: ‘America for humanity’.[6]
He referred to
Roque Sáenz Peña's address at the first Pan-American Conference in 1889 (one in
which the so-called "American zollverein" was proposed). In 1938,
Argentina viewed itself as a significant global actor with a universalist
outlook (Scarfi 2017, 160-168).
World War II
ultimately catalysed a shared vision of the Americas. Although the 1936 Buenos
Aires resolutions may have appeared ineffectual at the time, they laid the
groundwork for the 1939 Declaration of Continental Solidarity. Gradually, it
became clear that excluding European influence from the Western Hemisphere also
meant preventing the spread of ‘subversive ideologies’ counter to
inter-American ideals (Halperin Donghi 2003, 167-173).
These ‘subversive
ideologies’ largely referred to nationalist and corporatist worldviews inspired
by anti-liberal European critiques (Bayly 2018, 90-93). What began in the
cultural realm soon transitioned into political activism. As Patricia Funes
observed, “Toward the end of the 1920s, and especially after the impact of
1930, [that moral-magisterial space] appeared insufficient, and many [nationalist]
intellectuals turned to the political arena, more traditionally understood”
(Funes 2006, 35). Merely diagnosing the nation's decline was no longer enough;
active political intervention was deemed necessary. Liberal ideology and
institutions —especially representative democracy and capitalist trade— were
seen as having eroded the national community's unity. These two liberal pillars
were precisely what Pan-Americanism represented (Cándida Smith 2017, 94-136).
Nationalist movements viewed it as a threat, a “Trojan horse” that introduced
foreign values into Latin America. This perception fuelled the rhetoric of the “internal
enemy”, then prevalent in the region (Zanatta 2008).
In this complex
interplay of political, economic, and security concerns, organizing the
Pan-American Games became a highly ambitious undertaking. Sport symbolized the
promise of a continent striving to overcome years of setbacks, misalignments,
and misunderstandings. As Barbara Keys noted, sport “was part of broader
currents of Americanization [...] reaffirming deeply rooted convictions that
the United States was a model for the rest of the world and a force for peace
in international affairs” (Keys 2006, 89).
III. Organizing the First Pan-American Games
The new
direction in U.S.–Latin American relations also paved the way for significant
support in the realm of sport. In this context, a proposal by Alexander J.
Hogarty —an American consultant who collaborated with several Latin American
National Olympic Committees between the two World Wars— sought to organize the
Pan-American Games in Havana in 1940. As César R. Torres has pointed out,
proposals were made in April 1938, but the cancellation of the 1940 Olympic
Games in Finland gave greater momentum to the idea of organizing hemispheric
games (Torres 2011).
At the same
time, the Argentine Olympic Committee attempted to involve the U.S. Olympic
Committee, particularly through its representative Avery Brundage, by
submitting Buenos Aires’s candidacy for the first Pan-American Games. In
1939—before the official cancellation of the Helsinki Olympics—Juan Carlos
Palacios, president of the Argentine Olympic Committee, wrote that these
“alternative games” would be well received by all peoples of the Americas. They
would serve “an original purpose” and, while stimulating public interest in
sports, contribute “to a greater and better knowledge and understanding among
the peoples”, fostering a shared ambition for the broad progress of sport[7].
Palacios
also wrote to Henri Baillet-Latour, president of the International Olympic
Committee (IOC), underscoring the connection between the proposed Pan-American
Games and the failure to hold the Finnish Olympics: “The Argentine
Confederation of Sports–Argentine Olympic Committee […] decided to organize a
Pan-American Games for the month of November 1940, in which all Hemispheric
Nations would participate and whose realization would be subordinated to the
suspension of the XII Olympic Games” in Finland[8].
Palacios’s
words may be read in light of a broader political discourse, such as that of
Foreign Minister Cantilo at the opening of the 1938 Lima Conference. Palacios
shifted the idea of “America for Humanity” into the realm of international
sporting relations by promoting the hemispheric games as a response to the
suspended Olympics. Both declarations shared a common worldview: to demonstrate
the values of the American hemisphere to the rest of the world.
Thanks to
Avery Brundage, Palacios’s proposal reached the level of U.S. diplomacy.
Brundage wrote to Secretary of State Cordell Hull, who expressed tepid
governmental support for organizing the Pan-American Games. Hull responded:
I need hardly assure you that
the Department is interested in any initiative seeking to underscore the
friendly relations already existing between this country and the other American
republics, and I am pleased to note your interest in the improvement of
inter-American relations in the field of athletics. I have from time to time
received suggestions that inter-American athletic contests be held and believe
that there is a definite place for friendly athletic competition in our
relations with the other countries of this hemisphere. The organization of such
events must, of course, be left to private initiative, as the role of the
Department in this field is one of coordination and cooperation; that is, it
serves as a central bureau working in harmony with and acting as a
clearing-house for private organizations which strive to improve cultural
relations.[9]
This
response reveals a certain ambiguity: while the U.S. government offered
coordinated support, it refused to assume responsibility for organizing the
Pan-American Games, which would remain a private initiative.
Despite
this ambiguity —and fuelled by the cancellation of the 1940 Olympics— the
organization of the hemispheric games moved forward, supported by the idea
that, from a political perspective, “through inter-American sport competition
there must inevitably arise a new friendliness, a better understanding, and a
greater desire to travel among nations of the Western Hemisphere”[10].
These sentiments were echoed by Juan Carlos Palacios at the opening of the
First Pan-American Sports Congress in 1940: “The regular contact of the peoples
of the continent will end up making their inhabitants true brothers. The democratic characteristic of sport, will allow
people from a different social class to live together, with the consequent
advantage of being able to really remove all differences between one another”[11].
Beyond
these ceremonial expressions, two key political ideas emerged. First, there was
a recognition of two distinct Americas, defined by cultural and political
differences: a northern, liberal, Protestant hemisphere and a southern,
Catholic, Latin one. Second, there was an urgent call to unify these two parts
through a shared universe of values. The First Pan-American Games were seen as
a symbolic vehicle to promote this vision, as they “symbolize the
crystallization of a wish, long hoped for by the most illustrious men of our
hemisphere: the unity of a powerful and vigorous America”[12].
In this light, the Pan-American Games sought to bring together what seemed
divided — an idea echoed in the official poster for the event, created by
Argentine artist Failer Tótaro[13].
Others
further emphasized this spirit of continental unity. The Games were hailed as
“a lesson of behaviour and good will taught by the youngest continent on earth
[…] union, peace, and friendly understanding are still the bonds that link
these new nations”[14].
They were also described as “a very tangible aspect of continental solidarity”,
offering American youth the opportunity to build mutual acquaintance, thereby
reinforcing the “Good Neighbor” spirit[15].
The notion
that the Western Hemisphere differed fundamentally from the Old World was
rooted also in the legacy of the Monroe Doctrine. At the same time, it
emphasized the unity of the Americas —no longer divided in two— as Judge
Jeremias T. Mahoney, a key figure in the U.S. Olympic movement, argued during a
banquet honouring Francisco A. Borgonovo, a delegate to the Organizing
Committee[16].
Alongside
its political and cultural dimensions, Pan-Americanism also had an economic
aspect. Benjamin F. Nazar Anchorena —an industrialist and member of the
Arbitral Tribunal of the Argentine Sports Confederation–Argentine Olympic
Committee— argued that “friendly understanding in the field of sports [would
be] an excellent medium for better understanding in terms of commercial
economy, that is, the prosperity of America”[17].
This connection, discussed in Pan-American conferences, also surfaced on the
sporting field: the Pan-American ideal had an economic côté as
well.
There was
thus an attempt —led particularly by Avery Brundage— to legitimize the
hemispheric games within the framework of the Good Neighbor Policy and
Roosevelt’s transformations in inter-American relations during the 1930s. It
was a complex and often ambiguous process, complicated further by the
contradictions and limitations of Pan-Americanism during the critical years of
1941–1942. These tensions ultimately contributed to the failure of the first
Pan-American Games.
IV. The
First Problems with the IOC
In the
Olympic sphere, Henri Baillet-Latour immediately sought to clarify the
distinction between the IOC and the organizers of the Pan-American Games. These
games could not claim the status of “Olympic Games”. Writing to Ricardo C.
Aldao and Horacio Bustos de Morón —both IOC members— Baillet-Latour expressed
strong objections to what he called “the usurpation of the title ‘Olympic’”,
noting that the games had initially been labelled the “First Pan-American
Olympic Games”[18]. Yet shortly afterward,
in a letter addressed to all IOC members, Baillet-Latour adopted a more
conciliatory tone, stating that although the Pan-American Games “are not
Olympic, [they] will serve the Olympic idea and will bring greater
participation from overseas countries in future Games. We cannot but rejoice”[19].
This more favourable position was also publicly reaffirmed in the second issue
of the Boletín de los Deportes[20].
Nonetheless,
the IOC’s ambiguous stance reappeared repeatedly. For example, when
representatives from American countries met at a gathering convened by the
Argentine Confederation of Sports–Argentine Olympic Committee, they agreed to
create the Pan-American Sportive Committee to oversee the organization of
Pan-American Sportive Games every four years, starting in 1942[21].
Avery Brundage was named president of the committee and soon became one of the
Games’ strongest advocates, alongside the Argentine Olympic Committee.
Although
war soon engulfed Europe, the IOC —under Baillet-Latour’s leadership— expressed
appreciation for the Pan-American initiative. Given the war conditions, the IOC
president instructed the American countries to communicate directly with
Brundage, rather than through the IOC’s Swiss headquarters[22].
Brundage
also assured Baillet-Latour that the Pan-American Games could improve the IOC’s
public image in the United States. As he explained: “Here in the United States
too, from time to time, radical, disgruntled, and ignorant journalists and
malcontents voiced vicious criticism of the Games and the IOC. We will probably
have our hands full after the war in bringing the Olympic machine back into
smooth working order. However, I feel that the people of the world,
disillusioned with politics, will turn with relief to the high ideals of the
Olympic Movement. I trust that this day will soon arrive”[23].
Thus, until early 1941, the
organizers of the First Pan-American Games —especially the Argentine Olympic
Committee— sought to legitimize their efforts within the broader Olympic
community.
V. The Collapse of the First Pan-American
Games
From the outset,
the organization of the First Pan-American Games was marked by a series of
critical challenges, particularly within the sporting and Olympic spheres. A
widespread perception prevailed that the presence of the International Olympic
Committee (IOC) in the Western Hemisphere was limited, and that National
Olympic Committees in the Americas enjoyed excessive autonomy from the IOC — an
issue considered detrimental to the long-term future of the Olympic movement
(Torres 2008)[24].
As early as 1941,
Avery Brundage emphasized the need to identify members in Central America
capable of acting beyond personal interests, while also noting the greater
complexity of the South American context, due to political instability. He
remarked that although Latin American countries were formally defined as
republics, the actual forms of government —despite persistent references to
democracy— were often closer to dictatorships or semi-dictatorships. In most
cases, little could be accomplished without governmental support, and amateur
sport was no exception. In Argentina, Brundage observed, sport organizations
appeared relatively independent from political power, whereas in other
countries, such as Brazil, sport was entirely politicized, to the point that
two different groups claimed IOC representation[25].
This assessment
was reinforced by IOC delegates Joaquín Serratosa Cibils (Uruguay) and Julio
Gerlein Comelin (Colombia), who confirmed the prevalence of similar tendencies
throughout the region. According to them, “there are strong tendencies in
that direction in a number of Latin American countries. […] As a matter of
fact, in many of these countries little will be done for many years to come
unless the government does it. This is a subject which will merit most serious
consideration by our Committee”: in that sense, there was the hope that “there
will be no outside interference with our plans”, referring above all to the
repercussions that the events of World War II could have for countries with
such large numbers of European immigrants[26].
Beyond the issue
of the politicization of Olympism, another sports-related conflict emerged that
jeopardized the organization of the First Pan-American Games: nationalist
rivalries. In October 1941, Brundage noted that Colombia had decided to
postpone the Central American Games —originally scheduled for early 1942— to
the end of the same year. This new timeline clashed with the Pan-American
Games. As Brundage pointed out, it was not the first time national interests
disrupted regional sporting events (see Sotomayor 2016, 94–101). “Whether this
conflict in dates was deliberate or accidental, I do not know. Colombia was not
represented at the Pan-American Sport Congress which I attended in Buenos Aires
and there may be some hidden reason for its action”[27].
This conflict worried not only the IOC and its President: this scheduling conflict not only concerned the IOC but
raised fears that the Pan-American Games would become a solely Latin American
event, excluding North and Central American nations — a risk that became
reality just one month later. IOC Acting President Sigfrid Edström declared
unequivocally that the outbreak of war involving the United States rendered the
organization of the Latin American Sports Games unrealistic[28].
In this sense, it
is not only the difficulties of Pan-Americanism (mencioned above) that hinder
the realization of the Games, but above all other issues related to
international politics, such as the entry into the war of certain countries in
the American hemisphere. Political considerations further influenced the
cancellation of the Games. The entry of the United States into World War II
following the attack on Pearl Harbor marked a turning point in the history of
the Pan-American Games. Brundage sought to avert cancellation by appealing to
Nelson A. Rockefeller, then Coordinator of the Office of the Coordinator of
Inter-American Affairs (CIAA 1940–1945), an agency tasked with advancing U.S.
cultural diplomacy across Latin America. The CIAA aimed to promote hemispheric
unity and resistance to Axis influence through various soft power initiatives
(Sadlier 2012).
Brundage urged
Rockefeller to recognize that Latin American audiences, far from viewing the
cancellation as a demonstration of wartime resolve, might interpret it as a
sign of American vulnerability. In his view, a symbolic gesture —such as the
deployment of a military aircraft to deliver a small U.S. sports delegation to
Buenos Aires— would instead project strength and reinforce regional solidarity.
He pointed out that Germany had continued to promote sports activities in
wartime Europe, involving both neutral and belligerent athletes[29].
Brundage framed participation in the Pan-American Games as a strategic
diplomatic tool to strengthen inter-American alliances and counter fascist
influence. He also warned that Argentina, which had often adopted a
nationalistic and ambivalent stance toward the United States, might interpret
American absence as a deliberate slight, exacerbating already delicate
political tensions: “The Argentineans being a proud, suspicious, and nationalistic people”
Brundage remarked: they “will certainly take it as a deliberate slight if we
are not there, a reprisal for the Rio Conference and a delicate situation will
be further strained”[30].
Rockefeller’s
response, though prompt, was unequivocal. While he expressed general support
for inter-American sports initiatives, he stated that current intelligence
assessments suggested such programs would be counterproductive under wartime
conditions. Moreover, official authorities had advised against participation,
making U.S. involvement unfeasible: “at the present time, reports from experienced
observers in the American Republics have convinced us that the harmful effects
of attempting to carry out an active inter-American sports program, no matter
how limited its scope, would over-balance those resulting from withdrawal in
this field. Further, official authority by whose opinion we must necessarily to
a large extent be guided has pronounced unequivocally against participation at
this time”[31].
Meanwhile,
Argentine organizer Enrique Palacios attempted to sustain momentum by writing
to President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Under Secretary of State Sumner Welles,
appealing to ideals of hemispheric solidarity and highlighting the
contradiction of a Pan-American event held without its “elder sister” nation[32].
Yet neither Brundage’s diplomatic efforts nor Palacios’s advocacy succeeded in
reversing the U.S. decision. By the end of April 1942, the United States
formally announced its withdrawal, effectively postponing the First
Pan-American Games until after the conclusion of the war. Although the United
States maintained its cultural diplomacy efforts toward Latin America in
various fields (such as film production and radio broadcasting), these did not
extend to the sports sector (Cramer and Prutsch 2012).
The failure of the
Games was the result of two intertwined failures of legitimation. From the
standpoint of international sports governance, the effort to establish a
pan-American event faced resistance due to the politicization of sport,
persistent distrust among national Olympic committees, and a moment of
institutional fragility within the IOC itself. Concurrently, the global
realignment caused by the United States’ entry into World War II shifted the
priorities of U.S. foreign and inter-American policy, even if other initiatives
aimed at promoting Pan-American cultural integration continued to be pursued.
In the end, neither the efforts of Brundage nor those of the organizing
committee were sufficient to overcome these obstacles, and the vision of
hemispheric unity through sport had to be deferred. Consequently, it was the
other two critical factors that played a decisive role in the decline of the
1942 Pan-American Games.
VI. Conclusions
The failure of the
First Pan-American Games cannot be attributed solely to the entry of the United
States into the Second World War. In fact, the U.S. government continued to
promote a variety of cultural initiatives aimed at preserving continental unity
and countering the influence of Axis powers. The cancellation of the Games was
instead the result of three structural issues that extended far beyond the
wartime emergency.
The first critical
issue concerned the very concept of Pan-Americanism. As César Torres has
argued, the collapse of the First Pan-American Games revealed the inherent
limitations of Pan-Americanism itself (Torres 2011). These limitations, upon
closer examination, were rooted in both its conceptual complexity and its
ideological ambiguity. As demonstrated in this study, diverse interpretations
of Pan-Americanism emerged across North, Central, and South America. On one
hand, a hemispheric vision prevailed, while on the other, a universalist
interpretation took hold. Though both versions converged around the shared
opposition to Axis powers during the war, they nonetheless differed
significantly in cultural terms.
Using the
Argentine case as an example, and adopting the lens of cultural history,
Cándida Smith (2017) has shown how relevant distinct political and cultural orientations
converged in the early 1940s in support of Pan-Americanism as an anti-Axis
platform. In this context, the simplistic, often imperialistic interpretation
of Pan-Americanism gave way to a more multifaceted political culture — one that
carried with it models of political and economic organization, social
representations, and, importantly, new international alliances. These diverse
visions gained traction thanks to the multilateral framework promoted by the
Good Neighbor Policy.
However, focusing
on the outbreak of the war and the contradictions of Pan-Americanism does not
fully explain why other U.S. cultural diplomacy initiatives were strengthened,
while that of the Pan-American Games was set aside. This evolving understanding
of the beginning of the World War II in the Americas and of Pan-Americanism
introduces the second structural issue. To conceive Pan-Americanism as a
universe of shared values was to define a principle of unity for the Western
Hemisphere. It involved, in effect, the construction of a continental identity —
one that differed from the traditional tripartite division of the Americas into
North, Central (including the Caribbean), and South. In alignment with this
geographical framework, the IOC had already proposed the creation of regional
competitions in the Americas during the 1920s. It had sponsored the Latin
American Games in Rio de Janeiro in 1922 (involving Argentina, Chile, Uruguay,
and Brazil), as well as the Central American and Caribbean Games from 1926 onward[33].
Within this context, the Pan-American Games emerged not as a singular
initiative but as one among several competing regional sport models. They must
therefore be interpreted as part of a broader ecosystem of regional blocs that
reflected the growing influence of nationalism across much of Latin America — nationalisms
that, by this time, had begun to receive institutional and political support.
The third and
final structural issue pertains to the status of the Olympic and sporting
movements in Latin America during the period in question. The planning of the
Pan-American Games played an indirect but meaningful role in both the creation
and recognition of several national Olympic committees. Countries such as
Argentina (1923), Mexico (1923), Chile (1934), and Venezuela (1935) saw their
Olympic committees recognized by the IOC in the same year they were
established. In other instances, however, significant delays occurred between
the formation of a national committee and its formal recognition by the IOC.
The Brazilian Olympic Committee, for example, was founded in 1904 but not
officially recognized until 1935; the Peruvian committee was created in 1923
but only acknowledged in 1936; and Colombia’s committee waited more than a
decade before being recognized (1936/1948). This gradual and uneven process of
institutional development unfolded in tandem with two additional dynamics:
first, the persistent difficulties in professionalizing sport in a political
environment marked by strong nationalist sentiment; second, the sudden death of
IOC President Henri de Baillet-Latour in January 1942, which added further
uncertainty to the international Olympic movement[34].
While the outbreak
of war and the shifting international context constituted immediate causes for
the postponement of the First Pan-American Games, they were not the only —or
even the principal— reasons. The deeper, structural causes lay in the
limitations of Roosevelt's Pan-Americanism under the Good Neighbor policy, the
internal contradictions of the Pan-American ideal itself, the rise of
nationalist political cultures across Latin America, and the institutional
fragilities of the Olympic movement in the region.
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* Francesco Davide Ragno is an
Assistant Professor in History and Institutions of the Americas at the
University of Bologna. His research focuses on Latin American political
history, populism, and inter-American relations during the 20th century. His publications
include Liberale o populista? Il radicalismo argentino (1930-1943) (Il
Mulino, 2017) and, with Benedetta Calandra, Argentina: Biografia di una
nazione dall’indipendenza ad oggi (Il Mulino, 2025).
This research benefited from the
Postgraduate Research Grant Programme funded by the International Olympic
Center, through a project entitled “Which Americas? Ideas, Political
Culture, and Rituals in the Pan-American Games’ Design.”The author wishes
to thank Mariadele Di Blasio, who carried out part of the documentary
collection work.
[1] La Época, 10 March 1951, p. 8.
[2] Following
the suggestions of French historian Pierre Rosanvallon, I will use the
‘political culture’ as a tool to understand “the ‘politico’ refers at the same
time to a sphere and a process. In the first case – as a sphere – it represents
the place in which the lives of men and women are intertwined, and it provides
a framework for their actions. This idea is connected to an idea of a ‘society’
that appears to its members as a meaningful ‘whole’. As a process, the
‘politico’ represents the path of a group of people […] that become a true
community” (Rosanvallon 2005, 8).
[3] The drop of the armed intervention strategy was eased
by the publication of the so called “Clark Memorandum”, an official document on
the Monroe Doctrine prepared by Under Secretary of State J. Ruben Clark, at the
close of the Coolidge Administration. In this memorandum Clark tried to
demonstrate that the strategy of armed intervention was damaging the image of
the United States in South America and it was not within the Doctrine as
announced by Monroe. See, among others, Smith (2012) and Rinke (2015). On the
Pan-American relation, during the Hoover Administration, see: DeConde (1970),
Walker (2006), Wöpke (2008).
[4] Roosevelt’s
First Inaugural Address, 4 March 1933 [http://avalon.law.yale.edu/20th_century/froos1.asp]
[5] The history
of Pan-Americanism is deeply rooted in the history of the Western Hemisphere
since the early nineteenth century. It should not be forgotten, however, that
Pan-Americanism was not the only vision through which the continent was
imagined as a unified whole. Of particular importance and influence over the
centuries was the Pan-Latin ideal, which, beginning with the Anfictionic
Congress of Panama in 1826, sought to unite the Americas through shared Latin
and Hispano-American ideals. See, among others, Funes (2006, 206-215).
[6] Discurso de José María Cantilo en la Sesión
Plenaria de la VIII Conferencia Panamericana. Archivo del Ministerio de
Relaciones Exteriores y Culto (Argentina), VIII Conferencia Panamericana, Anexo
II, 54-55. On this see also Rapoport (1988, 29-40).
[7] Juan
Carlos Palacios to Avery Brundage, 27 September 1939, Avery Brundage Collection
(hereafter ABC), Box 202, Folder “I Pan American Games and Congress, 1940-46”,
University of Illinois Archive (hereafter UIA).
[8] Juan
Carlos Palacios to Henri Baillet- Latour, 5 December 1939, Correspondence of
the Noc of Argentina, 1923-1966, Folder “Correspondence 1923-1949”, IOC
Historical Archives (hereafter IOC HA), Lausanne.
[9] Cordell
Hull to Avery Brundage, 2 October 1939, quoted in Supplementary report of Avery Brundage on the First Pan American Sport
Congress, ABC, Box 202, Folder “I Pan American Games and Congress,
1940-46”, UIA.
[10] Sport… creator of Good Will, ABC, Box
202, Folder “I Pan American Games and Congress, 1940-46”, UIA.
[11] Memoria y balance General – Balance (1 de octubre
1939 – 20 de septiembre 1940), in “Publications, annual reports and Bulletins of the
NOC Argentina, 1935-1966”, IOC HA.
[12] J.C.
Palacios, “A Greetings to the Sportsman”, in Boletín de los Deportes. Publicación
Oficial del Comité Organizador, (1) 1941, p. 1.
[13] Boletín de los Deportes. Publicación Oficial del
Comité Organizador, (1) 1941, p. 8.
[14] Boletín de los Deportes. Publicación Oficial del Comité Organizador, (3) 1941, p. 6.
These are Eduardo Souto’s words. Souto was Assistant Secretary to the
Executive Committee of the First Pan-American Games and delegate of the
Argentine Federation of Chess.
[15] Boletín de los Deportes. Publicación Oficial del
Comité Organizador (4) 1941, p.6. These are Miguel Dasso’s
words. Miguel Dasso was president of the National Sports Committee of Lima,
Perù.
[16] Ivi,
p. 7. On Mahoney’s political figure, see Lucas
2008.
[17] Ivi,
p. 5.
[18] Henri
Baillet-Latour to Ricardo C. Aldao, 19 december 1940, in “1ers Jeux
Panaméricains à Buenos Aires en 1942 (non celebrés) en 1951: Correspondence,
bullettins officiels, compte-rendu et bulletins d’information”, Folder:
Correspondance, 1940-1942, IOC HA.
[19] Henri
Baillet-Latour to Members of IOC, 1 January 1941, IOC President – Henri
Baillet-Latour, Box “Circulares Escrites par HBL, 1926-1941”, IOC HA.
[20] Boletín de los Deportes. Publicación Oficial del
Comité Organizador (2) 1941, p. 4.
[21] First Pan American Congress – Summary of
Resolutions, ABC, Box 202, Folder “I Pan American Games and
Congress, 1940-46”, UIA; Avery Brundage to Henri Baillet-Latour, Box
“Correspondance de HBL (President) 1939-1945, Folder “Correspondance
1940-1941”, IOC HA.
[22] Henri
Baillet-Latour, 1 January 1941, IOC President – Henri Baillet-Latour, Box
“Correspondance from Henri Baillet-Latour (President) to the Ioc Secretary
General, Mr. Albert Berdez (1938-1941)”, Folder “Baillet/Secr. Gén. 1940-1941”,
IOC HA.
[23] Avery
Brundage to Henri Baillet- Latour, 17 December 1940, IOC President – Henri
Baillet-Latour, Box “Correspondance de HBL (President) 1939-1945, Folder
“Correspondance 1940-1941”, IOC HA.
[24] Pedro
Jaime de Matheu to Henri Baillet-Latour, 1 January 1940, IOC President – Henri
Baillet-Latour, Box “Correspondance de HBL (President) 1939-1945” Folder
“Correspondance 1940-1941”, IOC HA.
[25] Report
written by A. Brundage and sent to Henri Baillet- Latour, 1941, IOC President –
Henri Baillet-Latour, Box “Correspondance de HBL (President) 1939-1945, Folder
“Correspondance 1940-1941”, IOC HA.
[26] Avery Brundage to Henri Baillet- Latour, 5 September
1941, Avery Brundage, Box “Correspondance 1937-1951, Folder “Correspondance
1937-1949”, IOC HA.
[27]
Avery Brundage to Henri Baillet- Latour, 10 November 1941, IOC President –
Henri Baillet-Latour, Box “Correspondance de HBL (President) 1939-1945”, IOC
HA.
[28] Cicrulaire,
24 January 1942, IOC President – Sigfrid Edström, Box “Biographie, Arrticles de
Presse, Lettres circulaires et discurs de S. Edström, 1940-1964”, Folder
“Circulaires 1940-1962 “, IOC HA.
[29] Avery
Brundage to Nelson A. Rockefeller, 14 April 1942, ABC, Box 202, Folder “I Pan
American Games and Congress, 1940-46”, UIA.
[30] Ibidem.
[31] Nelson A. Rockefeller to Avery Brundage, 18 April
1942, ABC, Box 202, Folder “I Pan American Games and Congress, 1940-46”, UIA.
[32] Juan
Carlos Palacios to Franklin Delano Roosevelt, 7 April 1942, ABC, Box 202,
Folder “I Pan American Games and Congress, 1940-46”, UIA; Juan Carlos Palacios
to Sumner Welles, 6 April 1942, ABC, Box 202, Folder “I Pan American Games and
Congress, 1940-46”, UIA.
[33] The
Central American and Caribbean Games began in 1926 in Mexico City and they are
still organized. See URL http://www.odecabe.org/inicio.aspx
[accessed 25 March, 2020].
[34] A similar
process in Latin America has occurred with regards to football. See: Brizzi and
Sbetti (2018, 35-57); Armus and Rinke (2014).