Running Her Way into History: Former Olympian Constance Darnowski Stoll ’56Ed

March 11, 2013

For as long as she can recall, Constance Darnowski Stoll ’56Ed knew that the key to success was to work hard and never lose sight of the goal. It was that mixture of determination and perseverance that propelled her from an amateur runner training on her own time in a Brooklyn park to the worldwide stages of the 1952 and 1956 Olympics.

“I started competing in track when I was 12 years old,” she recalled. “I was first sponsored by the Police Athletic League, and then I met a gentleman who was coaching a few young ladies in a park near my house in Greenpoint, Brooklyn. He was sponsored by the German-American Athletic Club. So I started to compete with that group because he was an excellent hurdle coach. Even as a young girl, I loved hurdling and was fast enough for the hurdles back then.”

This dedicated young athlete carried her love of hurdling all through high school, and by the time she began her studies at Teacher’s College (now The School of Education) on St. John’s Lewis Avenue campus, she had already participated in her first Olympic games, held during the summer of 1952 in Helsinki, Finland. She readily acknowledges that the memories of that special time are as vivid today as ever.

“What most impressed me were the Opening Day ceremonies,” she said. “Everybody was in uniform, marching into the stadium. It was so emotional, and so fantastic to hear the crowd cheering for us. Traveling to Helsinki was great, and we even took side trips to England and Amsterdam. As if being on the Olympic team wasn’t enough, I got to see other parts of the world that I would never have seen otherwise.”

As with many St. John’s students then and now, Darnowski Stoll needed to work to help pay her college tuition. Although her days and nights were a whirlwind of activity, she managed to get everything done without ever falling behind on any of her responsibilities. Wanting to experience as much of what the University had to offer as possible, she even found the time to serve as President of her sorority and sportswriter for The Quill, the Lewis Avenue student newspaper.

“While I was at St. John’s from 1952 to 1956, there were no track teams for women,” she noted, “so I still competed for the German-American Athletic Club. I took classes at St. John’s from 4 - 6 p.m. every day and all day on Saturday. I had a job from 9 a.m. – 3 p.m. every day, and then I trained on Tuesdays and Thursdays and most Sundays. And somewhere along the way, I fit in my studying and my homework.”

A few months after graduation she was again in the Olympic spotlight, this time competing against world-class hurdlers in Melbourne, Australia. Returning home after the games, the two-time Olympian decided to hang up her spikes and turn her attention from the track to the classroom.

She began the next phase of her life as a Mathematics teacher at New Hyde Park Memorial High School on Long Island, and subsequently taught at a number of schools in New York and Connecticut. Along the way she transitioned from teacher to administrator, serving first as a middle school Guidance Counselor and finally as Principal of the school at which she had taught for more than two decades.

Although more than 60 years have passed since Darnowski Stoll joined the St. John’s family, she still remains connected to the University that played such an important role in her early life.

“You know, everything changes over time,” she said. “and progress is usually a good thing. The Olympics are very different today than when I was involved, and that’s true of St. John’s as well. I’ve watched the University evolve for so many years, and the changes are absolutely amazing. But regardless of how much St. John’s has changed since I was a student, the spirit is still absolutely the same. I’m proud to say that I was inducted into the St. John’s Athletic Hall of Fame in 1993, and even though I live in Connecticut, I try to get to as many St. John’s events as I can. I’ll always be  proud to be associated with the University that I love.”