Daniel Delany Bulger
Daniel Delany Bulger was a leading Irish athlete. Along with his younger brothers, Michael Joseph Bulger and Lawrence Bulger, he was prominent in the Irish sporting world in the late 19th century. Daniel was one of the 79 delegates who attended the Congress of the Sorbonne in Paris in 1894 that lit the flame of the Olympic Games of the Modern Era in Athens in 1896.
Family background
The Bulger family were from Moore Street, Kilrush, County Clare, where their father, Daniel Scanlan Bulger, was a woollen merchant and draper and ran a loan office. Around 1880, the family moved to Dublin, where Daniel Scanlan Bulger became a member of the Dublin Stock Exchange and his sons were educated at Blackrock College and Trinity College Dublin, from where Daniel Delany Bulger graduated with a BA degree in 1886.Athletic achievements
Between 1885 and 1892, Bulger was the winner of 25 gold medals at Irish athletic championships run by either the Irish Amateur Athletic Association or the Gaelic Athletic Association.On 1 August 1887, he set the Irish Native Record for 100 yards of 10.2 seconds at the GAA Championships held at the County Kerry Athletic Club Grounds, Tralee. He held this record, jointly with Norman D. Morgan , Denis Murray , and James P. Roche , until Frederick R. Shaw clocked 10.0 seconds in Belfast on 20 July 1913. Alaso in 1887, he was a member of the Irish athletics team that visited America.
Between 1889 and 1892, he won five British Amateur Athletic Association Championships. The first was the long jump event at the 1889 AAA Championships and this was followed by two wins in the 1891 AAA Championships in the 120 yards hurdles and long jump. The fourth and fifth titles were at the 1892 AAA Championships, when he repeated the double of hurdles and long jump.
His achievements included multiple Irish championships in each of the 100 yards, 220 yards, 120 yards hurdles, and long jump, as well as British championships in the long jump and 120 yards hurdles. He introduced the crouch start into Irish sprinting.
In the 120 yards hurdles, he equalled the world record of 15.8 seconds at the IAAA championships at Ballsbridge on 1 August 1892.
The full list of his Irish athletics titles is as follows:
IAAA 100 yd Champion:
- 1888 – 10.4 sec
- 1889 – 10.5 sec
- 1890 – 10.6 sec
- 1892 – 10.4 sec
- 1886 – 10.6 sec
- 1887 – 10.2 sec
- 1888 – 10.4 sec
- 1889 – 10.6 sec
- 1890 – 10.4 sec
- 1885 – 24.6 sec
- 1886 – 23.4 sec
- 1886 – 23.8 sec
- 1887 – 24.0 sec
- 1888 – 24.6 sec
- 1888 – 17.0 sec
- 1892 – 16.4 sec
- 1887 – 17.6 sec
- 1888 – 17.2 sec
- 1889 – 17.0 sec
- 1890 – 16.8 sec
- 1889 – 20 ft 11½ in
- 1892 – 22 ft 10 in
- 1888 – 22 ft 0½ in
- 1889 – 21 ft 5¼ in
- 1890 – 21 ft 4 in
- 1885: Irish Athletic Championship 100 yards – 2nd
- 1886: IAAA Championship 100 yards – 3rd
- 1886: GAA Championship 120 yards Hurdles – 2nd
- 1887: IAAA Championship 100 yards – 2nd
- 1887: IAAA Championship 220 yards - 2nd
- 1887: IAAA Championship 120 yards Hurdles – 2nd
- 1888: IAAA Championship 220 yards – 2nd
- 1888: All-Round Championship – 12 events – 3rd
- 1890: IAAA Championship Long Jump – 2nd
- 1890: All-Round Championship – 10 events – 2nd
- 1891: IAAA Championship 120 yards Hurdles – 2nd
AAA Long Jump Champion
- 1889 – 21 ft 6 in
- 1891 – 20 ft 4 in , equal 1st with Malcolm W. Ford
- 1892 – 21 ft 4¼ in
- 1891 – 16.6 sec
- 1892 – 16.0 sec
Olympic involvement
From 16 – 24 June 1894 Daniel Bulger and Joseph Magee of the I.A.A.A. Competitions' Committee attended the Congress in Paris, as representatives of the I.A.A.A. This international congress led to the establishment of the Olympic Games of the Modern Era, the creation of the International Olympic Committee and the decision to hold the inaugural Olympic Games in Athens in April 1896. Bulger and Magee played an integral part for Ireland in this momentous Olympic Congress.