In March 1912, during the 13th
session of the IOC, the bid on behalf of Belgium to host the 1920 Summer Olympics was made by Baron
Édouard de Laveleye, president of the
Belgian Olympic Committee and of the
Royal Belgian Football Association. No fixed host city was proposed at the time. The organizing committee was created on 9 August 1913. It had four presidents: • Édouard de Laveleye, president of the Belgian Olympic Committee •
Henri de Baillet-Latour, member of the
IOC •
Robert Osterrieth, president of the
Royal Yacht Club of Belgium •
Charles Cnoops, vice-president of the
Belgian Fencing Association Among the 22 vice-presidents of the committee were people with a military or industrial background, and further people from sports organizations like
Paul Havenith, president of the football and athletics club
K. Beerschot V.A.C. and
Nicolaas Jan Cupérus, president of the
Belgian Gymnastics Federation. The first action of the committee was to send an official letter to the IOC in Paris, confirming Antwerp as the city for the Belgian Olympic bid. With Antwerp confirmed as the Olympic Games host, Belgium began reconstructing the Beerschot Stadium into the . Construction on the new Olympic stadium began in July 1919 and finished in May 1920. In 1914, a 109-page brochure was created to promote the idea of Antwerp as a host city for the Olympics:
Aurons-nous la VIIème Olympiade à Anvers? (
Will we have the 7th Olympiad at Antwerp?). It was sent to all IOC members and was used during the
6th Olympic Congress in Paris in 1914, where the candidacies of Amsterdam (which would eventually host the
1928 Summer Olympics), Antwerp, Budapest, and Rome (which would eventually host the
1960 Summer Olympics) were discussed. Despite a slight preference at the time for Budapest, no final choice was made, and the outbreak of
World War I soon afterwards prevented any further progress. In 1915,
Lyon made a bid for the 1920 Games, but after some discussion, they agreed to support Antwerp and postpone their bid until 1924 if Antwerp was liberated in time to organize the Games. The support for Belgium by cousin country France, then the leading country of the IOC, also meant that Amsterdam and Budapest (in an enemy state) had no chance for the 1920 games against Antwerp. New candidacies from American cities did not have that disadvantage, and bids were received from
Cleveland,
Philadelphia, and
Atlanta (which would eventually host the
1996 Summer Olympics), while Cuba also submitted a bid for
Havana. However, shortly after the armistice in November 1918, the IOC decided to give Antwerp their first preference, if they were still willing to host the 1920 Games. In March 1919, the Belgian Olympic Committee decided to go ahead with the organization of the Games: on 5 April 1919, at a meeting in Lausanne, Antwerp was officially declared the host city for the games of the VIIth Olympiad. ==Organization==