in
Stanley Park, Vancouver, British Columbia In 1970, Jerome was made an Officer of the
Order of Canada. The following year he was inducted into
Canada's Sports Hall of Fame. Jerome was posthumously inducted into
Canada's Walk of Fame in 2001 and was named a Person of National Historical Significance in 2010. In 1984, the Labatts International Track Classic Pre-Olympic meet was renamed the Harry Jerome International Track Classic. The meet is held annually at
Swangard Stadium in
Burnaby, British Columbia. The Harry Jerome Sports Complex in North Vancouver, one block from North Vancouver High School where he first went out for track in 1958, and the Harry Jerome Sports Centre, home to the Burnaby
Velodrome, are named after Jerome, as are the weight room at the
University of Oregon and the track and field stadium in Prince Albert. The
Stanley Park sea wall in
Vancouver is graced with a bronze
statue of Jerome. The annual
Harry Jerome Awards, the national awards dinner for Canada's black community organized by the Black Business and Professionals Association (BBPA), is named after him. Another meet, called the Harry Jerome Indoor Games was created in 2011. It is held at the
Richmond Olympic Oval, once used for
Speed Skating events at the
2010 Vancouver Olympics, but now a multi-purpose sports facility. The meet is mainly attended by high school students representing lower mainland clubs, as well as some university student-athletes, and younger athletes. On September 30, 2019,
Google celebrated Harry Jerome's 79th birthday with a
Google Doodle. The Harry Jerome Community Recreation Centre in North Vancouver, British Columbia is scheduled to open in July 2026. ==Works about Jerome==