BRIEF HISTORY OF ROWING
Rowing is one of the oldest sports in world competition. Long before great
networks of road snaked across the land, water was the primary means of moving
people and goods from one place to another whether by lake, river or sea.
Friendly informal competitions often arose between watermen and laid the seeds
for what has become the sport of rowing. The elegance of many oars moving in
and out of the water together did not escape the ruling classes who used
brilliantly dressed rowers in great water processions. Oared barges raced on
the Nile as early as 2500 B.C and the Egyptian
Pharaoh Amenophis II tomb's (inscription dated to
around 1430 BCE) shows him rowing. The Roman poet Virgil describes a rowing
race in the Fifth book of Aeneid. Rowing was also
used as an instrument of war. Though rowers did fatigue and had to be fed, they
could be depended upon when the wind failed. The galleys of the Mediterranean
cultures of Phonetia, Greece, Rome, Turkey and Venice
generated tremendous speeds as rowers were trained to work together to ram and
disable other boats.
The organized sport of rowing traces it beginnings to the "Coat and
Badge" competition for novice London
watermen which was established in 1715 and has continued to be held annually
for nearly three centuries. Eton College claims the first student crew with informal
competitions arising between the various houses on the Thames
River west of London. Graduates of Eton carried these water
races to the collegiate level at Oxford and Cambridge. By the 1820's,
great boat houses were being constructed and the first intercollegiate sports
competition held between Oxford and Cambridge competition was held in 1829. Known simply as "The Boat Race,"
a name it carries to this day, the race was held in 1829.
Then as now, spectators were fascinated and professional rowing competitions, complete with highly paid champions and significant
opportunities for betting, soon arose in the countries of the British
Empire wherever suitable water and significant population could be
gathered. Henley-on-Thames hosted the Royal
Henley regatta in 1839 and this is still considered one of the premier rowing
events in the world.
Rowing soon found its way to the United States. Boat clubs were
established in New York, Boston
and Philadelphia
and moved west. The Harvard-Yale Boat Race in 1852 inaugurated intercollegiate
sports competition in the US.
In 1869, four oarsmen from Harvard competed against Oxford
on the Thames. The event drew world wide
attention and within two years the number of boat clubs in the United State
nearly tripled. The first national governing body for a sport in the United States
was for rowing. 1872, the the National Association
for Amateur Oarsmen was founded in Philadelphia
(In 1982, the name was changed to the United States Rowing Association and then
US Rowing. Although there are many different rowing associations throughout the
country, US Rowing is the national governing body for rowing competitions in
the United States).
Rowing was included in the Centennial celebrations in Philadelphia in 1876. American painter Thomas
Eakins captured the event on canvas. Underneath the beauty and athleticism,
however, conflict between upperclass amateur rowers
and gritty professionals was growing. Ugly scandals arose in professional
contests and the public's fascination which had made professional rowers the
highest paid and most well known of athletes in the 1880's and 1890's turned
sour. By the beginning of the 20th century, professional rowing had been
thoroughly discredited and rowing in the United States was largely reduced
to elite colleges and private boat clubs.
The international appeal (as well as costly scandals) led European rowing
associations to come together in 1892 to form the Federation International des
Societies d'Aviron (FISA), the first international
sport governing organizations. FISA continues to regulate the rules of
international rowing competitions. When Frenchman Baron De Coubertin, a rower
himself, proposed a quadrennial sports festival which became the modern
Olympics in 1896, rowing was among the competitions to be contested. Although
the races in Athens
were cancelled due to bad weather, rowing has been included in every Olympic
Games, earning it the distinction of being the team sport with the longest
Olympic history.
Women have been relative late comers to the sport of rowing. Women rowers were
only included for the first time the Montreal Games of 1976. However, Title IX
which requires a balance of opportunities for female athletes,
has greatly expanded rowing programs at the collegiate level. Rowing grew
rapidly in the 1980's and 1990's. While still an amatuer
sport, crew is no longer the exclusive province of elite boarding schools and
private colleges. The popularity of rowing has reached down into public high
schools and out into community rowing programs. A low-impact sport with
tremendous opportunities for developing cardiovascular fitness, rowing can be
enjoyed by people of all ages.
References
Sweeney, Joe, "The History of the Penn Athletic Club Rowing
Association"
Weil, Thomas, "The Dangerously Neglected Legacy of Rowing."
With acknowledgements to the EO Smith Crew http://www.eosmithcrew.org/rowing.htm