Irish-Australian who set swimming world records
Sarah 'Fanny' Durack was an Irish-Australian swimmer - the first woman to win an Olympic swimming medal.
Born to Irish emigrant parents in Australia, Fanny Durack was lucky that she was not born in Ireland. If she had, she may not have had the opportunity to become a champion. Had her parents had stayed in Ireland, would Fanny Durack have been at the Olympics?
From the 1890s onwards to 1900, Australian states had slowly been rolling out votes for women. In contrast, in Britain and Ireland, the vote was only won in 1918.
However, there were still significant amounts of discrimination and sexism as regards to rights of Australian women, there was still much to be done for the cause of women.
Fanny Durack made her own statement about what she could achieve as a woman, not just by competing professionally as a swimmer, but also with what she was wearing doing so.
Fanny Durack was mostly a self-taught swimmer. By the time she was 17, Fanny Durack won her first state swimming title. Durack clearly had a natural talent for swimming, an athlete who was born at just the right time to shine.
For the first time ever in the history of the Olympics, the 1912 Games - held in Stockholm, Sweden - allowed women to compete in swimming. Women had only been allowed to participate in the Olympics since 1900, swimming and diving had only been added in 1912.
2,408 athletes participated in the 1912 Olympics and only 48 of them were women - just 2%.
The Australian public were endlessly proud of Durack.
A campaign was started to get her to the 1912 Olympics. Numerous local and international publications wrote about the 'water-nymph' who should represent Australasia in the Olympic Games.
However, women were banned from competing in events where men were also present. By this point Durack had 56 medals and 100 trophies to her name. Thanks to public appeal, along with her formidable record, the ban was lifted and Fanny Durack was allowed to compete in Stockholm.
Arriving in Stockholm, Durack shocked the crowd by donning a sleek, close-fitting swim suit instead of the usual modest and ‘appropriate’ woolen swimsuit.
Not caring whether her outfit was ‘decent’ enough for a woman to be wearing at the time, Durack argued that the heavy clothing she was encouraged to wear had 'as much drag as a sea-anchor'.
Fanny Durack rebelled against societal standards for women at the Olympics when she wore that suit for the 100m freestyle event. And it paid off. She became the first woman to ever win the Olympic gold medal in swimming, not just for Australia but in the world.
Between 1912 and 1918, Fanny Durack broke 12 world records.
Just a week before Durack was due to travel to the 1920s Antwerp Olympics, she was stricken with appendicitis. She had an emergency appendectomy and subsequently contracted both typhoid fever and pneumonia.
By 1921, due to her health, Fanny Durack retired from competitive swimming in January 1921. She dedicated herself to coaching children and lived until 1956. Fanny Durack was inducted into the International Swimming Hall of Fame in 1967.
She had a massive impact on the perception of women athletes, not just in Australia, but across the world. Fanny Durack was a champion who very much blazed a glorious trail for every female Olympians who came after her.
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