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Tag: Rowing

  • Unity Boat Club: Inclusive rowing team for all abilities – WTOP News

    For many people, rowing is a relaxing and competitive outlet; for the Unity Boat Club, it’s a statement about the power of determination and breaking down barriers.

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    Unity Boat Club: Inclusive rowing team for all abilities

    For many people, being on a boat out on the water is pure relaxation; for the Unity Boat Club, it’s a statement about the power of determination and breaking down barriers.

    “We’re focusing on diversity and inclusion,” said Patrick Johnson, the club’s co-founder and president emeritus. “We’re also providing opportunities for people who may not be able to afford some of the other programs.”

    During a Sunday afternoon training session on the Potomac River at Thompson Boat Center, Johnson and assistant coaches led the team through a variety of drills.

    Johnson said the goal of the club is to provide rowing opportunities for everyone, offering personalized coaching and support for athletes with physical, visual, intellectual or developmental disabilities.

    High school rowers serve as mentors for the adaptive rowers.

    “Each boat that goes out today will have one adaptive rower, and one high school rower from 10 to 12 different high schools around D.C., Maryland and Virginia,” Johnson said.

    Boats used for competitive rowing, or shells, are typically only 1-foot wide.

    “We also have recreation boats, which allows for a lot of different levels to be able to row who maybe couldn’t before,” Johnson said. “We have safety pontoons that can go on there, so all levels can row.”

    Johnson said the teamwork and comradery required to row in unison benefits athletes and volunteers, in and out of the water.

    “You have to learn how to work with somebody else,” Johnson said. “If the boat isn’t moving together, then it’s not going to move well at all.”

    The club has meetings and training sessions in a variety of locations, including Fort Belvoir Marina, Anacostia Community Boathouse, as well as indoor sessions at CrossFit Adaptation in Arlington.

    “It’s just rewarding to see people doing things that they never thought they’d be able to do,” Johnson said.

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    Neal Augenstein

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  • Lowell’s Boat Shop race slated for Oct. 18

    AMESBURY — Lowell’s Boat Shop officials will soon ask folks to start their engines – or better put – dip their oars into the water as they gear up for the annual Mighty Merrimack Rowing Race and Fall Haul extravaganza.

    The festive tradition, taking place Oct. 18, will feature human-powered boats racing down the Merrimack River to celebrate the start of autumn.


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    By Caitlin Dee | Staff Writer

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  • Row, row, row your boat: Lowell’s Boat Shop race weeks away

    AMESBURY — Lowell’s Boat Shop officials will soon ask folks to start their engines – or better put – dip their oars into the water as they gear up for the annual Mighty Merrimack Rowing Race and Fall Haul extravaganza.

    The festive tradition, taking place Oct. 18, will feature human-powered boats racing down the Merrimack River to celebrate the start of autumn.


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    By Caitlin Dee | cdee@newburyportnews.com

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  • Unbelievable facts

    Unbelievable facts

    At the 1928 Olympics, Australian rower Bobby Pearce paused mid-race to let a family of ducks cross,…

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  • Rowing on the river: Scullers savor the challenges, beauty of the Merrimack

    Rowing on the river: Scullers savor the challenges, beauty of the Merrimack

    Splash, whoosh, click.

    Splash, whoosh, click.

    Two rowers slide back and forth in the middle of their long skinny boats, gliding over the Merrimack River.

    It’s an eye-catching scene.

    Iconic, too, in that it’s immortalized by American artist Thomas Eakins in his 1871 oil painting “Max Schmitt in a Single Scull,” which depicts his friend on the Schuylkill River in Philadelphia.

    Rowing the single scull, a pleasant and lonely endeavor deeply rooted in this region, endures in competitions and as a niche activity on the Merrimack.

    Here, on a late spring afternoon, each rower works a pair of oars spread wide in oarlocks suspended off the gunwales by riggers.

    The scullers propel themselves upriver on the surface’s broken image of reflected clouds and blue sky.

    They ride over the tidal river, pushing and pulling, Paul Geoghegan, 67, of Merrimac in a blue scull, and Rick Bayko, 76, of West Newbury in a white one.

    They belong to the Merrimack Tidal Rowing Association, a small group that stows its boats, known as sculls or shells, in garage-like bays at Marianna’s Marina in Haverhill.

    It’s downriver from Haverhill’s Basiliere Bridge and upriver from West Newbury. The Groveland Pines Recreation Area lay on a rise directly across the water.

    Years ago, race cars roared there at the Pines Speedway on Saturday nights. If the wind was right, people downriver in West Newbury could hear the engines.

    Geoghegan and Bayko, former track athletes, row together once or twice a week.

    Both like the exercise, peace and solitude that rowing brings.

    “What’s really neat is when you come here on an early Sunday morning and it is completely flat,” Geoghegan said. “There is a little bit of fog on the water and it starts to lift a little bit.”

    Bayko, who was a fine-tuned distance runner for much of his life, recalls trying his hand at rowing once when he was in college in Boston.

    He climbed in a training wherry (a light rowboat) on the Charles River and couldn’t keep the boat straight.

    Storrow Drive was on one side and Memorial Drive in Cambridge on the other. Despite all the Boston traffic and noise, and the frustration built from not keeping the boat steady, he was impressed and surprised by how peaceful it was on the water.

    Association members row when they please, each with a key to the storage bays where the lightweight sculls rest on racks.

    A main draw for the single scull rowers, as well kayakers and canoeists, is getting away for a few hours, retreating to the river.

    “Rowers are solitary,” Geoghegan said. “They like to get together — then go apart.”

    He and Bayko share a few words before they head to the boat launch – a few more at the turnaround spot on the river.

    Right now, as they row, each of them likely has a distinct interior experience.

    Bayko is counting his strokes, checking his time, engaged in a challenge.

    “I enjoy going real fast and hard and feeling that this is well within me,” he said.

    He will feel a sense of accomplishment when he’s done.

    Geoghegan likes to get in a workout and look around.

    Moments after he arrived at the marina this afternoon, he saw a bald eagle flying upriver.

    Osprey and kingfishers are regulars on the Merrimack.

    One day, an endangered species almost joined him in his scull.

    “I pull a stroke,” he said. “I look over my shoulder and I see a sturgeon in the air.”

    The big, prehistoric-looking fish splashed down so close to the boat that Geoghegan got wet. The short-nose sturgeon spawns in Haverhill.

    Rowing has a storied history, the sport evolving from warfare, fishing and transportation.

    The first modern races stem from water taxis ferrying customers, the rowers striving to be first across the Thames River in London, England, Bayko said.

    Some of the first interhigh school and intercollegiate athletic events in the 19th century involved rowing.

    Phillips Exeter Academy in Exeter, New Hampshire, and Phillips Academy Andover in Andover competed, as did Harvard and Yale crew teams.

    The upcoming Olympics Games Paris 2024, which will run from July 26 to Aug. 11, will include single, double and quadruple sculling (a rower operates two oars), and pair, four and eight sweeping (the rowers hand a single oar) events, all at 2,000 meters (1.2 miles).

    Rowing remains popular with youth who compete on high school and college teams, but they typically drift away from it in young adulthood.

    Now, with an aging population — some 20% of Americans are 65 and older — some of the erstwhile rowers return to rowing, men and women.

    Other rowers, Geoghegan and Bayko among them, discover and take up the activity later in life.

    Sculling engages all the muscle groups and is a fluid continuous movement, a strength and cardio exercise without abrupt stops and starts, putting less stress on knees and ankles.

    Geoghegan and Bayko started with indoor rowing on machines about 20 years ago.

    Geoghegan, a longtime skier, was tired of being sore after teaching skiing.

    He started indoor rowing to get in shape for skiing. Then, he discovered outdoor rowing.

    Bayko’s body had taken a pounding from running thousands of miles.

    He fell in love with cross-country running at Newburyport High, Class of 1965. After serving in the U.S. Army, he ran competitively in college, qualifying for the Olympic trials twice. He finished in the top 20 at the Boston Marathon four years in a row in the 1970s.

    Besieged by injuries, he took up indoor rowing at age 52 and held the world record for his age group at 57.

    Upriver, another rowing organization in Lowell named the Merrimac River Rowing Association, hosts the Textile River Regatta in the fall.

    The Head of the Charles Regatta in Boston draws thousands of competitors from around the world over three days in October, where rowers race for the best time.

    Meanwhile, the Haverhill rowers get on the water throughout the year.

    “The river is always different, a different light,” Geoghegan said.

    For more information on the club, contact Paul Geoghegan at merrimackrowers@gmail.com.

    By Terry Date | Staff Writer

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  • Oxford coach blasts Thames pollution as a national disgrace ahead of Boat Race with Cambridge

    Oxford coach blasts Thames pollution as a national disgrace ahead of Boat Race with Cambridge

    LONDON — The coach of Oxford’s crew taking part in the Boat Race described the pollution in London’s River Thames as a “national disgrace” as the company responsible for its upkeep faces mounting financial difficulties that critics say will need it to be taken back into state hands.

    Testing by a campaign group has found high levels of E.coli along a section of the Thames in southwest London that will be used for the historic race on Saturday.

    Crew members have been warned about the risks of entering the water and advised to use a “cleansing station” at the finish area. The pollution has also cast doubt on the post-race tradition of throwing the winning cox into the water.

    It comes as figures released by the Environment Agency showed the level of sewage spills into England’s rivers and seas by water companies more than doubled in 2023 compared to 2022, reaching 3.6 million hours of spills in 2023 compared to 1.75 million hours in 2022.

    There has been no suggestion that the annual Boat Race between storied universities Oxford and Cambridge that dates to 1829 will not go ahead. The women’s race will precede the men’s event along the same 4.2-mile (6.8-kilometer) section of the Thames.

    But Oxford coach Sean Bowden has lamented the state of the water.

    “It’s a national disgrace, isn’t it?” Bowden posed. “It would be terrific if the Boat Race drew attention to it. We are very keen to play a part and we recognize we have a role and a responsibility to it.

    “Why,” he added in British newspaper The Daily Telegraph, “would you want to put your kids out in that?”

    Invariably, the focus has turned to whether the winning crew will dunk its cox into the Thames at the end of the race.

    “If there’s a health and safety problem, I don’t think we’ll be throwing him in because we don’t want to risk that,” said Harry Glenister, who has rowed for Britain and will compete for Oxford.

    “It’s just too much of a risk. We support whatever the Boat Race is saying about the conditions in the water. We just hope we’ll win and then we’ll decide.”

    Cambridge has won four of the last five men’s races and leads the rivalry 86-81.

    Cambridge has also won six straight in the women’s race.

    E.coli bacteria normally live in the intestines of healthy people and animals. Most strains are harmless, cause relatively brief diarrhea and most people recover without much incident, according to the Mayo clinic. But small doses of some strains — including just a mouthful of contaminated water — can cause a range of conditions, including urinary tract infection, cystitis, intestinal infection and vomiting, with the worst cases leading to life-threatening blood poisoning.

    River Action, a campaign group, said the testing locations suggested the source of pollution was from utility company Thames Water discharging sewage directly into the river and its tributaries. Thames Water, Britain’s largest water company, is facing huge pressure to clear up the river, though it insists that the elevated levels of E.coli are not necessarily its fault.

    “I would point out that E.coli has many different sources,” the company’s recently appointed chief executive Chris Weston told the BBC. “It is not just from sewage, it is also from land run-off, it is from highway run-off, it is from animal feces. All of those things contribute to the problem and I am absolutely determined that at Thames, we will play our part in cleaning up the problem and so the Thames is a river that people can use as they would like to everyday.”

    Under a plan drawn up last summer, Thames Water was asking investors to inject close to 4 billion pounds ($5.05 billion) into the business over the next five years. However, on Thursday shareholders refused to make the first payment of 500 million pounds ($630 million) without a big increase in consumers’ water bills, a demand that the industry regulator denied.

    Weston insisted that it was “business as usual” at the debt-laden company as it has enough financial resources to survive into next year, by which time he hoped a new funding arrangement will have been agreed. However, the news has raised speculation that the company may have to be nationalized.

    The parlous state of many of Britain’s rivers, canals and coastlines is set to feature heavily in the general election, which is expected to take place in the next few months. The main opposition Labour Party, which is way ahead of the governing Conservatives in opinion polls, has said it will make sure that “new investment comes through to fix the broken sewage system without taxpayers being left to foot the bill.”

    ___

    AP sports: https://apnews.com/sports

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  • 'The Boys in the Boat' gives the Hollywood treatment to rowing during an Olympic year

    'The Boys in the Boat' gives the Hollywood treatment to rowing during an Olympic year

    COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — The journey from nowhere to an Olympic gold medal is a tale as old as time.

    Just as well-worn, but far less explored, are the stories about great athletes who realize they can’t make it anywhere unless they have a way to bankroll the trip.

    “The Boys in the Boat” is Hollywood and director George Clooney’s way of stringing those plot lines together. That it opens Christmas Day, a mere seven months before the start of the Paris Olympics, is good fortune for the people who oversee rowing in the U.S. and know the general public mostly either a) doesn’t think about that sport or b) sees it as the exclusive playground for East Coast and Ivy League elites.

    USRowing worked with producers of the movie to sponsor dozens of screenings across the country with two purposes: raising funds for an organization that received about $3.5 million of its $15 million budget in 2023 from charitable donations, and building awareness across racial and socioeconomic lines. One jarring stat: In 2021, a study found that only 2% of women who competed in NCAA rowing were Black. (Men’s rowing isn’t sanctioned by the NCAA, and so, wasn’t part of the study.)

    “What we’re trying to do here, and what so many clubs are doing around the country, is trying to create programs and opportunities” for people to row, said USRowing CEO Amanda Kraus.

    “TBITB” is about a group of poor students at the University of Washington who try out for the junior varsity crew team. It’s 1936, and far from seeking Olympic glory, these guys are simply trying to find a way to make a buck.

    “All you gotta do is make the team,” one of them says. “How hard can that be?”

    Plenty hard, it turns out, and what ensues is the Miracle on Ice, except on water — and with one other notable difference: Most of those hockey kids always knew where their next meal was coming from.

    Certainly there are others out there in a country of 330 million looking for a fresh start, a taste of the great outdoors and a chance to try something new. Kraus believes her sport might be that thing — and that all those potential rowers don’t have to be daughters and sons of millionaires.

    Rowing is hoping to inspire more people like Arshay Cooper, who was a member of the first all-Black high school rowing team at Manley High School in Chicago. Cooper authored a book, “A Most Beautiful Thing,” that itself was made into a movie produced by basketball stars Grant Hill and Dwyane Wade.

    “In rowing, you move forward by looking in the opposite direction,” is a quote from Cooper on his website that describes his worldview. “I learned that it’s OK to look back, as long as you keep pushing forward.”

    The sport also hopes to build more programs, such as Learn to Row Day, when rowing clubs are urged to welcome newcomers and teach them about the sport.

    So much about rowing is a steep climb. Kraus says it costs around $50,000 a year to support a Team USA rower; that comes after the tens of thousands expended on their development at the grassroots and college levels. But, she said, building a pipeline is an investment worth making, and it doesn’t mean everyone has to end up at the Olympics.

    “We hope people can get inspired to really check the sport out for themselves,” Kraus said. “You can be 30 or 40 or 70 and go do a ‘Learn to Row’ course at your local club. That’s a real thing. You don’t have to row in college to be part of this sport.”

    USRowing has around 74,000 members (by comparison, the U.S. Tennis Association has 680,000) and, like all niche sports, the Olympics are its time to shine. That makes a rowing movie a Christmas present for this sport.

    The high point in the film — based on the 2013 book of the same name by Daniel James Brown that’s considered rowing’s bible — takes place during a particularly fraught time. At the 1936 Berlin Games, Nazi flags get better placement than the Olympic rings and Adolf Hitler is a constantly glowering presence.

    Nobody, however, poses a bigger threat to the boys from Washington than the leader of America’s Olympic committee, who appears unbothered as he tells their coach that, even though they won their era’s version of the Olympic trials, a team with a better pedigree and more money will take their place in Berlin unless they raise $5,000 in a week.

    It’s an absurd and unfair insult, and one that, sadly, isn’t that far removed from today’s realities: Politics rule. And even in a billon-dollar Olympics industry, so many athletes have to scratch for pennies, especially in America, where the government doesn’t pay for anything.

    They make it — getting over the hump with a bit of unexpected help — and soon find themselves rubbing elbows at the opening ceremony with Jesse Owens. The great sprinter assures the rowers he’s not there to prove anything to Hitler, but rather to his own country, which still treats Blacks like second-class citizens.

    We know how the Owens story ends. Now, we know how the rowers’ story ends, too.

    It’s a quintessential underdog sports drama, all the way to the short epilogue that’s intended to give moviegoers the feels about the mysticism of a sport very few understand. If only a few of them put down the popcorn and navigate to an online donations page — or maybe even a local crew club — then the small rowing community in the U.S. will have a hit on its hands.

    ___

    AP Summer Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/2024-paris-olympic-games

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  • Rowing to allow ‘limited number’ of Russians to compete in key Olympic qualifier

    Rowing to allow ‘limited number’ of Russians to compete in key Olympic qualifier

    The governing body of rowing says it will allow a “limited number” of Russians to return to competition for the world championships in September

    FILE – Athletes compete at the World Rowing Championships in Ottensheim, near Linz, Austria, Saturday, Aug. 31, 2019. The governing body of rowing says it will allow a “limited number” of athletes from Russia and Belarus to return to competition for the world championships in September. (AP Photo/Matthias Schrader, File)

    The Associated Press

    LAUSANNE, Switzerland — The governing body of rowing said Wednesday it will allow a “limited number” of Russians to return to competition for the world championships in September, a key event to qualify for next year’s Paris Olympics.

    World Rowing said athletes from Russia and Belarus would only be allowed to compete in the single sculls, coxless pairs — both events which offer Olympic qualifying spots — and the lightweight single sculls, which isn’t an Olympic event. They will also be allowed in para-rowing single sculls and pairs. Larger crews like fours and eights won’t be allowed.

    World Rowing said there would be no national symbols for the Russian and Belarusian crews, “enhanced” anti-doping procedures and background checks. Those checks will “ensure that athletes who are associated with the military or war in any form, or have publicly supported the war, will be automatically excluded,” the governing body said.

    The move is largely in line with recommendations from the International Olympic Committee. It initially supported sports like rowing, which excluded Russians and Belarusians from sporting events on security grounds following the Russian invasion of Ukraine last year. The IOC now favors allowing them to compete as neutral athletes without national symbols as qualifying ramps up for the Olympics. The IOC does not recommend a return of Russians and Belarusians in team events.

    Even a limited return of Russian rowers could prompt a boycott from Ukraine, which has a policy not to compete in national team sports events which readmit Russian athletes.

    ___

    More AP coverage of the Paris Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/2024-paris-olympic-games and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

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  • Chief recommends firing officers in paralyzed prisoner case

    Chief recommends firing officers in paralyzed prisoner case

    The police chief in New Haven, Connecticut, recommended Tuesday that four officers be fired for mistreating a Black man who became paralyzed from the chest down last year in a police van that braked suddenly.

    Police Chief Karl Jacobson’s recommendations in the case of Richard “Randy” Cox now go to the city’s police commissioners, who have the sole authority to fire officers. The commissioners are expected to hold hearings beginning in late April or early May, he said.

    “The message to the community is that we will be transparent and we will be accountable, and we will hold our officers accountable,” Jacobson said at a news conference at police headquarters. “The message to the officers is that this administration does have your back and that mistakes do happen, but we will not treat this community disrespectfully as happened in the Randy Cox situation.”

    Jacobson also announced that internal affairs investigations found the officers violated conduct rules on integrity, abiding by the law, trustworthiness, courtesy and respect.

    Ben Crump, an attorney for Cox and his family, said they are encouraged the chief is recommending the officers be fired.

    “These officers were sworn to protect their community, but they inflicted unnecessary and traumatizing harm to Randy, who will pay the price for the rest of his life,” Crump said in a statement.

    An attorney for one of the officers said they were being used as scapegoats for the department’s inadequate training and policies, and noted Jacobson said over 50 policies are under review to make sure what happened to Cox doesn’t happen again.

    The four officers — Oscar Diaz, Betsy Segui, Jocelyn Lavandier and Luis Rivera — also have been criminally charged on allegations they cruelly mistreated and neglected Cox on June 19, 2022, after he was injured in the back of a police van with no seat belts. He’d been arrest on gun and threatening charges, which were later dropped.

    A fifth officer, Ronald Pressley, is charged with the same crimes. Jacobson said Pressley retired in January, so he cannot be disciplined.

    Police have said the van driver, Diaz, was transporting Cox to police headquarters when he braked hard to avoid an accident. Cox, whose hands were handcuffed behind his back, slid head-first into the metal partition between the driver and passenger compartments, breaking his neck and leaving him paralyzed from the chest down.

    “I can’t move. I’m going to die like this. Please, please, please help me,” Cox said minutes after the crash, according to police video.

    Diaz stopped a few minutes later to check on him, according to police video and officials. Cox was lying motionless on the floor and Diaz called paramedics. However, Diaz told them to meet him at the station instead of waiting for them — a violation of department policy, Jacobson has said.

    At the station, some of the officers mocked Cox and accused him of being drunk and faking his injuries, according to surveillance and body-worn camera footage. Officers dragged Cox by his feet out of the van and placed him in a holding cell prior to his eventual transfer to a hospital.

    The five officers have pleaded not guilty to second-degree reckless endangerment and cruelty to persons — misdemeanor charges criticized as too light by Cox’s family and lawyers.

    The case has drawn outrage from civil rights advocates like the NAACP, along with comparisons to the Freddie Gray case in Baltimore. Gray, who was also Black, died in 2015 after he suffered a spinal injury while handcuffed and shackled in a city police van.

    Gregory Cerritelli, a lawyer for Segui, said the officers are “scapegoats” for the department’s “inadequate training and policies.”

    “The entire process lacks fundamental fairness,” Cerretelli said about the internal affairs investigations.

    Messages seeking comment for left for the other officers’ lawyers.

    Cox is suing the officers and city for $100 million in federal court for alleged negligence, excessive use of force, failing to provide immediate medical care, assault and intentional infliction of emotional distress, among other claims.

    In court documents, the officers and the city deny the lawsuit allegations.

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  • Philadelphia City Rowing Receives $7,000 Grant for SMART Goal Setting and GRIT Testing Programs for All Youth Participants

    Philadelphia City Rowing Receives $7,000 Grant for SMART Goal Setting and GRIT Testing Programs for All Youth Participants

    Philadelphia City Rowing (PCR) has received a $7,000 grant from the Fund for Children of The Philadelphia Foundation to support its mentoring and goal-setting programs.

    Announcement of the grant was made by Pedro A. Ramos, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Foundation. The Philadelphia Foundation’s Fund for Children is supported through generous annual contributions from the Philadelphia Eagles and the Philadelphia Phillies.

    “Through the generosity of The Philadelphia Foundation’s Fund for Children, Philadelphia City Rowing can now continue to provide SMART Goal Setting (Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Relevant and Timely) and GRIT Testing for all our over-400 Philadelphia inner-city youth participants,” said Terry Dougherty, Executive Director of Philadelphia City Rowing. “Early identification of educational and athletic roadblocks can help our participants develop work ethic and resiliency, or ‘grit,’ in the achievement of their goals on and off the water.”

    Philadelphia City Rowing was established in 2010 to empower the youth of Philadelphia through the sport of rowing. Philadelphia is the historic home of the Olympic sport of rowing, symbolized by the active rowing community of public and private elementary and high schools, colleges, and rowing clubs based on the Schuylkill River. Today, PCR serves over 400 Philadelphia inner-city youth with core programs that include academic support, mentoring, swimming and water safety, nutrition education, community service and family engagement.

    About The Philadelphia Foundation:

    Founded in 1918, The Philadelphia Foundation (TPF) strengthens the economic, social and civic vitality of Greater Philadelphia. TPF grows effective philanthropic investment, connects individuals and institutions across sectors and geography, and advances civic initiatives through partnerships and collaboration. A publicly supported foundation, TPF manages more than 900 charitable funds established by its donors and makes over 1,000 grants and scholarship awards each year. To learn more, visit www.philafound.org.

    About Philadelphia City Rowing: 

    Founded in 2010, Philadelphia City Rowing is a unique, nonprofit, sports-based youth development program that harnesses one of Philadelphia’s most iconic sporting traditions, rowing, to engage and empower public school students in Philadelphia. Philadelphia City Rowing provides multi-faceted programming that includes comprehensive academic support, swimming and water safety instruction, nutrition and wellness education, and civic engagement opportunities. These components are incorporated into each of Philadelphia City Rowing’s different program offerings, which are tailored to suit different ages and levels of experience. PCR’s programs are offered free of charge to public school district students in grades 7-12. Additional information is available at http://www.PhiladelphiaCityRowing.org.

    Source: Philadelphia City Rowing

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