Boathouse, Bridge Road, Llandaff, Cardiff, Wales. Tel: 029 2056 6361l
|
|
HISTORYROWING HISTORY
History has many important examples of our ancestors as rowers, Roman
warships, Viking longboats and Venetian galleys, but the first recorded boat
with oars is on an Egyptian wall relief dated about 3300BC.
Historically, with each new form of transport there came a desire to race, and
rowing boats were no exception. In Britain, racing developed on the Thames
from the time when only two bridges existed so that crossing was largely by
rowing boats. The watermen who rowed these boats competed against each other
often for large stakes placed by their upper class clientele. The most famous
race, which began in 1716, is the Doggett coat and Badge race for single
scullers. This race is the oldest in the world and, largely unchanged, still
takes place today between apprentice watermen on the Thames.
Today the two best known rowing occasions are the University Boat Race, rowed
annually from Putney to Mortlake, and Henley Royal Regatta. The latter,
although an event which attracts many crews of international standard, is the
pinnacle of the regatta calendar for the club oarsman, to whom the opportunity
to compete there is everything.
Rowing became an Olympic sport in 1900, since when British crews have
consistently won medals, making rowing one of Britain's most successful
sports. The achievements of Steve Redgrave, one of the most distinguished
Olympians of all time in any sport, are well known even to the non-rowing
public, but many other athletes continue to bring sporting prestige to Britain
in Olympic and World Championship competition. This success has lead to an
upsurge of interest in our sport and with many fine young rowers, both male
and female, achieving at club, school and university level rowing in Britain
has a healthy future.
CLUB HISTORY
After World War Two, returning members of Taff (1879) and Cardiff (1884)
Rowing Clubs found their boathouses burnt out or collapsed through wood rot,
their boats and memorabilia missing. Members joined forces to form Llandaff
Rowing Club, rebuilding the old Taff Clubhouse and using the Cardiff Boathouse
for temporary storage. At first progress was very difficult because of
problems in obtaining building materials in the post-war period, the absence
of boats and the silt which had filled the river in places. As luck would have
it, the Clubs' own boats, which had been washed up on the estuary mud flats
had been rescued by residents of the lower part of Cardiff and protected under
tarpaulins. After restoration work, rowing restarted at the end of 1946 and
the first regatta was held in 1947.
In the 1950's the club blossomed and became a force on the regatta circuit.
The Welsh National Rowing Club was formed in 1958 to represent Wales at the
Empire Games at which many of Llandaff's senior members officiated. Jeremy and
Timothy Luke began to compete at the top level in pair oared events reaching
the trials for the 1960 Olympic Games and with the Edwards brothers winning
the silver medal for coxless fours at the 1962 Empire Games in Australia.
Further international success in coxless pairs was achieved by Charlie Wiggin
winning the Silver Goblets at Henley Royal Regatta and a bronze medal at the
1980 Moscow Olympic Games. More recently David and Robert Luke have won at
Henley and represented Great Britain in World Championship events.
In 1993 a veteran squad was formed with the object of competing
internationally. The squad has won regularly at National and World
Championship, 1996 being an especially successful year with six gold medals at
the World Masters Regatta.
In many years of racing at Club regatta Llandaff Rowing Club has seldom had
less than seventy wins a year, bringing both local and national recognition to
the club.
|