The History of Competitive Swimming

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The History of Competitive Swimming

Paintings of humans engaging in the act of swimming date to the Stone Age, around 7000 years
ago.
The Swimmer, published in 1538, is the first known book on the subject of swimming.
Competitive swimming was first introduced in the early 1800s in Britain by the National
Swimming Society. At that time, there were man-made indoor pools in London and the
National Swimming Society of England used them for swimming competitions. These events
became popular in England and led to the formation of the Amateur Swimming Association in
1880.
The swimming strokes used in this time period were the side stroke and the breaststroke. In
1873 John Trudgen introduced the front crawl to Britain used with a scissor or flutter kick. This
enhanced speeds and made swimming competitions new and exciting. Improvements to the
front crawl, either by different kicks or different ratios of kicks to strokes, resulted in the fastest
swimming style known today, now called the freestyle stroke.
In 1896 the Olympic Games were held in Greece in the city of Athens in the Mediterranean Sea.
Swimming was included and there were four swimming contests held. They were: 100 m, 100
m for sailors, the 500 m and the 1200 m competitions. Hungarys Alfred Hajos won the first
gold medal in the history of swimming in the 100 m freestyle and the 1200 m race. Paul
Neumann from Austria won the 500 m event. A Greek sailor named Ioannis Malokinis won the
100 m for sailors.
In 1900 the Olympic Bames were held in Paris, France in the Seine River and had the 200 m, 100
m and 4000 m and 200 m backstroke and a 200 m relay race. The Paris Games also had an
underwater and a swimming against the current races. The 4000 m freestyle races was won by
British swimmer John Jarvis. The 4000 m event was the longest swimming competition event
ever held in the history of swimming. The backstroke was used in the Olympics in the sport of
water polo, for the first time.
In 1902 Richard Cavill introduced the front crawl to the Western world.
In 1904 the Olympic Games in St. Louis, Missouri, were held in an artificial lake and had the 50
yards (46 m), 100 yards (91 m), 220 yards (200m), 440 yards (400 m), 880 yards (800 m) and
one mile (1.6 km) freestyle; 100 yards (91 m) backstroke and 440 yards (400 m) breaststroke;
and the 4 x50 yards (46 m) freestyle relay. In the history of swimming, this was the first time
that the Olympics specified if an event was freestyle or breaststroke.
In 1908 the Federation Internationale de Natation Amateur (FINA), which is the worlds first
swimming association, was formed.
In 1912 at the Olympic Games in Stockholm, women swam competitively for the first time. It
was the first time electronic timing devices were used. Womens races were held in the 100 m
freestyle and the 100 m freestyle relay. The mens events were the 100 m, 400 m and 1500 m
freestyle; 100 m backstroke; 200 m and 400 m breaststroke; and a 4 x 200 m freestyle relay.
This was a milestone Olympic Games for swimming. Women were being allowed to compete
for the first time in the history of swimming, and men had an extensive list of competitive races
that were held.
In 1922, Johnny Weissmuller became the first person to swim 100 m in under a minute.
Weissmuller went on to win five Olympic medals and 36 national championships, igniting an
interest in competitive swimming that was never seen before. Weissmuller never lost a race
over a career spanning ten years. His record of 51 seconds in the 100 yard freestyle event was
unbroken for the next 17 years. He later garnered Hollywood fame as the star of numerous
Tarzan films. Also, in 1922, female swimmer Sybil Bauer was the first woman to break the
mens 440 m backstroke record. Competitive swimming went to the forefront of sports due to
these record breaking feats.
The standard 50 Meter swimming pool, used in all subsequent Olympic competitions, was first
used in the 1924 Olympics.
Butterfly was developed in the 1930s and was at first a variant of breaststroke, until it was
accepted as a separate style in 1952.
Diving blocks were introduced during the 1936 Olympics.
In 1943 the United States ordered the reduction of fabric in swimsuits by 10: due to wartime
shortages, resulting in the first two-piece swimsuits.
The flip turn, a technique used by swimmers to reverse direction at the end of a pool, was
developed during the 1960s.
Mark Spitz in 1972 broke all records in the history of swimming at the 1972 Summer Olympics
and won seven gold medals. Spitz was a phenomenal swimmer and won a total of 9 Olympic
gold medals, a silver, a bronze, five Pan Am gold medals, 31 other amateur titles and 8 college
titles. He accumulated this impressive total of titles between the years of 1968 1972. Spitz,
at the 1972 Olympics, broke world records in each of the seven events he which he won gold
medals.
Swimming goggles were first used during the 1976 Olympics.
Competitive swimming has not seen the likes of Spitz until Michael Phelps. As of this date,
Phelps is the most decorated Olympian of all time. He holds the all-time records for Olympic
gold medals. Phelps has won 22 Olympic medals. Michael won six gold and two bronze medals
in 200 4 in Athens. In 2008 at the Beijing Olympics he won eight gold medals. In 2012 at the
Summer Olympics in London, Michael Phelps won 4 gold and 2 silver medals making him the
most successful athlete of the games for the 3rd Olympics in a row.

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