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Capt Matthew Webb story and his English Channel swim. Nothing great is easy
Capt Matthew Webb from Dawley, Shropshire was the first person to swim the English Channel. Born in 1848 he became a Captain but gave it up to concentrate on...
Thank you my friend TSgt Joe C. for making us aware that on August 25, 1875 twenty-seven-year-old merchant navy captain Matthew Webb became the first known person to successfully swim the English Channel.
Captain Webb accomplished the grueling 21-mile crossing, which really entailed 39 miles of swimming because of tidal currents, in 21 hours and 45 minutes.
Sadly, while trying to swim the rapids below the Niagara Falls he was killed on 24 July 1883.
Images: Portrait of Webb from The Illustrated London News, 4 September 1875; Webb landing at Calais from The Illustrated London News, 4 September 1875
Background from rmg.co.uk/discover/behind-the-scenes/blog/captain-matthew-webb-1848–1883-first-person-swim-channel
"Captain Matthew Webb (1848–1883): the first person to swim the Channel
Captain Matthew Webb was the first person to swim across the English Channel unaided. Using our library and archive collections we research the life of this extraordinary man.
With the 2016 Olympics now under way in Rio de Janeiro, it seems timely to recall the career of Matthew Webb, a merchant mariner best remembered today not for his sailing career but for his swimming prowess. His most famous feat in his chosen sport ended at At 10.41 on the morning of 25 August 1875, when Webb, a stocky man of medium height, collapsed forward, exhausted, as his feet touched the sands on the beach at Calais. He was tired and weak and suffering from delirium, but Captain Matthew Webb had just succeeded in the then unprecedented feat of swimming the English Channel unaided. He had been in the water nearly 22 hours.
Among the Caird Library and Archive’s collection are a number of items which allow us to piece together some of his Webb’s career both on and in the water.
Webb was born in Dawley, Shropshire, on 19 January 1848, the second son of a doctor. He was able to swim by the time he was seven. At age 12, he left school and joined the merchant service. His applications to be examined for second mate and first mate, contained in his certificate file in the Caird Library and Archive, reveal that Webb was based on the SS Conway from 1860-62, and then served as an apprentice on the Cavour and Hampden. Whilst on a later voyage (on the Russia), one of his crewmates fell overboard mid-Atlantic during a gale and Webb dived in after him. Webb was in the water for 37 minutes, coming close to being lost. He failed to find the missing sailor, but for his attempt he was awarded a silver medal by the Liverpool Humane Society and the Stanhope Gold Medal by the Royal Humane Society.
Webb was clearly already a confident swimmer when during the early 1870s the idea of swimming the Channel took hold of him. It was at around this time that he became master of the Emerald. There is no master’s certificate for him in his certificate file, but we find him in charge of the Emerald on a Crew List dating from 1875.
Webb announced his intention to swim the Channel in 1874 and began training, swimming off Dover for several hours at a time and later training at Lambeth Baths.
After one failed attempt at the crossing, Webb tried again on 24 August 1875. Coated in porpoise grease, he dived off Admiralty Pier, Dover, at a little before 1 p.m. The Illustrated London News covered the story, sending its artist on one of the boats accompanying Webb, but taking much of its text from an issue of the Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News, which reported that Webb swam ‘sturdily with the ebb till a quarter to three, when he drank a cup of good ale’. He had some more ale later and at around 6.30 that evening some ‘beef tea’. After nightfall, Webb was stung by a jelly fish, and the tide turned, bearing him south-west. At 11 p.m., he was about eight or nine miles from Calais. By dawn, runs the report,
Cape Grisnez appeared almost within his grasp, when the flood-tide set in, at five, and drifted him eastward, towards Calais. An hour or so later there sprang up a breeze, which ruffled the sea and dashed the waves in the face of Captain Webb …
After 9 a.m., the crew of the mail boat Maid of Kent rowed out, and, positioned windward, sheltered Webb, who finally made it to land at 10.41. He was helped ashore and boarded a waiting carriage which conveyed him to the Hotel de Paris, Calais.
Webb returned home to a hero’s welcome, gave lectures and took part in endurance swimming events – even spending 60 hours in a glass tank at the Royal Westminster Aquarium – but how could he beat swimming the Channel?
Webb’s end came at Niagara Falls in 1883. He was attempting another first – to swim the whirlpool rapids – but was crushed by the sheer weight of the water. The Illustrated London News reported the death of ‘the bravest and greatest of swimmers’ in its issue of 28 July.
Webb’s Channel crossing remained unique for over 30 years. Although several others made the attempt, it was not until 1911 that Yorkshire-born Thomas William Burgess became the second person to succeed. Of course more have followed, but Webb’s story continues to appeal, perhaps because he was not only the first to succeed in this unusual form of maritime endeavour, but also because of his reckless and ultimately fatal bravery."
Capt Matthew Webb story and his English Channel swim. Nothing great is easy
Capt Matthew Webb from Dawley, Shropshire was the first person to swim the English Channel. Born in 1848 he became a Captain but gave it up to concentrate on his quest to swim the Channel. Capt Webb completed the swim on 24th August 1875. Whilst trying to swim the rapids below the Niagara Falls he was killed. This is a short story of his life.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2HP41pU7Ywg
FYI COL Mikel J. Burroughs LTC Orlando Illi Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. Maj William W. "Bill" Price CPT Jack Durish Capt Tom Brown CMSgt (Join to see) MSG Andrew White SFC William Farrell SGT (Join to see) Sgt Albert Castro SSG David Andrews Sgt Randy Wilber Sgt John H. SGT Charles H. Hawes SGT Mark Halmrast PO1 William "Chip" Nagel CPT Gabe SnellLTC Greg Henning
Captain Webb accomplished the grueling 21-mile crossing, which really entailed 39 miles of swimming because of tidal currents, in 21 hours and 45 minutes.
Sadly, while trying to swim the rapids below the Niagara Falls he was killed on 24 July 1883.
Images: Portrait of Webb from The Illustrated London News, 4 September 1875; Webb landing at Calais from The Illustrated London News, 4 September 1875
Background from rmg.co.uk/discover/behind-the-scenes/blog/captain-matthew-webb-1848–1883-first-person-swim-channel
"Captain Matthew Webb (1848–1883): the first person to swim the Channel
Captain Matthew Webb was the first person to swim across the English Channel unaided. Using our library and archive collections we research the life of this extraordinary man.
With the 2016 Olympics now under way in Rio de Janeiro, it seems timely to recall the career of Matthew Webb, a merchant mariner best remembered today not for his sailing career but for his swimming prowess. His most famous feat in his chosen sport ended at At 10.41 on the morning of 25 August 1875, when Webb, a stocky man of medium height, collapsed forward, exhausted, as his feet touched the sands on the beach at Calais. He was tired and weak and suffering from delirium, but Captain Matthew Webb had just succeeded in the then unprecedented feat of swimming the English Channel unaided. He had been in the water nearly 22 hours.
Among the Caird Library and Archive’s collection are a number of items which allow us to piece together some of his Webb’s career both on and in the water.
Webb was born in Dawley, Shropshire, on 19 January 1848, the second son of a doctor. He was able to swim by the time he was seven. At age 12, he left school and joined the merchant service. His applications to be examined for second mate and first mate, contained in his certificate file in the Caird Library and Archive, reveal that Webb was based on the SS Conway from 1860-62, and then served as an apprentice on the Cavour and Hampden. Whilst on a later voyage (on the Russia), one of his crewmates fell overboard mid-Atlantic during a gale and Webb dived in after him. Webb was in the water for 37 minutes, coming close to being lost. He failed to find the missing sailor, but for his attempt he was awarded a silver medal by the Liverpool Humane Society and the Stanhope Gold Medal by the Royal Humane Society.
Webb was clearly already a confident swimmer when during the early 1870s the idea of swimming the Channel took hold of him. It was at around this time that he became master of the Emerald. There is no master’s certificate for him in his certificate file, but we find him in charge of the Emerald on a Crew List dating from 1875.
Webb announced his intention to swim the Channel in 1874 and began training, swimming off Dover for several hours at a time and later training at Lambeth Baths.
After one failed attempt at the crossing, Webb tried again on 24 August 1875. Coated in porpoise grease, he dived off Admiralty Pier, Dover, at a little before 1 p.m. The Illustrated London News covered the story, sending its artist on one of the boats accompanying Webb, but taking much of its text from an issue of the Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News, which reported that Webb swam ‘sturdily with the ebb till a quarter to three, when he drank a cup of good ale’. He had some more ale later and at around 6.30 that evening some ‘beef tea’. After nightfall, Webb was stung by a jelly fish, and the tide turned, bearing him south-west. At 11 p.m., he was about eight or nine miles from Calais. By dawn, runs the report,
Cape Grisnez appeared almost within his grasp, when the flood-tide set in, at five, and drifted him eastward, towards Calais. An hour or so later there sprang up a breeze, which ruffled the sea and dashed the waves in the face of Captain Webb …
After 9 a.m., the crew of the mail boat Maid of Kent rowed out, and, positioned windward, sheltered Webb, who finally made it to land at 10.41. He was helped ashore and boarded a waiting carriage which conveyed him to the Hotel de Paris, Calais.
Webb returned home to a hero’s welcome, gave lectures and took part in endurance swimming events – even spending 60 hours in a glass tank at the Royal Westminster Aquarium – but how could he beat swimming the Channel?
Webb’s end came at Niagara Falls in 1883. He was attempting another first – to swim the whirlpool rapids – but was crushed by the sheer weight of the water. The Illustrated London News reported the death of ‘the bravest and greatest of swimmers’ in its issue of 28 July.
Webb’s Channel crossing remained unique for over 30 years. Although several others made the attempt, it was not until 1911 that Yorkshire-born Thomas William Burgess became the second person to succeed. Of course more have followed, but Webb’s story continues to appeal, perhaps because he was not only the first to succeed in this unusual form of maritime endeavour, but also because of his reckless and ultimately fatal bravery."
Capt Matthew Webb story and his English Channel swim. Nothing great is easy
Capt Matthew Webb from Dawley, Shropshire was the first person to swim the English Channel. Born in 1848 he became a Captain but gave it up to concentrate on his quest to swim the Channel. Capt Webb completed the swim on 24th August 1875. Whilst trying to swim the rapids below the Niagara Falls he was killed. This is a short story of his life.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2HP41pU7Ywg
FYI COL Mikel J. Burroughs LTC Orlando Illi Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. Maj William W. "Bill" Price CPT Jack Durish Capt Tom Brown CMSgt (Join to see) MSG Andrew White SFC William Farrell SGT (Join to see) Sgt Albert Castro SSG David Andrews Sgt Randy Wilber Sgt John H. SGT Charles H. Hawes SGT Mark Halmrast PO1 William "Chip" Nagel CPT Gabe SnellLTC Greg Henning
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SFC Shirley Whitfield MSG Mark Million COL Lee Flemming LTC (Join to see) PO1 William "Chip" Nagel SSgt Harvey "Skip" Porter SCPO Morris Ramsey SFC William Farrell Alan K. LTC Greg Henning SSgt (Join to see) MSgt Stephen Council Sgt Trevor Barrett Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. MSG Andrew White SP5 Mark Kuzinski SGT David A. 'Cowboy' Groth Cpl Scott McCarroll LTC John Shaw LTC John Griscom
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