Glasgow University Boat Club

Last updated

Glasgow University Boat Club
Glasgow Green East Boathouse.jpg
Glasgow University Boat Club Rowing Blade.svg
Location Glasgow, Scotland Flag of Scotland.svg
Coordinates 55°50′52.5″N4°14′10.8″W / 55.847917°N 4.236333°W / 55.847917; -4.236333
Home water River Clyde
Founded1867 (1867)
Former namesGlasgow University Rowing Club
University University of Glasgow
Affiliations Scottish Rowing
Website www.glasgowuniversityboatclub.co.uk
Events
GUBC Western Eights Head, Scottish Boat Race

Glasgow University Boat Club (GUBC) is the rowing club of the University of Glasgow, Scotland. The club is affiliated to Scottish Rowing. [1]

Contents

GUBC is one of the most active and successful clubs within the university, producing rowers and crews that have and continue to compete successfully at local, national and international levels. Club members have frequently been chosen to represent Scotland at both the Home Countries International Regatta and Great Britain at the European Universities Rowing Championships and World Rowing Under-23 Championships.[ citation needed ] [2]

Until 2005, the club was the last independently funded sports club at the University, before being joining Glasgow University Sports Association, formerly the GU Athletic Club.

History

The club was founded as Glasgow University Rowing Club (GURC) in 1867. [3] [4]

The club first competed at Henley Royal Regatta in 1936, sending a four-man crew to compete in the Wyfold cup. [5] In 1960 the crew of a GURC boat rescued a young child who had fallen into the Clyde. [6]

GUBC was an all-male club until 2004, when a historic merger with Glasgow University Ladies Boat Club meant that female students were accepted into the club.

Training facilities

The club trains on the River Clyde at Glasgow Green, boating from the East Boathouse. Built in 1924 the building is home to the club's boats and member's private singles. Rowers have access to 6km of non-tidal water between the weir at Glasgow Green and Belvidere Straight adjacent to Cuningar Woodland Park. The club also has its own land training space equipped with rowing ergometer and free weights. This is shared with a few other sports clubs within the University of Glasgow but the club also has access to the University's main gym facilities in the Stevenson Building.

Scottish Boat Race

Glasgow University Boat Club competes against Edinburgh University Boat Club in the Scottish Boat Race, an annual boat race featuring competing eights on the River Clyde. [7] It is the second oldest University Boat Race in the United Kingdom after the Oxford and Cambridge Boat Race and the third oldest in the world. In 2013 the course for the Scottish Boat Race was changed from above the weir at Glasgow Green to below the weir with the finish in line with the Tall Ship at the Riverside Museum. [7]

Currently Glasgow hold neither trophy, however the Glasgow men's first VIII had won the trophy thirteen times consecutively from 2000 to 2012. [8] [2]

Honours

British champions

YearWinning crew/s
1993 Men U23 1x [9]
2005 Open Ltw2x, Women Ltw2- [10]
2006 Open 2x, Open Ltw2x, Open U23 L2x, Women Ltw2- [11]

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Katherine Grainger</span> British rower

Dame Katherine Jane Grainger is a British former rower and current Chair of UK Sport. She is a 2012 Summer Olympics gold medallist, four-time Olympic silver medallist and six-time World Champion. She served as Chancellor of Oxford Brookes University between 2015 and 2020, and is currently Chancellor of the University of Glasgow.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">British Rowing</span> British rowing association

British Rowing, formerly the Amateur Rowing Association (ARA), is the national governing body for the sport of rowing. It is responsible for the training and selection of individual rowers and crews representing Great Britain and England, and for participation in and the development of rowing in England. Scottish Rowing and Welsh Rowing oversee governance in their respective countries, organise their own teams for the Home International Regatta and input to the GB team organisation.

University rowing in the United Kingdom began when it was introduced to Oxford in the late 18th century. The first known race at a university took place at Oxford in 1815 between Brasenose and Jesus and the first inter-university boat race, between Oxford and Cambridge, was rowed on 10 June 1829.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Scottish Rowing</span>

Scottish Rowing (SR), formerly the Scottish Amateur Rowing Association, is the governing body for the sport of rowing in Scotland. It is responsible for promoting the sport in Scotland and also for selecting crews to send to the Home International Regatta and the Commonwealth Rowing Championships. In addition, Scottish Rowing also runs three of the major regattas of the year, Strathclyde Park Regatta, the Scottish Rowing Championships and the Scottish Indoor Rowing Championships.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cambridge '99 Rowing Club</span>

Cambridge '99 Rowing Club, generally referred to as 'Nines', is based on Kimberley Road in the historic City of Cambridge, UK.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hampton School Boat Club</span> British rowing club

Hampton School Boat Club (HSBC) is the rowing club of Hampton School. Each year the club produces 1st VIIIs that compete at Championship level in the United Kingdom. The club hosts two Head race events each year.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sons of the Thames</span>

Sons of the Thames is a rowing club in Hammersmith, London, England. It was formed in Putney in 1886 with the aim, still enshrined in its constitution, to further the sport of rowing.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Weybridge Rowing Club</span>

Weybridge Rowing Club, founded in 1881, is a rowing club by the Thames in England, on the Surrey bank. The club organises head races, notably the Weybridge Silver Sculls which has had Olympian winners and co-organises a May/June regatta. It consists of a wide range of members: juniors, novices, seniors, masters (veterans) – these include many past and present champions.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Durham University Boat Club</span>

Durham University Boat Club (DUBC) is the rowing club of Durham University. In recent years, DUBC has cemented itself as one of the strongest university boat clubs in Great Britain. Under the leadership of former British Olympian Wade Hall-Craggs, DUBC notably won the BUCS Victor Ludorum for ten consecutive years (2004-2013), and has produced a number of athletes that have competed internationally at European and World Championship level.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Trevelyan College Boat Club</span>

Trevelyan College Boat Club (TCBC) is the boat club of Trevelyan College, at Durham University in England. An active north eastern rowing club, it competes on a national level, for example at Henley Royal Regatta and the Head of the River Race. The club runs under the leadership of a structured executive committee and benefits from an annual intake of around thirty novice rowers each year. The club was founded officially in 1976, although there was a history of rowing at the college earlier, with the first boat bought in 1966. It is recorded that an all fresher crew won the Ladies Invitation Race at the university Epiphany Term regatta in 1967.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Newcastle University Boat Club</span>

Newcastle University Boat Club (NUBC) is the rowing club of Newcastle University, UK. Established in March 1911 as the boat club for Armstrong College, it celebrated its centenary in 2011, when was also appointed High Performance Programme for heavyweight men and women by British Rowing. In the past 20 years current students and alumni won 60 international vests for GB.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Glasgow Rowing Club</span>

Glasgow Rowing Club is a rowing club, based in the Gorbals area of Glasgow, Scotland. It is a private club, with no direct public funding. Application for membership is open to all. The club is affiliated to Scottish Rowing.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Edinburgh University Boat Club</span>

Edinburgh University Boat Club (EUBC) is one of the oldest sports clubs of the University of Edinburgh, in the city of Edinburgh, Scotland.

Strathclyde Park Rowing Club (SPRC) is a rowing club which was founded in 2000 by Iain Somerside, Karen & Peter Barton and Tom Hewitt. It is the only 'open' club based at the international rowing course at Strathclyde Country Park, Motherwell, North Lanarkshire.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Clydesdale Amateur Rowing Club</span>

Clydesdale Amateur Rowing Club is Scotland's largest rowing club, located on the River Clyde in the centre of Glasgow. It is successful each year in many events at the Scottish Rowing Championships and is affiliated to Scottish Rowing.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Scottish Boat Race</span>

The Scottish Boat Race, also known as the Edinburgh vs. Glasgow Boat Race, is an annual rowing race between the University of Glasgow and the University of Edinburgh, in competing eights currently held on the River Clyde in Glasgow, Scotland. Started in 1877 on the Clyde above the tidal weir, the Scottish Boat Race has continued regularly since its inception with the exception of 1903 to 1919 due to GURC being a non-competitive club. The Race was originally contested in coxed fours but this was changed to eights after 1961. It is also believed to be the third oldest university boat race in the world, predated only by the Oxford and Cambridge Boat Race and the Yale-Harvard Regatta. Edinburgh University won the 2016 Scottish Boat Race after winning the Men's Scottish Boat Race, both Beginner crew races, the Women's Reserve race and the Ergometer Challenge.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Oxford University Women's Lightweight Rowing Club</span> British rowing club

The Oxford University Women's Lightweight Rowing Club was established in 1984 to represent the University of Oxford in the race against the Cambridge University Boat Club at the Lightweight Boat Races. Throughout the season, the Club races as Tethys Boat Club.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">University of St Andrews Boat Club</span> Scottish university rowing team

The University of St Andrews Boat Club (UStABC), founded in 1962, is the rowing team affiliated to the University of St Andrews. Operating under the University of St Andrews Athletic Union, the club competes in head races and regattas across Scotland and England, including the Head of the River Race (London), British Universities and Colleges Sport (BUCS) Regatta and Henley Royal Regatta. Its national governing body is Scottish Rowing and the registration code of 'SAU'.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Globe Rowing Club</span> British rowing club

Globe Rowing Club is a rowing club in Greenwich in the South East of London, England. Established in 1923, the club house and boat house are based on Crane Street in the historic centre of Greenwich, as part of the Trafalgar Rowing Trust. Its crews use the River Thames and the London Regatta Centre at the Royal Docks for water outings. The club admits male and female rowers of all ages, but is particularly known for its high performance junior programme.

Ewan Murray Gilmour Pearson is a Scottish former international rower who participated in the 1986 Commonwealth Games.

References

  1. "Club finder". Scottish Rowing.
  2. 1 2 Baxter, Emma (4 September 2012). "Club profile: Boat Club". Glasgow University Guardian . Retrieved 22 May 2016.
  3. "Get involved: Make a splash with the GUBC". Glasgow University Guardian. 22 February 2011. Retrieved 22 May 2016.
  4. "Prologue and progress: the Boat Club connects with its archive". universityofglasgowlibrary.wordpress.com. University of Glasgow. 27 June 2014. Retrieved 22 May 2016.
  5. "An Editorial Diary. Glasgow University at Henley". Glasgow Herald . 24 June 1936. p. 14. Retrieved 22 May 2016.
  6. "Child falls into Clyde. Rescue by student". Glasgow Herald. 18 February 1960. p. 14. Retrieved 22 May 2016.
  7. 1 2 "New route for Glasgow and Edinburgh's university boat race". STV News. 19 March 2013. Retrieved 22 May 2016.
  8. "Sport: Boat". University of Glasgow . Retrieved 22 May 2016.
  9. ""For the Record." Times, 19 July 1993, p. 20". Times Digital Archives.
  10. ""Nautilus cruise." Times, 18 July 2005, p. 53". Times Digital Archives.
  11. ""Rowing." Times, 17 July 2006, p. 57". Times Digital Archives.