University of Warwick Boat Club

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University of Warwick Boat Club
Uwbclogo.png
University of Warwick Boat Club Rowing Blade.svg
Location Barford, Warwickshire, UK
Home water River Avon
Founded1967 (1967)
Membership100 (approx)
Affiliations British Rowing
boat code - UWK
Website www.warwickrowing.com
Events
Varsity
Notable members
Tom Solesbury

The University of Warwick Boat Club is the rowing club of the University of Warwick. The club was founded in 1967 [1] and as of 2019 has over a hundred members. [2] It rows out of a boathouse on a 3.5km stretch of the River Avon, Warwickshire. It caters for all levels of rowers from novices to experienced oarsman [3] . The club regularly attends races throughout the United Kingdom, including Pairs Head, Fours Head, Eights Head, BUCS fours and eights, BUCS Regatta, Marlow Regatta and Henley.

Contents

Notable former members include Oxford University Boat Club member and Boat Race winner Ben Ellison, [4] Olympian Tom Solesbury, [5] and Team GB para-rowing coxswain Oliver James MBE. [6]

The club was known internationally for the nude wall calendars produced by its members, first as 'Warwick Rowers' later as 'Worldwide Roar'. [7] However, the club and the calendar are no longer affiliated.

Facilities

The club's facilities include 6 Concept2 ergos, kept in the Boathouse. The club's men's 1st VIII rows in a 2011 wing-rigged Hudson Boatworks [8] and the women's 1st VIII rows in a 2015 Filippi Boats. [8] The club owns four further eights, three fours, and numerous small boats.

The club trains out of a rebuilt [8] boathouse on a 3.5km stretch of the River Avon south of Warwick Castle.

History [9]

The University of Warwick was established in 1965; during the first year there was no rowing club associated with the university. In 1966 there were several undergraduates who had previous rowing experience at their Schools, these undergraduates began by boating out of Stratford Rowing Club. With the first race being in a Coxed Pair, borrowed from Stratford R.C.

During the academic year 1967-68 John Fawthrop and Godfrey Bishop, the Clubs Treasurer and Captain respectively, had started the process of registering the club with ARA (now British Rowing), as well as designing the first kit with the notable red, white and black colours. It was at this stage that the club began to attract many new members, which Stratford RC weren't able to accommodate. So the search started for a location to build the boathouse and a stretch of river to row on.

Godfrey began looking at the local Ordnance Survey map to examine a suitable stretch of the River Avon. He was able to borrow a canoe; and paddled down the river Avon from Warwick Castle to the little village of Barford. After leaving Warwick Castle behind he stumbled across a gold mine; the river opened up to reveal a stretch wide enough for side by side racing.

After some research it was found out that the land was owned by a Mr Smith-Ryland, Lord Lieutenant of Warwickshire and a keen supporter of youth sport. Through Mr Bruce-Lockhart, the university's Development Officer, the club was able to set up a meeting with Mr Smith-Ryland, who could not have been more helpful. He drove them to a site alongside the river which was deemed suitable and agreed access across his farmland.

Once a suitable stretch of river was found for the Boathouse to be built on, the club set about purchasing a few boats and oars. Two coxed IV's from Wallingford RC, a new Sims coxless IV, and oars from Kingston Rowing Club.

The first boat entered under the name UWBC was a IV-
Bow: Godfrey Bishop
2: John Fawthrop
3: Dave Brown (ex Bedford Modern School)
Stroke: Diegan Morris (ex Radley College)
Coach: Henry Hatton (Leander and Stratford RC)

Land training began at Woodlands School, Coventry (the university currently had no sports centre). Boats were kept under the flood arch of the new motorway bridge until the Boathouse was built in August 1968.

The club first completed in Eights Head of the River Race in 1970.

Since then a new Boathouse has been built (2010), due to the increase in the number of boats the club owns. And the site has undergone various upgrades including a new floating pontoon.

Ursus Boat Club

The club's alumni maintain strong links with the club through the Warwick Graduate Boat Club, Ursus. [10] Members of Ursus and UWBC regularly compete. The club hosts an annual ball, which sees some friendly side by side racing between Ursus and current UWBC members, before having a sit down meal in the evening.

Ursus was set up in 2002 by alumni Ken Loveday and Mark Williams with the help of the executive committee for that year. The newly established boat club had two primary functions, firstly to enable old friends to keep in touch with each other and the club and secondly to help with the purchasing of new equipment for UWBC.

Alumni of the club include Boat Race winner Ben Ellison [4] [11] and Olympic rower Tom Solesbury. [12] [5]

Training Camps

The club attends two annual training camps, as well as numerous away days paddling against other crews. In previous years the club has boated from Reading Rowing Club, Walbrook Rowing Club, Dorney Lake for their Winter training camp. Typically the Spring training camp is held abroad, the club has attended training camps at Tilburg, Netherlands; Banyoles, Spain; Mimizan, France.

Warwick Rowers / Worldwide Roar calendars

In 2009, members of the men's team began independently producing an annual wall calendar featuring them modeling nude, as 'Warwick Rowers', donating the proceeds from sales to help fund the team. [7] In 2012 they began donating proceeds from sales of the calendar as well as related media and merchandise to Sport Allies, an independent charity created by them 'to reach out to young people challenged by bullying, homophobia or low self-esteem'. [13] With the university fully funding the club, Sport Allies later became the sole beneficiary of the Warwick Rowers. [13] In 2011 the women's team began producing a similar calendar featuring its rowers, [14] sharing proceeds with Macmillan Cancer Support. [15] In 2019, 'Warwick Rowers' rebranded itself as 'Worldwide Roar'. [16] The club now has no connection to the calendar.

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The Worldwide Roar is a mental health project and a non-profit organization dedicated to promoting healthier masculinity for social change. The project began by tackling homophobia in sport through the use of sport-based male nudity. It has since broadened its scope to promote healthier masculinity as a route to LGBTQ+ rights, gender equality and ending structural racism.

References

  1. "Naked Warwick Rowers Come To Hollywood". The Hollywood Times. 5 December 2014. Retrieved 23 October 2015.
  2. "University of Warwick Boat Club". University of Warwick Boat Club. Retrieved 20 March 2019.
  3. "Rowing". www.warwicksu.com. Retrieved 22 August 2024.
  4. 1 2 "The Boat Race News". The Boat Race. Retrieved 20 March 2019.
  5. 1 2 "Warwick Rowing Alumni: Where are they now?". University of Warwick. 30 November 2016. Retrieved 20 March 2019.
  6. "Oliver James MBE". British Rowing. Retrieved 20 March 2019.
  7. 1 2 Dicker, Ron (31 October 2014). "Naked Warwick Men's Rowing Team Calendar Makes A Splash To Fight Homophobia". The Huffington Post. Retrieved 22 August 2015.
  8. 1 2 3 "About UWBC". Archived from the original on 12 February 2012. Retrieved 1 April 2011.
  9. "HISTORY – University of Warwick Boat Club" . Retrieved 22 August 2024.
  10. "Warwick Rowing". 16 March 2012. Archived from the original on 16 March 2012. Retrieved 20 March 2019.
  11. "The Oxford and Cambridge Boat Race sponsored by Xchanging". 4 March 2009. Archived from the original on 4 March 2009. Retrieved 20 March 2019.
  12. "Tom Solesbury | British Rowing". 26 June 2010. Archived from the original on 26 June 2010. Retrieved 20 March 2019.
  13. 1 2 "Sport Allies". The Warwick Rowers. Retrieved 22 August 2015.
  14. "Warwick Rowing - Women's Naked Calendar 2015". Warwick SU. Retrieved 22 August 2015.
  15. "Warwick Uni Rowers Want To Boost Girls' Body Confidence With Latest Naked Calendar". The Huffington Post. 3 November 2016. Retrieved 25 November 2016.
  16. "The Warwick Rowers". worldwideroar.org. Retrieved 9 October 2019.