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Sarah Frances "Fanny" Durack (27 October 1889 – 20 March 1956) was an Australian swimmer. From 1910 until 1918 she was the world's greatest female swimmer of all distances from freestyle sprints to the mile marathon.[1]
[edit] Life and careerDurack was born in Sydney, Australia in 1889. Durack learned to swim in Sydney's Coogee Baths using breaststroke, the only style for which there was a championship for women at that time. In 1906 she won her first title, and over the next few years, dominated the Australian swimming scene. In the 1910-11 swimming season, Mina Wylie beat Durack in the 100 yards breaststroke and the 100 and 220 yards freestyle at the Australian Swimming Championships at Rose Bay. The two went on to become close friends. In the late 1910s, she held every women's swimming world record from 100 m to a mile. Durack and Wylie were initially refused permission to compete in the 1912 Stockholm Olympics. The New South Wales Ladies Swimming Association later allowed them to go provided they bore their own expenses. Durack set a new world record in the heats of the 100 m freestyle. She won the final, becoming the first Australian woman to win an Olympic gold medal in a swimming event. Until 1932 (when Claire Dennis won the 200 m backstroke in Los Angeles) she was the only such woman; and until 1956 she and Dennis were the only two such women. [edit] Death and legacyDurack died in Sydney in 1956. She was interred with her late husband in Waverley Cemetery. Fanny Durack Pool[2] in Petersham, Sydney is named in her honour. [edit] Records[edit] Olympic Records
[edit] World records
Fanny Durack was posthumously inducted into the International Swimming Hall of Fame in 1967. [edit] Notes and references[edit] References
Categories: 1889 births | 1956 deaths | Australian swimmers | Olympic swimmers of Australasia | People from Sydney | Swimmers at the 1912 Summer Olympics | Divers at the 1912 Summer Olympics | Sportspeople of multiple sports | Olympic gold medalists for Australasia | Burials at Waverley Cemetery | Former world record holders in swimming | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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