Silken Laumann on the podium

Silken Laumann rowing on Elk Lake

Silken Laumann gained rowing glory living and training in Victoria and she is well known to all Canadians for rebounding from a serious leg injury to win the bronze medal for single sculls at the 1992 Olympics. Laumann provided many amazing performances during 13 years of competitive rowing. She made the national team in 1983 at 18 and the following year won Olympic bronze in double sculls paired with her sister. She battled chronic back pain in the 1980's then climbed the international rowing ladder and won the World Championship in 1991. Laumann's efforts earned her the 1991 Lou Marsh Trophy as Canada's Outstanding Athlete. But there was more recognition and competitive glory to come. Her bronze medal at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics, coming less than two months after her boat was rammed and her leg badly injured at a regatta in Germany, became the stuff of legends. She went on to win more World medals and retired from the national team after winning singles silver at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics. Laumann was named Canada's 1992 Female Athlete of the Year and became the first non-American to win the Wilma Rudolph International Courage Award in 1997. She was named to the Canadian Sports Hall of Fame in 1998.

Dan O'Sullivan

In some ways, we can thank Dan O'Sullivan for the legion of Victoria rowers that have won great acclaim on the world stage as Olympic medallists. He was one of the seminal influences in the creation of the sport through the James Bay Athletic Association in the 1880's. Dan was the stroke rower on JBAA's "Big Four" crew that laid claim to six straight North Pacific Association of Amateur Oarsmen titles beginning in 1895. He went on to compete in singles and doubles events but his main efforts were in coaching. Throughout his 36 years of coaching and sporting determination, he and the "Bays" dominated rowing in the Pacific Northwest and they were legendary in the sport across the country at the time of his death in 1933.

saveonABOUT THE GREATER VICTORIA
SPORTS HALL OF FAME

Victoria enjoys a stellar sports history and we celebrate the many athletes, teams and builders who have contributed to that history.  Our displays are seen at the Save-On-Foods Memorial Centre (1925 Blanshard St.)  through Gate Three.

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