"America's Oldest Intercollegiate Athletic Event"
by John Veneziano, Harvard Sports Information DirectorBoat clubs at Harvard and
Yale had existed since the early 1840s, but races against outside competition was rare.
That all changed when Yale issued a challenge to Harvard "to test the superiority of
the oarsmen of the two colleges." Thus the oldest intercollegiate athletic event was
born.
On August 3, 1852--in a two-mile race on the calm waters of Lake Winnepeaukee--Harvard
and Yale battled like never before. Yale was represented by two boats, the Shawmut
and the Undine, while Harvard rowed in the Oneida. Harvard won the inaugural
race by about four lengths, earnings a pair of black walnut oars as its prize. It seems
that people right away knew this was going to be the start of something big, for among the
distinguished observers was General Franklin pierce, the Democratic party nominee and
native of near-by Hillsborough, who would be elected President later that year.
No further races were held between the schools until July 1855, when Yale issued
another challenge. In a contest held on the Connecticut River in Springfield, Harvard made
it two straight, winning by one minute and 38 seconds. Harvard and Yale met again in 1859
and 1860, but it wasn't until 1864 that the Regatta became an annual event. Yale gained
its first series win that year, taking the three-miler on Worcester's Lake Quinsigamond by
42 seconds.
In 1876, the series' first four-mile race was held as the crews met on the Connecticut
River. Yale won the contest, which was the first since the inaugural one to use
eight-oared shells, by 29 seconds.
The Regatta came to New London in 1878 and, with rare exception, has been held in the
town originally known as Nameaug (good fishing place) ever since. Yale arrived 12 days
prior to the June 28 race, settling in at Gales Ferry and taking quarters at a two-story
house owned by Latham Brown. Harvard set up camp five days later, moving into a house
owned by Charles Stoddard, about a mile south of Yale.
In anticipation of the race, a huge grandstand--seating approximately 3,000 fans--was
erected. A crowd of 25,000 showed up. Harvard led the entire way and took victory with a
time of 20:44.75, establishing an American record. One casualty on the day was the press
boat, which struck a tugboat midway through the race and missed the ending.
The Regatta wasn't held in 1896 because of a breakdown in relations between the two
schools, but was renewed in 1897 with a three-boat race in Poughkeepsie that included
Cornell.
President Theodore Roosevelt was in attendance for the 50th anniversary Regatta and saw
a 13-second Yale victory. This came during a dominant streak for the Elis, who were in the
midst of winning 17 races in 19 years.
The 1911 race marked the first appearance of an airplane on the regatta course. The
flier was H.W. Atwood, the noted aviator who set a record time for a flight between Boston
and New London. By today's standards, his travel time would barely qualify him for the
breakdown lane on I-95, as he completed the 135-mile flight in 2 hours, 12 minutes.
Harvard won the race easily, as Yale's stroke was taken from the shell at the three-mile
mark.
Just three years later came the closest race in Regatta lore. Yale won by an official
count of 1/5 second--the smallest fraction measured on stop-watches of the time--but the
true margin was closer. The 1914 Regatta also marked the inaugural junior varisty
eight-oared race, replacing the varsity substitute fours.
Then, in 1925, an estimated crowd of 100,000 along the shoreline and two packed
observation train of 32 cars witnessed history as, for the first time, a crew trailing by
open water at the mile mark came back to win. Yale roared back from its deficit to gain
victory with a record-breaking upstream clocking of 20:26.
In 1934, distinguished Harvard alum and U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt was among
the spectators. His son, Franklin, Jr. was a member of the Crimson JV crew that year.
Roosevelt didn't do much cheering as Yale swept the day's events, and set a downstream
mark with a time of 19:51.8. With Roosevelt in attendance again the following year, Yale
scored a second straight victory.
But in 1936, Harvard initiated a 10-year winning streak that was the longest in the
rivalry at that time. And the 1938 season marked an unprecedented triumph by the Crimson,
as Harvard earned its first ever quadruple sweep since the combination race was added in
1920.
The Regatta was not held in 1943-45 because of World War II, and the 1946, the shortest
in history, was held on the Charles River. When the crews reappered in New London the
following spring, they saw the new highway bridge that had been completed above the
Thames. But the result was the same...Harvard won the race by six seconds.
In 1952, the schools went to New London in June, then ventured to Lake Winnepesaukee in
August to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the first Regatta. The race followed the
original script, with Harvard winning by 2.7 seconds.
Yale won five in a row between 1954 and 1958, culminating with a 13 second upstream
victory. That win pulled the Elis within 48-46 in the all-time series.
Since that year, however, Harvard has seized the upper hand in the rivalry. The Crimson
won 21 of the next 22 races--including 18 in a row to start Harry Parker's coaching tenure
in Cambridge. The only Eli breakthrough came in 1962, one year before Parker's arrival.
The 1963 combination race set the tone, as one of the great comebacks in Regatta history
occurred when the Crimson--after trailing by as much as three lengths--burst through Yale
in the final strokes to win by a half-length. The varsity had an easier time of it the
next day, winning by 28 seconds. Harvard's final win in that 18-year run saw the Crimson
establish a course record that stands to this day, with a time of 18:22.4 in its
two-length victory.
The Elis bounced back to win four straight between 1981 and 1984, starting with an 11
second upstream win. But Harvard answered with an 11-year Regatta streak that ran from
1985 until 1995. In the 1995 contest, both crews smashed the upstream mark. Harvard's
winning time of 18:41.9 and Yale's clocking of 18:45.5 both bettered the previous
standard. Harvard has won three of the last five races. |