Hugh Edwards (rower)
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Olympic medal record | |||
Men's Rowing | |||
---|---|---|---|
Gold | 1932 Los Angeles | coxless pairs | |
Gold | 1932 Los Angeles | coxless fours |
Hugh Robert Arthur Edwards (November 17, 1906 – December 21, 1972) also know as Jumbo Edwards attended Christ Church, Oxford and was a British rower who competed in the 1932 Summer Olympics.
He went up to Oxford in 1925, and was the only Freshman selected to row in the 1926 Blue Boat. He notoriously collapsed in the race, and was later diagnosed as having a hypertrophied heart, and was told he was no longer needed to row for the university.
Edwards left Oxford in 1927 to become a school teacher. He also recommenced rowing, with London Rowing Club. While rowing with London Rowing Club, he was successful at Henley Royal Regatta in 1928, 1929, and 1930, winning the Grand Challenge Cup in 1930. At the Empire Games in Canada in 1930, London Rowing Club crews representing England, and which contained Edwards, won the eights and coxed fours. He was then invited to row in the 1930 Oxford Blue Boat.
In 1932 he won the gold medal with his partner Lewis Clive in the coxless pairs event. He won his second gold medal as member of the British boat in the coxless fours competition.
During the Second World War Edwards served in the RAF. He was invited back to be a member of the Oxford coaching team in 1949, although resigned in 1957 after a disagreement with the Australian born President, Roderick Carnegie. He was brought back in 1959 by OUBC President Ronnie Howard. That crew beat Cambridge, and his subsequent coaching efforts made him an Oxford legend.
He wrote a book on rowing technique in 1963 entitled The Way of a Man with a Blade.
A coxless four belonging to Christ Church Boat Club is named Jumbo Edwards. The club's other four, is named after Jonathan Searle, another Olympic Gold medallist.