Daphne Ceeney

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Daphne Ceeney

Daphne Hilton (née Ceeney) in 2012
Personal information
Nationality  Australia
Born (1934-01-07) 7 January 1934

Daphne Hilton née Ceeney (born 7 January 1934) is a former Australian Paralympic competitor. She was the first Australian woman to compete at the Paralympic Games.[1] She won fourteen medals in three Paralympics in archery, athletics, fencing, swimming, and table tennis from 1960 to 1968.

Personal

Australian Paralympic Committee President and Daphne Hilton (née Ceeney) view the blazers and medals Hilton donated to the APC in 2012

Ceeney was born in the New South Wales town of Harden-Murrumburrah on 7 January 1934, as the eldest of four children.[2] She became a paraplegic after a horse-riding accident in 1951 at the age of 17.[2] She spent 9 months in Sydney's Royal Prince Alfred Hospital before returning to Murrumburrah. Eight years after the accident, she moved to Sydney where she spent six months at the Cherrywood Rehabilitation Centre and then one year at Mt Wilga Rehabilitation Hospital.[1] While living at the rehabilitation hospital, she developed her sporting ability and skills. [1] She was selected as Australia's only female athlete at the 1960 Rome Paralympics.

In 1967, she married Frank Hilton, whom she had met at the Northern Archers Club.[2] She worked as a shorthand typist until the birth of her twin girls, Nichole and Rachael, in 1970.[2] She was at the Royal North Shore Hospital for six months before the delivery, and was the first person with paraplegia to give birth to twins in Australia; a thesis was written about her pregnancy and birth.[2] She officially opened the athlete's village at the 2000 Sydney Olympics and Paralympics, and was part of the 2000 Paralympic torch relay.[2] In August 2012, she donated a set of medals from the 1960 Games and three Australian team blazers to the Australian Paralympic Committee.[3]

Sporting Career

1960 Summer Paralympics

Ceeney was the only Australian female competitor at the inaugural 1960 Rome Games.[4] At the games, she won two gold medals in the Women's 50 m Breaststroke complete class 5 and Women's 50 m Crawl complete class 5 events, three silver medals in the Women's St. Nicholas Round open in archery, Women's Club Throw C, and Women's Javelin C events, and a bronze medal in the Women's Shot Put C event.[5]

1962 Commonwealth Paraplegic Games

She won 11 gold medals at the 1962 Commonwealth Paraplegic Games in Perth, Western Australia.[1]

1964 Summer Paralympics

At the 1964 Tokyo Games, she won a gold medal in the Women's Doubles C table tennis event with Marion O'Brien,[2] a silver medal in the Women's 50 m Freestyle Prone complete class 5 event, and three bronze medals in the Women's Albion Round open in archery, Women's 50 m Freestyle Supine cauda equina, and the Women's Foil Individual (wheelchair fencing) events; she also competed but did not win any medals in athletics events at the 1964 games.[5]

1966 Commonwealth Paraplegic Games

Ceeney won 13 medals including 6 gold medals in swimming fencing, shot put, table tennis and pentathlon at the 1966 Commonwealth Paraplegic Games in Jamaica.[1] At these games, she was the only female member of Australia's wheelchair basketball team.[2]

1968 Summer Paralympics

At the 1968 Tel Aviv Games, she won a silver medal in the Women's 50 m Freestyle class 5 (cauda equina) event and two bronze medals in the Women's 60 m Wheelchair C and Women's Pentathlon special class events.[5] She retired from Paralympic competition in 1968.[2]

2002 World Wheelchair Games

In the 1990s, Ceeney came out of retirement and took up lawn bowls in the hope of gaining selection for the 2000 Sydney Paralympics.[1] The sport was taken off the program after the 1996 Atlanta Paralympics but Ceeney went on to compete at the 2002 World Wheelchair Games winning a silver and bronze medal in the pairs. She retired from lawn bowls in that year.[2]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Smith, Jeanette (2011). Pushing String. Singapore: Playright Publishing. ISBN 9780980666694. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 2.8 2.9 "Daphne Hilton interviewed by Robin Poke". Australian Centre for Paralympic Studies oral history project. National Library of Australia. 6 August 2010. Retrieved 12 February 2012. 
  3. Mackey-Laws, Kyle (8 August 2012). "All-rounder a pioneer for today's athletes". Canberra Times. Retrieved 8 August 2012. 
  4. "Life to Live". Disability Services Australia. Retrieved 12 February 2012. 
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 "Athlete Search Results". International Paralympic Committee. Retrieved 12 February 2012. 

External links

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