Ernestine Bayer (born March 25, 1909 – September 10, 2006) was an American rower who has been called the "Mother of Women's Rowing".[1]
Early life
Ernestine Steppacher was born in Philadelphia to Henry and Rosetta Steppacher. As a child she taught herself to ride a bicycle, and took rides on crabbing boats in the Delaware Bay.[2] She later attended secretarial school, and worked as a stenographer in a local bank.[2][3]
Rowing career
Bayer became interested in rowing through her husband, Ernest Bayer, who became a silver medalist in rowing at the 1928 Olympics.[3] She persuaded him to teach her how to row, despite the disapproval from other male rowers.[2]
In 1966, the Women’s Eight from the PGRC won the first National Women’s Rowing Championships.[5] In 1967 Bayer and her 10-woman crew entered the 2nd Women's Rowing Nationals competition; they won all of their events. Bayer pushed for the team (which included her daughter, Tina) to enter the 1967 European women's championships. However, the president of U.S. men's governing body for rowing, John Carlin, was not supportive, fearing the team would be easily beaten by competitors from behind the Iron Curtain.[2][3][6] His decision was overruled by the president of the international rowing organization after the team competed successfully in Canada. The team secured a secret loan from Horace Davenport, head of the National Rowing Foundation, to finance their travel, and sourced their own uniforms.[6] Although the American team did not win, they did provide weight to the argument that women's rowing be added to the Summer Olympics.[2]
Bayer was a member of the U.S. Olympic women's rowing committee for the 1976 Summer Olympics, the first in which women's rowing was included.[2]
In 1989, Bayer rowed in the World Rowing Organization's Masters Regatta that was held in the United States for the first time.[citation needed]
In 1991 she competed in the Florida Masters Regatta and won in a mixed double and the single. Earlier that year she had competed in the Crash B indoor races in Boston and established a world record in her age bracket. In 1992 at age 83, she won her age division, 60 and over, in the Head of the Charles race. She was United States Rowing Sullivan Award nominee that year. At the age of 91 she set the world record on the Concept II rowing ergometer for women over the age of 90.[7] Also that year she competed in the Master's World Championships in Montreal winning the women's double, the women's eight, and taking 2nd in the mixed double.[citation needed]
Personal life and death
Ernestine secretly married Ernest Bayer (d. 1997) on January 28, 1928.[3][1] Their first date, in 1927, had been at a swimming pool.[2] She gave birth to their daughter, Ernestine, nicknamed Tina, in 1945.[1] The couple moved to New Hampshire in 1971.[3] There, she founded the Alden Ocean Shell Association, an amateur rowing group.[1]
Ernestine suffered her first stroke in March 2003. She recovered enough to be able to row in a double. In July 2005, she had a second stroke which left her paralyzed on her right side and unable to speak.[1]
Beyond her firsts in competition, Bayer was also the first woman to receive several different honors for her rowing career. She received the U.S. Rowing Medal for her contributions to the sport.[2]
In 1980, she became the first woman to be awarded the John J. Carlin service award by the U.S. Rowing Association.[2] In 1984 she became the first woman inducted to the National Rowing Foundation's Hall of Fame.[1]
From 1974 until 2011, the Ernestine Bayer race was held as part of the Head of the Charles race. It was the only race in the event open to recreational shells.[8]