Frederick Haughton "Rangi" Thompson (31 March 1908 – 15 December 1971) was a New Zealand rower who represented his country at one Olympic and two British Empire Games, winning a medal at each.
Biography
Born in Christchurch on 31 March 1908,[2] Thompson was the son of Ellen and Frederick Thompson.[3] A member of the Avon Rowing Club,[1] he began rowing in 1926.[4]
At the 1932 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, Thompson was a member of the New Zealand crews in the men's coxless pair and the men's eight.[4] Partnered with Cyril Stiles in the coxless pair, he progressed to the final via the repêchage, and went on to win the silver medal.[2] They finished half a length behind the gold medal crew from Great Britain after breaking a stay on the stroke rigger 600 m from the end of the race.[4] The New Zealand eight was eliminated in the repêchage.[2]
Thompson worked as a tanner at the Woolston Tanneries in Christchurch, where he was involved in a serious accident in July 1943. He caught his left arm in a machine used for stripping hides, and it took 45 minutes for him to be extricated. His arm was later amputated at Christchurch Hospital.[4][6] He later became a greengrocer.[4]