logo
#

Latest news with #openWaterSwimming

Oklahoma man's swim from Twin Cities to New Orleans grabbed headlines in 1930
Oklahoma man's swim from Twin Cities to New Orleans grabbed headlines in 1930

Yahoo

time06-07-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Oklahoma man's swim from Twin Cities to New Orleans grabbed headlines in 1930

The Mississippi River runs 1,826 miles between the Ford Dam in the Twin Cities and New Orleans. In 1930, Fred Newton swam every single one of them. A 27-year-old sign painter from Clinton, Okla., Newton guessed the endeavor would take him about three months. And — maybe — bring him fame and fortune. 'I just picked myself a nice cool job for the summer,' Newton told the St. Paul Dispatch on July 7, the day after he began his swim. 'I'm in the water from six to eight hours a day and I've put on a tan most folks would envy.' He made it to New Orleans nearly six months later, on Dec. 29, having endured cold and current — even floating rafts of manure and offal as he passed the South St. Paul stockyards. He did set a distance record for open-water swimming, but fame and fortune proved elusive. 'Not much came out of it,' said Worth Sparkman, a Clinton native who first learned about Newton's swim during the COVID-19 pandemic from a brief article in Smithsonian Magazine. 'I thought, 'I didn't know anything about that, and I lived there most of my life,' ' he said. 'I Googled (Newton) and there really wasn't a lot out there.' Now a reporter for Axios Northwest Arkansas based in Fayetteville, Sparkman is working on a book about Newton and his under-appreciated exploits. It wasn't unreasonable for Newton to imagine that swimming the length of the Mississippi might make him rich and famous in 1930, Sparkman said. The previous decade had seen America's ascendant mass media fuel a flurry of headline-grabbing stunts. Daredevils seeking an early version of viral fame tested their mettle by sitting atop flagpoles for days at a time, going over Niagara Falls in a barrel or walking on the wings of airplanes in flight. Promoters of the nation's new interstate highway system sought to capitalize on this trend in the late 1920s, organizing a cross-country foot race along Route 66 dubbed the 'Bunion Derby,' which boasted a $25,000 prize — nearly $470,000 in today's dollars. The race passed right through Clinton, where Newton earned a living painting signs for local businesses. 'He was an artist,' his son Phil said. 'He could stand on the inside of a window and paint a sign on it that you could read from the outside.' While Newton was tempted by the Bunion Derby's $25,000 purse, his knees had been damaged by an amateur football career, said Sparkman, who has read Newton's unpublished memoir in the course of his research. So he devised an alternative: Newton would swim across the country — albeit north-to-south — via the Mississippi River. 'He says in his manuscript that he hoped to earn fame and fortune,' Sparkman said. Newton enlisted the help of his younger brother and a friend, who agreed to follow along behind him in a rowboat with food and other supplies. The trio spent three weeks camped on Lake Minnetonka, where Newton trained with two long swims each day in June 1930, according to a report in the Clinton Daily News. They hoped to be in New Orleans by the beginning of October. Newton's epic swim started small on July 6. Entering the water on the Minneapolis side of the Ford Dam, he swam only as far as Union Depot in St. Paul, where local reporters caught wind of this aquatic curiosity. The Dispatch reported that Newton ate just two meals a day, supplementing his diet with candy handed to him by his companions in the rowboat. Newton told the newspaper that although he had been vaccinated against all manner of river-borne diseases, he still had one fear as he headed south. 'I've had all these serums, but there's nothing a man can do for an alligator bite that I know of,' Newton told the newspaper. As he departed the Twin Cities on his second day in the water, Newton encountered a very different obstacle. Refuse from South St. Paul's stockyards and slaughterhouses flowed directly into the Mississippi, creating rafts of manure and animal remains. 'There were enough islands of this that birds were actually alighting on them and eating the refuse,' Sparkman said. Newton made it all the way to Hastings that day, but that pace was difficult to maintain. It took him more than 170 days to reach New Orleans, where the water temperature of the Mississippi dips into the low 50s by late December, according to the National Weather Service. Newton was greeted by a supportive crowd and newsreel cameras as he emerged from the water covered in a thick layer of grease to insulate him from the cold. How a St. Paul newspaper wiretapped the city's police force 90 years ago 'Jaws' sank its teeth into Twin Cities moviegoers 50 years ago Hortman began legal career with win in landmark housing discrimination case Marine of Minnesota's 'Twins Platoon' details legacy of Vietnam in new book Downtown St. Paul has been declared 'dead' before The publicity generated by his success resulted in a series of exhibition swims and speaking engagements, but the Great Depression kept potential financial backers on the sidelines. 'The timing was unfortunate for him,' Sparkman said. 'If he had been able to do it in '29, he might have been better funded.' It was at one of his exhibition swims in Arkansas that Newton met his future wife. The couple eventually settled with their family in Gainesville, Texas, where Newton went into the insurance business. He died in 1992 at age 89. 'We moved to a little lake outside of town,' Phil Newton said. 'He would still swim into his 70s and 80s. Not too much.'

RNLI holds young adult water safety course for Plymouth students
RNLI holds young adult water safety course for Plymouth students

BBC News

time01-06-2025

  • Health
  • BBC News

RNLI holds young adult water safety course for Plymouth students

The University of Plymouth has collaborated with the RNLI, Swim England and Plymouth Active Leisure to teach students how to stay safe in the RNLI held a young adult water safety programme in May teaching students how to call for help correctly and how to use a was followed up by an open water swimming session at Tinside Cove which was run by Swim England and Plymouth Active Chhadva, a postgraduate student who cannot swim, said: "I loved it and definitely feel more confident and I would like to learn how to swim now." Digital and social media student Grace Uwe added: "I felt it was essential to have some experience and know the basics of saving myself in the water."I feel like I've learnt how to stay safe and I'm planning to do more swimming lessons now." Associate director of student support at the University of Plymouth Steve Gaskin said the sessions had been important to teach students "how to keep themselves and their loved ones safe" in the water."This event was an exciting opportunity for students of all swimming abilities to learn more about the open water and we are very grateful to the RNLI, Swim England and Plymouth Active Leisure for their support in delivering it," he single piece of advice which the RNLI has urged the students and the wider public to remember and share is: "If you find yourself struggling in water, float to live".

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store