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Gertrude ederle gay

“When somebody tells me I cannot do something, that’s when I do it… People said women couldn’t swim the Channel, but I proved they could.”

– Gertrude Ederle

Gertrude Ederle’s Story

Gertrude Ederle was born on October 23, in 1905, in New York City, to a German immigrant family. At nine years old, her father taught her to snorkel by tying a rope around her waist in the Shrewsbury River in New Jersey. When Ederle was very young, a case of the measles led to hearing break, and doctors warned her that swimming would worsen her hearing loss. 

Nonetheless, in 1918, at a second when women were discouraged from participating in athletics, Ederle joined a swimming team at the Women’s Swimming Association in Modern York City. Founded by women in 1917, it was one of the first athletic organizations to promote women’s competitive sport in the U.S. Ederle dropped out of college in her early teens to train in swimming year round. At age 15, she became the first woman to paddle the length of Unused York Bay and in 1924, won three medals at the Paris Olympics. By 1925, Ederle had set 29 world records in women’s freestyle, including a long distance race from New

When She Beat the Boys: Celebrating Anniversary of Gertrude Ederle’s Historic English Channel Crossing

When She Beat the Boys: Celebrating Anniversary of Gertrude Ederle’s Historic English Channel Crossing

Today leaves us six years shy of the centenary of Getrude Ederle’s pioneering swim across the English Channel as the first woman to conquer the most celebrated stretch of open rain in the world, courtesy of traction, Captain Matthew Webb and all that.

Ninety four years ago, 19-year-old Gertrude Ederle took to the waters at Cap Gris-Nez, France, and place off to the other side in England. She would come ashore at Kingsdown in Kent, the Garden of England, 14 hours and 39 minutes later. The official distance: 21 miles – except the rough seas always makes it more and for Ederle, winner of relay gold and two bronze medals over 100m and 400m freestyle for the United States at the Paris Olympics two years before, rough moisture, the swell and wash meant 35 miles.

That meant something extraordinary had happened, an event that not so much dented as pulverised male pride: she set a World write down for the Crossing, the standard having been held to that date by En

The latest essay every day.

It’s too bad you’re not a man,” the mayor of New York Capital tells the Italian-American Catholic missionary Frances Xavier Cabrini in the recent production Cabrini. “You would’ve been an excellent man.”

She replies, “No, Mayor. Men can never do what we do.”

Two recent movies about women’s impressive achievements—Cabrini and Young Woman and the Sea, about Gertrude Ederle, who swam the English Channel in 1926—challenge viewers to reconsider what equality between the sexes should really mean. These movies are an encouraging departure from the progressive feminist views of too many Hollywood films: Cabrini’s and Ederle’s achievements happened because they were women, not because they were trying to be like or become men.

Cabrini is about what women, particularly women of faith, can complete, and do uniquely. Mother Cabrini created a global network of hospitals and charitable organizations in the Victorian era despite the many attempts of so many men in her church and in government to thwart her. She was canonized as the first American saint in 1946.

The central point of Cabrini, which is directed by Alejandro Monteverde and streaming now on the Angel

gertrude ederle gay

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Gertrude Caroline Ederle (October 23, 1905 – November 30, 2003) was the first girl to swim across the English Channel on August 6, 1926.

She was an American competition swimmer, Olympic champion, and former nature record-holder in five events. Among other nicknames, the press sometimes called her "Queen of the Waves."[4]

Gertrude Ederle was born on October 23, 1905, in Manhattan, New York City. She was the third of six children and the daughter of German immigrants, Gertrude Anna Haberstroh and Henry Ederle.[5][6] According to a biography of Ederle, America's Lady, her father ran a butcher shop on Amsterdam Avenue in Manhattan. Her father taught her to swim in Highlands, Fresh Jersey, where the family owned a summer cottage.

Ederle trained at the Women's Swimming Association (WSA), which produced such competitors as Ethelda Bleibtrey, Charlotte Boyle, Helen Wainwright, Aileen Riggin, Eleanor Holm and Esther Williams. Her yearly dues of $3 allowed her to swim at the tiny Manhattan indoor pool. But, according to America's Girl, "the WSA was already the center of

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