Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2010
THE first Boat-Race between Oxford and Cambridge took place on the afternoon of the 10th of June, 1829, Oxford being victorious.
The day was exquisite and the Race consequently was rowed under the most favourable circumstances from Hambledon Lock to Henley Bridge, about two miles and a quarter, a distance covered easily by the winning crew in the space of 14 minutes 30 seconds.
The present Bishop of St Andrews, the Right Rev. C. Wordsworth, D.D., was mainly instrumental in getting up this Race. He may therefore legitimately be looked upon as the “Father of the Inter-University Match.”
The names of the Crews were as follows:
Oxford.
John Carter, St John's.
J. E. Arbuthnot, Balliol.
J. E. Bates, Ch. Ch.
C. Wordsworth, Ch. Ch.
J. J. Toogood, Ballio.
Thomas Gamier, Worcester.
George B. Moore, Ch. Ch.
Thomas Staniforth, Ch. Ch.
Coxswain, W. R. Fremantle, Ch. Ch.
Cambridge.
A. B. E. Holdsworth, Trin.
A. F. Bayford, Trin. Hall.
Ch. Warren, Trin.
C. Merivale, St John's.
Thomas Entwisle, Trin.
W. T. Thompson, Jesus.
G. A. Selwyn, St John's.
W. Snow (now Strahan), St John's.
Coxswain, B. R. Heath, Trin.
Life-rate of the Crews.
The vitality of these sixteen Oarsmen may on the whole be looked upon as very satisfactory. Each man ought, according to life probabilities, to have survived the race 40 years (his age when he rowed being 20); twelve have realized these expectations, and were alive and well at the end of the year 1869. The remaining four, who were prematurely cut off, lived on an average 27 years each, after the year 1829.
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