- Guy Nickalls
Infobox Person
name = Guy Nickalls
imagesize = 150px
caption = Vanity Fair "Spy" Cartoon from 1889
birth_date = birth date|1866|11|13|
death_date = death date|1935|07|08|
birth_place =
education =Eton college and Magdalen College Oxford,
occupation = rower
spouse =
parents = Tom Nickalls & Emily Quilhampton
children =Guy Oliver Nickalls Not to be confused with his son (British rower and Olympic silver medalist
Guy Oliver Nickalls ), Guy Nickalls (bornNovember 13 ,1866 - diedJuly 8 ,1935 ) was a British rower who competed in the1908 Summer Olympics as a member of the British eight that won gold.The son of Tom Nickalls (a jobber on the stock exchange and one of the founding members of London Rowing Club), Guy was one of twelve children, of whom his brother Vivian was also a successful oarsman. His mother, Emily, was the first woman to climb
Mont Blanc and Monta Rosa in the same week.ref|pudding Educated atEton college where he was known as "Luni" due to his reckless behaviourref|vanityfair, Nickalls played football with success, and when not engaged in athletically breaking his bones or risking his neck, he would row. At Eton Nickalls won the Junior Sculling (1884), the School Pulling (1885-86), and School Sculling (1885). His ability was soon noticed and he secured the four seat in the Eton Eight, carrying off the Ladies’ Challenge Plate at Henley in 1885.Nickalls went up to
Magdalen College, Oxford in 1887, ready to row down all comers. At Oxford he won the University Sculls (1887), the University Pairs (1888-90, with W.F.D. Smith once, then twice with Lord Ampthill, and the University Fours (1886 and 1889), went head of the river in 1888 with Magdalene, and rowed for Oxford inthe Boat Race for five years (from 1887 to 1891) losing three races and winning two. He was O.U.B.C. President in 1890. He was Captain of Leander in 1892 and 1897.From 1913 through 1916 Nickalls coached
Yale , enticed to New Haven by Averell Harriman and a sufficient salary to help see his two sons through Eton. Though his Yale crews won two of the three years he was there, Nickalls found the environment stressful and foreign. He was partly to blame, by spouting opinions better left unsaid or if said, certainly not within earshot of the attentive rowing press. Yet such remarks -- “Their paddling is bad, their rowing, worse” (about the Yale 1916 crew)ref|Nickalls5 -- were wholly in line with his personality: as O.U.B.C. President, he nearly scotched the 1890 Boat Race by calling the Cambridge crew “probably a poorer lot than usual” in an official letter to his counterpart, S.D. Muttlebury.ref|Nickalls6Nickalls tried to join the army in 1914 on the outbreak of war, but was turned down on account of age. By late 1917 the army had a change of heart, sending him to France, then age fifty, as a Captain in the 23rd Lancashire Fusiliers in charge of physical and bayonet training.
On July 6, 1935 Zürich Rowing Club won the Stewards’. “Thank God I have been spared to see what I believe to be the finest four of all time,” Guy told Gully. The next morning, Guy was in an auto accident en route to Scotland to fish, and died the following evening.
Achievements
Olympic Games
* 1908 - Gold, Eight (racing in a Leander crew representing the United Kindgom)
Henley Wins
* 1885 - Ladies Plate (racing as Eton college)
* 1888 -Diamond Challenge Sculls (racing as Magd. Coll., Oxon)
* 1889 -Diamond Challenge Sculls (racing as Magd. Coll., Oxon)
* 1890 -Silver Goblets (with Lord Ampthill, racing as OUBC)
* 1890 -Diamond Challenge Sculls (racing as Magd. Coll., Oxon)
* 1891 -Grand Challenge Cup (racing as Leander Club)
* 1891 -Silver Goblets (with Lord Ampthill, racing as Leander Club)
* 1892 -Grand Challenge Cup (racing as Leander Club)
* 1893 -Stewards' Challenge Cup (racing as Magd. Coll., Oxon)
* 1893 -Diamond Challenge Sculls (racing as Magd. Coll., Oxon)
* 1894 -Silver Goblets (with V. Nickalls racing as Formosa BC)
* 1894 -Diamond Challenge Sculls (racing as Formosa BC)
* 1895 -Stewards' Challenge Cup (racing as London RC)
* 1895 -Silver Goblets (with V. Nickalls racing as London RC)
* 1896 -Grand Challenge Cup (racing as Leander Club)
* 1896 -Stewards' Challenge Cup (racing as London RC)
* 1896 -Silver Goblets (with V. Nickalls racing as London RC)
* 1897 -Stewards' Challenge Cup (racing as Leander Club)
* 1897 -Silver Goblets (with E.R Balfour racing as Leander Club)
* 1905 -Grand Challenge Cup (racing as Leander Club)
* 1905 -Stewards' Challenge Cup (racing as Leander Club)
* 1906 -Stewards' Challenge Cup (racing as Leander Club)
* 1907 -Stewards' Challenge Cup (racing as Magd. Coll., Oxon)Wingfield Sculls
* 1887
* 1888
* 1889External links
* [http://www.databaseolympics.com/players/playerpage.htm?ilkid=NICKAGUY01 profile]
* [http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/The_Rowers_of_Vanity_Fair/Nickalls_G The Rowers of Vanity Fair/Nickalls G - Wikibooks, collection of open-content textbooks ] at en.wikibooks.orgReferences
# Guy Nickalls, Life's a pudding :an autobiography, 1939
# “Wingfield Sculls” (Spy), Vanity Fair July 20, 1889
#G. Nickalls, "quoted in" T. Mendenhall, The Harvard-Yale Race and the Coming of Sport to the American College, p. 298.
#G. Nickalls, "quoted in" Windsor Magazine, p. 109 (July 1896)
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