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WOMEN'S SPORT HISTORY
The Mystery Of Dorothy
Prior
by Bruce Kidd
Published in CAAWS Action Bulletin, Winter 1995
Some time ago, an elderly women in a Toronto hospital lingered
fondly over the yellowing pages of a scrapbook she kept by
her side. It was, she told the nurses, her most treasured
possession. When she died, the hospital staff decided to find
a home for such a valued record, and last summer the scrapbook
was passed along to me.
The trail from the hospital has gone cold, but the scrapbook
seems to have belonged to Dorothy Prior, the first Canadian
woman to swim at the Olympic Games.
The first pages are devoted to clippings noting the accomplishments
of the top Toronto swimmers and divers of the mid-1920s –
presumably those who inspired her – such as Flora Martin
and George Young, who won the women’s and men’s
sections of the 1¾ mile Across the (Toronto) Bay Race
in 1926. But a Mrs. K. Prior is listed as one of the contestants.
Did Dorothy follow in her mother’s footsteps?
Gradually Dorothy Prior’s name and photo take over.
She first appears as one of 13 young women in middies who
passed the Royal Life Saving Society exam. On the very next
page a headline proclaims, "Dorothy Prior Wins Breast-stroke
Race" and someone has underlined the paragraph about
her race in ink in the column below. Other articles record
her freestyle and diving championships. Most of the remaining
pages are devoted to her achievements.
The scrapbook confirms that there was a time when female
athletes in amateur sports were regularly covered and featured
in the mainstream press, and daily columnists like Alexandrine
Gibb kept their readers up to date with women’s sports
gossip.
In 1928, Prior’s athletic career began to soar. She
lowered her best time in the 220 yard breaststroke by almost
20 seconds, reclaiming the Canadian record from American Agnes
Geraghty, a silver medallist at the 1924 Games, and then setting
a new American record at the US championships. It was the
first time ever that a Canadian had broken an American swim
record. The noted New York coach, Louis de Breda Handley,
published her photograph in his widely-read Ocean Bulletin
of Swimming (sponsored by the Ocean Bathing Suit Company).
Later that year, she was the only Canadian female (along with
six men) named to the Amsterdam-bound Canadian swim team.
1928 was the first time Canadian women were entered in the
(Summer) Olympic Games, and the small contingent of six track
and field competitors, manager Alex Gibb, chaperone Marie
Parkes, and Prior received a gala send-off from Toronto’s
Union Station. Several pages of the scrapbook are devoted
to published photos of the fashionably attired young women
waving gaily from their platform car to the throng of dignitaries
and friends on the tracks below. Prior is hamming it up in
giddy excitement, with the biggest smile of all. In a subsequent
photo, she poses in her swim suit with the captain of the
ship which took them across the Atlantic. It must have been
a heady time for the 16-year-old high school commerce graduate.
Despite the high hopes of her supporters, Prior was eliminated
in the heats at Amsterdam, along with her major competitors
from the United States. Hildegard Schrader of Germany won
the 220 yard breaststroke, and Europeans took all of the medals.
In 1929, Prior had another banner year, lowering several
of her records and winning the prestigious Gale Trophy, a
five-event competition to determine "the all-round swimming
and diving champion of Canada".
But then the clippings stop. Was it because her victories
were becoming commonplace, or because she went to work as
a secretary and didn’t have the time? She seems to have
kept on winning because she is referred to as the defending
champion when the press reports briefly resume in 1932, and
she won a place on the nine-woman Canadian Olympic team in
Los Angeles. The remaining pages in the scrapbook are empty.
According to Canadian Olympic Association (COA) archivist
Sylvia Doucette, Prior (as Dorothy Schute) was last heard
from in Surrey, B.C., but the COA lost touch with her more
than a decade ago. I have not been able to trace her in Ontario
death records. (If any reader has any suggestions, I would
be pleased to hear from her/him c/o CAAWS).
We can only speculate about why the woman in the hospital
so prized the memories evoked by race reports and photographs
from such a distant time. But sports brought a sense of personal
accomplishment, public acclaim, and broadened horizons which
few other avenues could provide for women in the 1920s. During
her athletic career, Prior (and athletes like her) travelled
and competed in Europe and most of the major American cities.
She dined with senior public officials and exchanged autographs
with movie stars.
If she was like athletes and organizers I’ve interviewed
from that period, sports brought lasting friendships with
other women, too.
It’s too bad that so much of that rich history has
been lost from view, or that the best female athletes today
receive so little of the coverage their counterparts enjoyed
70 years ago.
Bruce Kidd’s writing reveals his astonishing range
of interests and knowledge of sport. Among his published works
are articles dealing with physical activity, athletes' rights,
the place of sport in the modern state, physical education
for adults, sport and masculinity, and the philosophy of excellence.
Almost single-handedly, he has brought attention to illustrious
but largely forgotten contributors to Canada's rich sporting
history such as the ground-breaking Women's Amateur Athletic
Federation. His most recent work, The Struggle for Canadian
Sport, won the North American Society for Sport History Book
Award in 1997. During the 1960's, Bruce was Canada's best
known middle-distance runner, winning the Lou Marsh Trophy
for his successes on the track. He was twice chosen Canada's
Male Athlete of the Year.
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