Aileen Riggin: SHE HAS DONE JUST SWIMMINGLY

For those who question the sincerity of the Olympics, for those who think the Games are just a moneymaking machine or a sounding board for the cacophony of world politics, here are two words: Aileen Riggin.

Actually, she's Aileen Riggin Soule nowadays. But in 1920 Miss Riggin was the 14-year-old gold-medal winner in women's springboard diving at the Olympics in Antwerp. "At the time, I was just an eighth-grader from Brooklyn Heights competing for the Women's Swimming Association of New York," says Mrs. Soule, who now lives in Honolulu, where she still swims for the--brace yourself--Humuhumunukunukuapuaa Swim Club. "When Helen Wainwright, who was also 14, and I made the Olympic team that summer, U.S. officials tried to have us disqualified for being too young. But the manager of our club convinced them that we deserved to go to Antwerp and promised that we would not embarrass the U.S. So off we went on a troopship called the Princess Matoika: 400 men, 15 girls and five chaperones thrown together for 13 days. And every day our manager reminded us of her promise.

"The girls slept four to a cabin, but our accommodations were like the Ritz compared with the men, who often slept on the deck rather than in the hold. We all shared one canvas tank in which to train--we would swim strapped to the side of the tank. Jack Kelly, a handsome, charming man and a splendid rower, was on that trip. He was Grace Kelly's father, you know. And despite all the chaperones, there was romance in the air. Alice Lord, one of our divers, later married Richmond Landon, who won the gold medal in the high jump."

At 4 ft. 7 in. and 65 lbs., Aileen was the smallest Olympian, too small to compete in her real love, swimming. Diving was just something she did instead, and it was altogether different than it is today. "In Antwerp, we dove into the city canal, a moat really, right alongside the boathouse. In those days, the two final dives were literally picked out of a hat. Our second dive was a forward somersault--you had to land feet first. Fortunately, I went last and watched as all the other girls missed theirs. Then I made mine. But the scoring system was so laborious that you often had to read the morning paper to find out if you had won. So after my dive, I went to lunch, and when I came back, I found out I had won. It was all very exciting, even if I was 14. God, country and Yale, and all that. Of course, in my case, it was God, country and the Professional Children's School."

Aileen made the Olympic diving and swimming teams for the '24 Games in Paris, and she came away with two more medals, a silver medal in the springboard and a bronze in the 100-m backstroke. (She still has medal certificates signed personally by Baron Pierre de Coubertin.) Those were the Games later dramatized in Chariots of Fire, a movie to which Aileen takes great exception. "They did a grave injustice to Charley Paddock, the sprinter who became a dear friend. They portrayed him as a skinny fellow of few words. Why, he was powerfully built, and he could talk the ears off the Prince of Wales."

Quotes of the Day »

Get & Share
A POSTING on Golf.com by an anonymous player who said President Obama and his friends moved painfully slowly on the links
For use in rail of Articles page or Section Fronts pages. Duplicate and change name as necesssary to distinguish.

Time.com on Digg

POWERED BY digg

Quotes of the Day »

Get & Share
A POSTING on Golf.com by an anonymous player who said President Obama and his friends moved painfully slowly on the links

Stay Connected with TIME.com