Glebe Rowing Club is the third-oldest rowing club in continuous operation on Sydney Harbour and was established in July 1879 in Blackwattle Bay Sydney, Australia. It has occupied its current location at the foot of Ferry St, Glebe since the club's inception. GRC is a community based club with a focus on novice, women's and social rowing and with a learn-to-row program.

Glebe Rowing Club
Image showing the rowing club's blade colours
LocationGlebe, Sydney
Home waterBlackwattle Bay, Sydney Harbour
FoundedJuly 1879
AffiliationsNSW Rowing Association
Websitewww.gleberowingclub.org.au

History edit

 
The Glebe Rowing Club's clubhouse, ca 1935
 
GRC's original boatshed is the 1st building along the right shoreline with the current shed immediately beyond

The Glebe Club was founded with an open attitude in welcoming labourers as members unlike the other Sydney rowing clubs formed at that time – the Sydney Rowing Club and Mercantile. Glebe's first president was Sir George Wigram Allen, Speaker of the NSW Legislative Assembly and Glebe's first Mayor. Its first captain was Robert Clark, brother of Jim Clark, the Sydney's captain at that time.[1] During the first ten years of the club's history it was the third most successful in Sydney winning 24 of the 260 races rowed between 1880 and 1890. In 1897 the shed at Blackwattle Bay and all the club's boats were destroyed by fire. A£570 insurance claim was made, a new shed opened only months later and a new fleet ordered. The club finished the last decade of the 19th century with 92 members and 11 boats.[1]

At the end of the 1901/02 season, the club had 77 members and a fleet of 16 boats and had enjoyed some competitive success under club captain John McGregor. However, the club's decision to pay part of the capitation fees for its members of the New South Wales 1902 interstate crew caused considerable internal dissension, with a special meeting censuring the committee and several committee members then resigning.[1]

Glebe competed against the Iron Cove clubs for the Leichhardt Challenge Shield during the 1910s, claiming victory from the Leichhardt Rowing Club in 1918. That decade also saw the commencement of combined rowing and social outings. Glebe and the Mosman Rowing Club started the trend in 1915, with Enterprise and Balmain quickly following the example. Glebe held another event in 1916 the same year that Leichhardt, Balmain and the Enterprise club held a combined Rodd Island rendezvous.[1]

In May 1953 for the second time in its history the club house was completely destroyed by fire and all boats were again lost. The club entered a hiatus until rebuilding commenced in 1957.

Due to financial difficulties in the mid-1990s the GRC lost rights to its original shed. The upper floor was taken over by a restaurant and the shed by the Sydney University Women's Rowing Club. Olympian Kim Mackney was club's sole member from 1994 to 2004 and struggled to keep the club alive in that time. Eventually a new shed facility was secured immediately next to the Ferry Road boathouse.[2]

 
Blackwattle Bay (right) in its Sydney Harbour context (GRC's original shed is at right edge of shot)

Club presidents edit

  • Sir George Wigram Allen, first Mayor of Glebe, Speaker of the NSW Legislative Assembly and the club's inaugural President.
  • Kim Mackney, President (1994–2016) was the club's sole member from 1994 to 2004 and presided over the club's re-establishment from 2004 and its return to viability.

Members edit

Notable members include:

  • Laurie Stepto OAM club member 1947 to 1986; senior office bearer with Rowing NSW 1955 to 1986 incl President 1978–86 and a former manager of an Australian touring rowing squad.

Olympic representative members include:

World champions include:

References edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ a b c d "Early Club Histories". Archived from the original on 21 August 2011. Retrieved 3 September 2012.
  2. ^ "One Man Club".
  3. ^ a b "Guerin-Foster Olympic index". Archived from the original on 19 April 2012. Retrieved 3 September 2012.
  4. ^ 1972 Austn C'ships
  5. ^ George Cook at Guerin-Foster

Bibliography edit

External links edit