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[Deathwatch] Aileen Riggin Soule, athlete, 96
- Date: Fri, 18 Oct 2002 19:51:17 -0700 (PDT)
- From: Deathwatch Central <cdw@slick.org>
- Subject: [Deathwatch] Aileen Riggin Soule, athlete, 96
Swimmer Aileen Riggin Soule Dies
7 minutes ago
By JAYMES SONG, Associated Press Writer
HONOLULU (AP) - Swimmer and diver Aileen Riggin Soule, the nation's
oldest female Olympic gold medalist, has died at 96.
Soule, who won her gold at the 1920 Olympics in Antwerp, Belgium, at
the age of 14, died Thursday night at a nursing home. "She died
peacefully in her sleep," said stepdaughter Patti Anderson.
The oldest living American to have won an Olympic gold medal is
100-year-old James Stillman Rockefeller, who won a rowing gold at the
1924 Olympics.
Four years after the 1920 Olympics, Soule competed in the Paris
Olympics and won the silver in the springboard, as well as a bronze in
the 100-meter backstroke.
"Swimming was her life and joy," Anderson said. "It kept her young."
Soule was born May 2, 1906, in Newport, R.I., and spent her childhood
in New York. She moved to Hawaii in 1957 and swam daily at a pool or at
Waikiki Beach well into her 90s.
Soule had attributed her longevity to swimming. She barely survived
Spanish influenza as a child, but swimming made her into an athletic
teenager.
She and her 17 female teammates almost didn't get a chance to compete
in the 1920 Olympics, because officials were concerned about them
traveling with the team's 331 men. Heavy chaperoning softened those
fears, and the young women took care of any other concerns that they
weren't athletically prepared.
"When she first started, people back then didn't want women to compete
at all," Anderson said.
Soule spent her early childhood in the Philippines before moving back
to New York, on the recommendation of a doctor who treated her for
anemia. There she studied ballet at the Metropolitan Opera (news - web
sites) School of Ballet and joined a girls' swim team, coached by Louis
de B. Handley of the New York Athletic Club.
Her training partners included future Olympic medalists Helen
Wainwright and Gertrude Ederle, who in 1926 became the first woman to
swim the English Channel.
In war-impoverished Belgium, the aquatic events were held in a muddy
canal. After earning 539.9 points in the springboard competition to
beat Wainwright, she received a victory trophy from King Albert.
Soule traveled the world on her own in the 1930s, putting on diving
exhibitions and teaching clinics. She also danced in the movie "Roman
Scandals" and skated in Sonja Henie (news - external web site)'s film
"One in a Million."