“FLOATING like a cork” in the Great Salt Lake was a very popular pastime in Northern
Utah, from when the first pioneers arrived until the early 20th
Century. And, by the 1920s, a new rage in the briny lake arose – long distance
swimming.
“Annual
marathon furnishes a thrill” was an August 25, 1920 headline in the Salt Lake
Telegram newspaper.
This “first”
annual race (authorized by the Amateur Athletic Union) started at Antelope Island
and ended at Saltair. Alvin Nelson won the 6.75-mile race in two hours and 40
minutes. McKeith Burt finished just five seconds behind, as runner-up.
(Note that
Nelson had won a similar inaugural GSL race a year prior, as an amateur, in
1919, but it was not organized under the auspices of the AAU.)
Thirteen
swimmers started the 1920 race, but five had to be fished from the lake in the
first four miles.
However,
seventh place was taken by Frank Nelson, just age 13 – and he swam the last
half of the race without goggles.
Looking south from the highest point on Antelope Island to the Oquirrh Mountains and part of the lake where marathon swim races used to be held.
-The
Telegram of Aug. 7, 1921 clarified that the August Antelope Island to Saltair
race was for amateurs only. It also stated that “Professor” C.S. Leaf held the
pro record for that same course at 2 hours and 28 minutes (or 12 minutes faster
than the amateur record), set on Aug. 19, 1919.
-The Ogden
Standard-Examiner of Jan. 20, 1927 promoted the idea of having a 31-mile
marathon swim race around the Great Salt Lake, that would capture the interest
of the world. There’s no evidence this race ever became a reality, But, the
intent was for the Salt Lake and Ogden chambers of commerce to funnel some of
the $100,000 combined money they used annually to promote Utah and add some
into this professional race and its prize funds.
The story
also noted how there’s no fear of shark attack’s in Utah’s lake and the
salt-laden water would offer more of a buoyant rest for swimmers.
-The
Telegram of July 6, 1930 explained how the Antelope Island to Saltair swimming
race had been an intermittent event, since its early years. For example, the
race was held in 1930, but wasn’t held in 1928 or 1929.
-“Orson
Spencer sets mark for Antelope Swim. Annual paddling marathon most successful
in history” was a Dec. 31, 1931 Telegram headline. The newspaper reported almost
five months after the event that Spencer had set a course record of 2:25.41,
breaking Professor Leaf’s pro record – and Charles Welch, Jr., was just 17
seconds behind as runner-up.
The west side of Antelope Island.
-One
shortcoming in early Great Salt Lake swimming races was the lack of female
entrants. “Feminine entrants lacking from 1931 Saltair Marathon” was a July 22,
1931 Telegram headline. Mary Gibbs, a Salt Lake tennis player, had initially
entered the race, but later withdrew.
-By 1932,
the GSL swimming race had attracted 40 participants. “Replete with tradition
and color, the annual Antelope Island swim marathon on the Great Salt Lake will
enter its fourteenth year of existence when paddlers begin the battle of the
brine …” Reporter Wendell J. Ashton stated in a June 29, 1932 Telegram story.
However, the
story stated that Mrs. Billie Droubay was the only woman entrant and an
unofficial finisher in the 1931 lake swim, “finishing two hours after officials
had left the finishing scene.”
The top
finishers in the 1930s races won medals.
-The
Telegram of Aug. 1, 1933 stated that year’s GSL swim was set for August 2 and
that three women were entered. Results of that race were apparently never
published.
-The
Telegram of July 6, 1936 reported that Miss Hazel Cunningham of Salt Lake, swam
from Saltair to Black Rock, a distance of five miles, in three hours and nine minutes. – And that was the last report of such a 1930s lake swim.
Cunningham's quest for GSL marathon swimming also highlighted the finicky lake's dangerous side. "Four rescued as boat sinks in lake storm" was a June 12, 1936 headline in the Salt Lake Telegram.
Her first attempt at a record swim was met with disaster as a sudden lake storm overturned the boat following along. A Salt Lake Tribune sportswriter and three of Cunningham's friends spent 4 hours in rough water with her before being rescued. The boat tipped over about three miles from Saltair beach.
Cunningham's quest for GSL marathon swimming also highlighted the finicky lake's dangerous side. "Four rescued as boat sinks in lake storm" was a June 12, 1936 headline in the Salt Lake Telegram.
Her first attempt at a record swim was met with disaster as a sudden lake storm overturned the boat following along. A Salt Lake Tribune sportswriter and three of Cunningham's friends spent 4 hours in rough water with her before being rescued. The boat tipped over about three miles from Saltair beach.
Fourth-graders from Layton's Vae View Elementary School wading in the Great Salt Lake.
-Why did
these 20th Century GSL lake races suddenly stop? Probably at least
partially because the Great Salt Lake’s level dropped significantly. All during
the heyday of briny races in the 1920s, the lake level stayed above 4,202 feet
above sea level. (4,200 feet is often considered the lake’s average elevation.)
According to
the U.S. Geological Survey, by 1935, the lake level was down to approximately 4,196
feet and by 1940, it had dropped to about 4,195 feet. These low lake levels
would have made a swim from Antelope Island to Saltair an impossibility, as dry
or very shallow lakebed would be the norm. The lake level rebounded some by
1950, but then by the 1960s it had dropped to the lowest level since the
Pioneers had arrived.
This metal post was landlocked in the former Great Salt Lake in 2004, when low lake levels exposed it. Twenty years earlier it would have been underwater.
This metal post was landlocked in the former Great Salt Lake in 2004, when low lake levels exposed it. Twenty years earlier it would have been underwater.
(-This story was originally published in the Deseret News on June 24, 2019.)
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