Gary Arthur Chapman:
Kogarah Intermediate High 1950-1953
Kogarah Primary School 1946-1949
12th March, 1938 23rd September, 1978
In
an era when champion sprinters were predominant; especially
Australian swimmers, Gary broke the world 220 yards freestyle
record. His time of 2 minutes 0.58 seconds at the Australian
championships in Sydney on the 8th of February 1956 stood until
bettered by John Konrads two years later. Gary won the Bronte
Medal at Australia’s triumphant 1956 Melbourne Olympics in the
100m freestyle with Jon Henricks
first from John Devitt.
He won gold medals at the 1954 Vancouver Commonwealth games in
400m freestyle and 4 x 200m relay, and in Cardiff , 1958 the
silver medal in 100m freestyle and gold in the 4 x 200m relay.
Gary later became a champion competitive fisherman. He won 8
N.S.W. state titles, while in the Australian Championships at
Albany W.A. and Caloundra Queensland; he won 4 championship
titles and 6 special events. His skill was recognised throughout
the sport and the N.S.W. division of A.N.S.A. acknowledged his
adeptness by honouring him as its first master angler. At the
time he was tragically lost at sea, Gary held 6 national sport
fishing records.
(from Kogarah High School hall
photos)
The following article is from
Wikipedia, the free
encyclopaedia
Gary Arthur Chapman (September 17, 1937 - September 23, 1978) was an Australian freestyle swimmer of the 1950s who won a bronze medal in the 100m freestyle at the 1956 Melbourne Olympics. Although he had set a world record in the 220yd freestyle, he was surprisingly omitted from the 4x200m freestyle relay team which won the gold medal.
Born in Brighton-Le-Sands, Sydney, Chapman first came to prominence in the 1952 Australian Championships, at the age of 14, when he cut 2.9s off the 440yd freestyle Australian record. In 1954, he sliced 12.8s off the 880yd record in qualifying for the Australian team at the 1954 Empire Games in Vancouver, where he won gold in the 440yd freestyle and bronze in the 1650yd freestyle. He also claimed gold in the 4x220yd freestyle relay. In his era, the 220 and 880yd freestyle was not contested as individual events.
Due to the rise of fellow Australian Murray Rose in distance freestyle swimming, Chapman switched to competing in the 110yd and 220yd freestyle events in a bid to increase his chances of success at the 1956 Olympics in Melbourne. Prior to the games, he defeated team-mate Jon Henricks twice in the 220yd freestyle, setting a world record on one of those occasions.
Due to the 200m freestyle not being an Olympic event, Chapman was forced to concentrate on the 100m freestyle. He won the bronze medal in 100m freestyle, finishing behind Henricks and another Australian, John Devitt. As the 220yd freestyle world record, Chapman was snubbed by the selectors in the 4x200m freestyle relay, only swimming in the qualifying heats, but being replaced by Kevin O'Halloran in the final, where the Australians won the gold medal in a world record time. Under the rules of the time, heat swimmers were not entitled to gold medals.
Chapman continued in the sport despite this until the 1958 Empire Games in Cardiff, where he was edged out for gold in the 110yd freestyle by Devitt, and managed to come only fifth in the 440yd freestyle behind fellow Australian John Konrads. Chapman collected a gold in the 4x220yd freestyle relay.
Chapman retired after the 1958 Games. In 1978 he and a friend died after a boat belonging to him capsized near Little Bay, New South Wales, in the south of Sydney. Their bodies were never recovered.