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Boathouse Row: Waves of Change in the Birthplace of American Rowing
Barnes and Noble
Boathouse Row: Waves of Change in the Birthplace of American Rowing
Current price: $35.00
Barnes and Noble
Boathouse Row: Waves of Change in the Birthplace of American Rowing
Current price: $35.00
Size: OS
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The history of Philadelphia’s Boathouse Row is both wide and deep.
Dotty Brown, an avid rower and former editor at the
Philadelphia Inquirer
, immersed herself in boathouse archives to provide a comprehensive history of rowing in Philadelphia. She takes readers behind the scenes to recount the era when rowing was
the
spectator sport of its timeand the subject of Thomas Eakins’ early artworkthrough the heyday of the famed Kelly dynasty, and the fight for women to get the right to row. (Yes, it really was a fight, and it took generations to win.)
With more than 160 photographs, a third of them in full color,
Boathouse Row
chronicles the “waves of change” as various groups of different races, classes, and genders fought for access to water and the sport. Chapters also discuss the architectural one-upmanship that defined Boathouse Row after Frank Furness designed the stunning and eclectic Undine Barge Club, and the regattas that continue to take place today on the Schuylkill River, including the forgotten forces that propelled high school rowing.
Beautifully written and illustrated,
will be a keepsake for rowers and spectators alike.
Dotty Brown, an avid rower and former editor at the
Philadelphia Inquirer
, immersed herself in boathouse archives to provide a comprehensive history of rowing in Philadelphia. She takes readers behind the scenes to recount the era when rowing was
the
spectator sport of its timeand the subject of Thomas Eakins’ early artworkthrough the heyday of the famed Kelly dynasty, and the fight for women to get the right to row. (Yes, it really was a fight, and it took generations to win.)
With more than 160 photographs, a third of them in full color,
Boathouse Row
chronicles the “waves of change” as various groups of different races, classes, and genders fought for access to water and the sport. Chapters also discuss the architectural one-upmanship that defined Boathouse Row after Frank Furness designed the stunning and eclectic Undine Barge Club, and the regattas that continue to take place today on the Schuylkill River, including the forgotten forces that propelled high school rowing.
Beautifully written and illustrated,
will be a keepsake for rowers and spectators alike.