Alick Wickham (SOL)

Honor Contributor (1974)

The information on this page was written the year of their induction.

FOR THE RECORD:  Introduced the crawl stroke to the Western World; National 50 yard freestyle champion of Australia.

Alick Wickham was a Solomon Islander who is credited with introducing the crawl stroke to the Western World.  It was George Farmer, a prominent Australian coach at the turn of the century who saw Wickham and gave his stroke the name that has survived.  Watching the speedy Wickham swim (he was later the National 50 yard freestyle champion of Australia), Farmer shouted, “Look at that kid crawling!”  From this comment came the crawl stroke label.

Arthur Freeman who often watched the young student swim in Australia said, “Wickham’s six-beat kick reminded me of an outboard motor.”  It was apparently a stroke very similar to today’s crawl stroke swum head up, as in water polo.  Forbes Carlile describes it as follows:

“In 1898 this boy from the British Solomon Islands arrived in Sydney – Alick Wickham – whose brother Harry wrote me several letters in 1950 when I was investigating the beginnings of the crawl stroke.  These letters explained that Alick came to Australia on his father’s trading schooner, when he was seven years old, and stayed in Sydney for his schooling.  Alick was keen on swimming, he played around in the water continually, and in 1898 was entered in a 66 yd. under-10-years handicap race in Australia’s oldest rock pool at Bronte, near Sydney.  It was here that Alick astonished onlookers with his speed and unusual stroke.  Charlie Bell, who raced against him, told me that Wickham swam with his head held fairly high, turning it quickly from side to side breathing with each complete stroke, his wooly head apparently not getting wet.  The entry of his arms was short and towards the centre line of the body with the elbows well bent.  His arm action was very fast and short.  Each arm performed a symmetrical action with the head turning from side to side as if breathing on each side, but only breathing on one side to each stroke.”

Twenty years later the colorful Alick Wickham broke another world record, this one at Melbourne, a world record which still stands.  Wickham made a perfect swan dive from a height of 205 feet, 9 inches.  As he climbed up the ladder before his dive at least one observer must have yelled, “Look at that kid crawling!” – up that ladder.