Dick Howell

Dick Howell
Howell circa 1920, around 17
Personal information
Full nameRichard John Howell
National teamUnited States
Born(1903-10-12)October 12, 1903
Chicago, Illinois
DiedJuly 20, 1967(1967-07-20) (aged 63)
Arlington Heights, Illinois
Height6 ft 6 in (1.98 m)
SpouseElizabeth Fletcher
Children3
Sport
SportSwimming
StrokesFreestyle
ClubSinai Social Center
Illinois Athletic Club
College teamNorthwestern University
CoachTom Robinson (Northwestern)

Richard John Howell (October 12, 1903 – July 20, 1967) was an American competition swimmer who competed for Northwestern University and represented the United States at the 1924 Summer Olympics in Paris. His 1924 Paris Olympic 4x200 relay team with whom he competed in a preliminary heat set a world record of 9:59.4, though he did not swim in the event final but as he did not actually swim with the team that won the event final, he did not receive a gold medal. He would set three NCAA national collegiate titles while swimming for Northwestern University through 1926.[1][2]

Early life and swimming

Howell was born in Chicago, Illinois to Frances and Mary Elm Howell on October 12, 1903.[3] He attended Hyde Park High School in Chicago, and set several national high school records while representing Hyde Park, though by most accounts he did not excell in his times until his High School Junior and Senior year.[4] In the Cook County Interscholastic Championship in Chicago in early December 1922, representing the Hyde Park High Swim Team, Howell swam a :55.8 in the 100-yard freestyle.[5] He graduated Hyde Park around 1922.[6].[7][8][9] In a December 1922, City-wide Interscholastic Championship, Howell swam a :57.4 for the 100-yard event, and a 2:26 for the 220-yard event, setting interscholastic records in both events.[10]

Howell did much of his training with the Sinai Social Center, later known as the Emil Hirsch Center, under Coach George Eckert from around 1918-1920, where in August of 1920, he won the Senior 440-yard race with a time of 5:50.4, setting a record at the Amateur Athletic Federation (AAF) Championship at McKinley Park. Eckert, of German-Jewish ancestry, coached at Chicago area's Sinai Center from 1916-1930, before coaching at Chicago's Shawnee Country Club.[11] By 1920, Howell held AAF records in 100, 200, 400, and 880-yard swim events.[12] Around 1920, Howell served as President of the Senior division for the Sinai Social Center's swimming association.[13][14]

By 1923, Howell had also competed while representing the exceptional program provided by the Illinois Athletic Club (IAC) where he swam the 440-yard freestyle event in 5:03.8 in March 1923, breaking Johnny Weismuller's world record for a 60-yard pool by 1.4 seconds. Weismuller, who also swam for the Illinois Athletic Club, would later replace him in the finals of the 4x200 freestyle relay at the Paris Olympics in July 1924. At the IAC, Howell was coached and mentored by Hall of Fame Coach Bill Bachrach, who would serve as head swimming coach for the U.S. Olympic Swimming team at the 1924 Olympics. In August, 1922, Howell won the 2.5 mile swim marathon in the Chicago River defeating Olympic swimmer Norman Ross.[15]

1924 Paris Olympics

As a 20-year-old at the July, 1924 Olympics, he swam for the gold-medal-winning American relay team in the men's 4×200-meter freestyle relay, though he did not swim in the event final, and was not awarded a gold medal, in conformance with the 1924 Olympic rules.[3] After swimming in the preliminary heats and semifinals and helping the American relay team qualify for the final, he was replaced by Johnny Weissmuller. In the semifinals he was a member of the team that set a new world record of 9:59.4, breaking the ten-minute barrier in the event for the first time.[3] One of his teamates on the 4x200 Olympic relay team was Ralph Breyer who had swum with him at Northwestern.[1]

Howell also competed in the 1924 Olympic men's 1,500-meter freestyle; he qualified for the semi-finals with a 22:48.2 but did not advance.[3][16]

Northwestern University

After high school, he enrolled at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, where he swam for the Northwestern Wildcats swimming and diving team in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and Big Ten Conference competition from 1922 to 1926.[2] Competing as a Wildcat, he won three NCAA national collegiate titles including the 400- and 1500-meter freestyle events in 1924 and the 220-yard freestyle in 1925, setting a few conference records.[17] He also captured four Big Ten titles, and set ten Big Ten freestyle records.[2] Remembered as one of Northwestern's all-time greatest swimmers, Howell was also a member of three intercollegiate championship water polo teams and wrestled while at Northwestern.[2] He was a member of the Northwestern teams that won the NCAA Championships and Big 10 conference in 1924 and 1925.[18] In his final year as a Northwestern undergraduate, Howell married fellow student Elizabeth Fletcher.[19]

He married Elizabeth Ann Fletcher on February 9, 1926 in the Chicago area, and the couple had two sons and a daughter. Fletcher was a Northwestern student when they met. Howell, after a suspension from Northwestern for marrying a Coed without parental sanction, did not return to Northwestern in 1926.[20][21]

At the AAU Sr. Indoor Championships on February 16, 1927 in Chicago, he broke what was considered the world plunging record for 60-foot pools by covering a 57-yard distance in 14.4 seconds.[22]

A resident of Wilmette, Howell died in nearby Arlington Heights, Illinois on July 20, 1967. Services were held in Wilmette's St. Augustine Episcopal Church on July 22. He was survived by his wife the former Elizabeth Ann Fletcher, two sons, a daughter, and grandchildren.[3][18]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Dick Howell". Olympedia. Retrieved November 13, 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d "Fifty Wildcat Greats: Richard Howell," Northwestern Magazine (Fall 2013). Retrieved January 20, 2015.
  3. ^ a b c d e Sports-Reference.com, Olympic Sports, Athletes, Dick Howell. Retrieved January 20, 2016.
  4. ^ "Howell, Prep Waterdog", Chicago Tribune, Chicago, Illinois, 25 July 1922, pg. 14
  5. ^ "Seven New Records in Swimming", Belleville Daily Advocate, Belleville, Illinois, 8 December 1922, pg. 5
  6. ^ "Seven New Records in Swimming", Belleville Daily Advocate, Belleville, Illinois, 8 December 1922, pg. 5
  7. ^ "Morse, Patricia, Hyde Park Herald, Hyde Park Stories". hpherald.com. August 2024. Retrieved January 4, 2025.
  8. ^ "Hyde Park Takes Prep Title Swim As Records Sink," Chicago Daily Tribune, p. 1. (March 26, 1922) Retrieved January 20, 2016.
  9. ^ "Ancestry, Dick Howell". ancestry.com. Retrieved January 2, 2025.
  10. ^ "10 Swim Marks Sunk", Chicago Tribune, Chicago, Illinois, 17 December 1922, pg. 21
  11. ^ "Pruder, Robert, June, 2019, "Claudia Eckert, Chicago's Greatest Female Aquatic Champion"". historyofsport.wordpress.com. June 27, 2019. Retrieved January 4, 2025.
  12. ^ "Sinai's Budding Swimming Champ, Richard Howell", Chicago Tribune, Chicago, Illinois, 12 December 1920, pg. 19
  13. ^ "Sinai Seniors Take AAF Swim Title", Chicago Tribune, Chicago, Illinois, 29 August 1920, pg. 19
  14. ^ Eckert's first name was George in "Sinai Swimmers to Race Beilifuss", Chicago Tribune, Chicago, Illinois, 23 March 1921, pg. 20
  15. ^ "Dick Howell, Rival for Weismueller", The Advertiser, Fremantle, Washington, 23 March 1923, pg. 4
  16. ^ Sports-Reference.com, Olympic Sports, Swimming at the 1924 Paris Summer Games, []. Retrieved January 20, 2016.
  17. ^ NCAA Division I Men's Swimming & Diving, National Collegiate Athletic Association, Indianapolis, Indiana, p. 11 (2013). Retrieved January 20, 2016.
  18. ^ a b "Rites Today for Ex Swim Star at N. U.", Chicago Tribune, Chicago, Illinois, 22 July 1967, pg. 98
  19. ^ International News Service, "May Force Groom to Give Up School," Journal Gazette, p. 8 (February 23, 1926). Retrieved January 20, 2016.
  20. ^ "Dick Howell and Coed Bride Plan Home", Chicago Daily Tribune, Chicago, Illinois, 2 March 1926, pg. 15
  21. ^ "Dick Howell Will Not Return to School", The Pantagraph, Bloomington, Illinois, 2 March 1926, pg. 11
  22. ^ Eckersall, Walter, "Howell Shaves Plunge Record", Chicago Tribune, Chicago, Illinois, 17 February 1927, pg. 17


Records
Preceded by Men's 4×200-meter freestyle relay
world record-holder

July 18, 1924 – July 20, 1924
Ralph Breyer,
Harry Glancy,
Dick Howell,
Wally O'Connor
Succeeded by