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Brown University Rowing

Brown University Men's Rowing
Brown University Boat Club Rowing Blade.svg
University Brown University
Conference Ivy League
1 Division
Location Providence, Rhode Island
Head coach Paul Cooke (Head Coach 2001-Present year)
Facility Hunter S. Marston Boathouse
Area of Competition Seekonk River
Nickname Bruno or Brunonian
Colors Seal Brown, White, and Cardinal
              
Conference Champions
'72 '84 '87 '93 '94 '00 '08 '09

The Brown University Men's Rowing team represents Brown University in men's intercollegiate rowing and is the oldest organized intercollegiate sport at the university. Since its revival in 1949, the Brown University rowing program has become one of the most successful collegiate rowing programs in the world, winning men's and women's national titles, as well as championship titles at the world-famous Henley Royal Regatta in London. In addition, the program has produced 32 Olympic rowers.

Brown rowing is characterized by its home course, the Seekonk River, and its historic rivalry with Yale and Harvard. The Brown rowing blade is half white (on bottom) and half brown (on the top).

Brown rowing was founded June 4, 1857, with the establishment of the University Boat Club, and consisted of a single six-oar shell, the Atalanta. According to the Encyclopedia Brunoniana, on September 11, 1857, the Brown Paper wrote:

"...She was there received by the club, borne to the water's edge and launched on the waves of Narragansett Bay with enthusiastic demonstrations from an assembled crowd." – The Brown Paper, September 11, 1857

Described as "a cumbersome lap-streak, weighing three or four hundred pounds," the shell only competed once, in a race on July 27, 1859, against Harvard and Yale at Lake Quinsigamond in Worcester, Massachusetts. Because the boat weighed almost 150 pounds (68 kg) more than the Harvard and Yale boats, Brown lost the race, finishing over five minutes behind the victorious Harvard crew.

It was not until eleven years later, on June 17, 1860, that Brown won against Harvard and Yale, claiming its first and only race between 1857 and 1950. According to Harold Amber's book, Ever True: The History of Brown Crew, Brown, in a spectacular series of events, recovered from a collision with an Amherst boat, executed a pristine turn, and overtook Yale and Harvard to win by six lengths.


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