James Lee Schroeder, Jr. (born September 9, 1981, in St Louis, Missouri) is an American rower, and a victorious Oxford Blue. He is married to fellow Stanford alum, Kelsey Twist. He is the grandson of retired corporate executive and civic leader Emory Williams.
Jamie was educated at The American Boychoir School '95, Choate Rosemary Hall, Connecticut '99, and Stanford University '05 from where he has a BSc and an MSc in Bioengineering. He originally enrolled at Northwestern University, where he began rowing in 2001 before transferring to Stanford. He matriculated in 2005 at Christ Church, Oxford where he studied cardiac energetics and earned a doctoral degree in 2010 from the Department of Physiology, Anatomy, and Genetics. He attends Johns Hopkins Medical School as part of the National Institutes of Health (U.S.) Medical Scientist Training Program. He is currently a diagnostic radiology resident at Johns Hopkins University.
At Oxford University, James was a member of Oxford University Boat Club and took part in the Boat Race in 2006. Both universities had extremely strong intakes that year, with Cambridge boasting several world champions and the Oxford crew including Olympic silver medallists Barney Williams and Jake Wetzel. Oxford, with Jamie in the five seat, won the epic contest by 5 lengths in a time of 18 minutes 26 seconds.
Jamie won his first senior international vest in 2003. He sat in the three seat of the United States Coxless Four, which came 7th at the World Championships in Seville. He occupied the two seat a year later when the Four came 10th at the Olympics in Athens. After taking a break from international rowing, Jamies competed in the single scull at the World Championships at Dorney Lake, Eton. He finished 12th. In preparation for the 2008 Beijing Olympics, the US quadruple scull first competed in the 2008 World Cup in Lucerne, Switzerland. The quad, with Jamie in the three seat, overcame the 3-year undefeated World Champion Polish quad to win a gold medal, marking the first time the US has had international success in the quadruple sculls event. Keeping the same lineup from the gold-medal World Cup boat, Jamie and his teammates Scott Gault, Sam Stitt, and Matt Hughes went on to place 5th at the 2008 Beijing Olympics later in the summer.