FRASER, DAWN


Meaning of FRASER, DAWN in English

(b. Sept. 4, 1937, Balmain, near Sydney), Australian swimmer, the first woman swimmer to win gold medals in three consecutive Olympic Games (1956, 1960, 1964). From 1956 to 1964 she broke the women's world record for the 100-metre freestyle race nine successive times. Her mark of 58.9 seconds, established on Feb. 29, 1964, at North Sydney, was unbroken until Jan. 8, 1972, when Shane Gould, a fellow Australian, achieved 58.5 at Sydney. At the 1956 Olympic Games in Melbourne, Fraser captured gold medals in the 100-metre freestyle event and in the 400-metre freestyle relay race. She repeated her triumph in the 100-metre freestyle at the 1960 and 1964 Games, in Rome and Tokyo respectively, and added silver medals in the 400-metre freestyle (1956), the 400-metre freestyle relay (1960, 1964), and in the 400-metre medley relay (1960). Her performances in the 1964 Olympics were especially noteworthy because she had been injured seriously in an automobile accident in March of that year. In 1957 Fraser won the United States women's freestyle championship at 110 yards (nearly equivalent to 100 metres). In addition to her unusually long-lived world record for 100 metres, she set world standards (all broken by the early 1970s) in freestyle swimming at five other distances up to 220 yards. Her autobiography, Below the Surface (Australian title Gold Medal Girl), written with Harry Gordon, was published in 1965.

Britannica English vocabulary.      Английский словарь Британика.