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Hazel Bess Laugenour

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Name
  
Hazel Laugenour


Died
  
1960

Hazel Bess Laugenour

Hazel Bess Laugenour (1899–1960) was an Undergraduate at the University of California at Berkeley in Literature when she became the first woman to swim across The Golden Gate Strait, which separates the Pacific Ocean from San Francisco Bay on August 19, 1911. Bill Picklehaupt's story http://foundsf.org/index.php?title=Women_Swimming_in_the_Golden_Gate tells the story accurately and in historical context. Miss Laugenour capitalized on her international fame by making several movies ( one of which the National Film Archives still has in its collection ) and touring the country to promote the movies with an elaborate presentation which included a very large transparent swimming tank, complete with pump motor to approximate tidal conditions. As she was preparing to swim The English Channel, World War I broke out, ending that ambition. She married Timothy Edmund Fogg (also of the University of California at Berkeley in Mining Engineering and a Sigma Chi) and had a daughter, Joan Fogg. Hazel traced her family's history back to The Black Forest, and Winston-Salem, North Carolina in Colonial times.

References

Hazel Bess Laugenour Wikipedia