Baltimore Sun

Nancy Brown

Swimming coach and mentor, who was cheerleade­r for sport across state, dies at her home in Pasadena

- By E.B. Furgurson III

Nancy Brown, who spent her life sharing her love of swimming as a coach and mentor to thousands, died Wednesday evening at her home in Pasadena. She was 83 years old.

She started teaching swimming to Baltimore-area summer camp kids when she was 16 years old and kept it up until retiring from coaching five years ago.

In 1974, she helped start a Maryland Masters swimming club in Catonsvill­e under the auspices of U.S. Masters Swimming. She started another group when she moved to Anne Arundel County in 1986, teaching and coaching adults from 18 to 90 years old.

“Nancy [was] a constant cheerleade­r, encouragin­g, supporting, coaxing, and in all ways possible, promoting Master’s swimming and instilling enthusiasm for the sport,” said fellow USMS swimmer Kristina Henry, who nominated Ms. Brown for U.S. Masters Swimming’s Dorothy Donnelly Service Award in 2015, which Ms. Brown won.

“Our mother was truly the definition of love and kindness,” said her daughter, Jill Springer. “She gave of herself so generously not only to her large family that she cherished but to countless friends whose lives, many have told me, are richer for having known her. Personally, she was my best friend and mentor who sparked a joy of swimming and coaching for which I am forever grateful.”

Nancy Brown took to the water early, swimming in the Magothy River at her grandmothe­r’s house. She would go all day and earned the nickname “Water Rat.” She got into competitiv­e swimming in high school at the Friends School in Baltimore. She captained the team in 1953 and 1954.

But she did not compete again until she formed the Maryland Masters with a handful of others at the Catonsvill­e YMCA in 1974. Then, in 1986, she formed a master’s group at the Severna Park Community Center. She led that team to 10 YMCA Masters Nationals championsh­ips, and numerous top-three finishes in women’s, men’s and combined team categories.

Ms. Brown was also instrument­al in running swimming events in the Maryland Senior Olympics, in which she also competed. She also swam and set records in the National Senior Olympics.

While leading teams and coaching she also amassed an impressive 833 individual USMS national top 10 rankings plus 32 USMS All-American honors for posting the fastest time in at least one event in a given year.

She set the world record in the 100 meters short course backstroke in 1991, the same year she was recognized in Sports Illustrate­d’s Faces in the Crowd section.

When she moved up to the 70-74 age bracket in 2006, she was as determined as ever. That year she had 44 No. 1 rankings while setting six USMS records and nine YMCA national records. That same year she competed in the FINA World Championsh­ips at Stanford University, winning the 200-meter backstroke and landing secondand third-place finishes as well.

Ms. Brown’s determinat­ion and dedication to her sport were tested in 2011 when she was diagnosed with a rare abdominal cancer. She continued to compete, setting four national records before an extensive 10-hour surgery. She was back at the Nationals in Fort Lauderdale in April 2012, the same year she was inducted into the Anne Arundel County Sports Hall of Fame.

Ms. Brown credited her life long swimming regimen for saving her life.

“Swimming was a lifesaver for me,” she told the Severna Park Voice in 2015. “It’s incredible what exercise can do to get you through something like that. Physically and emotionall­y, I can’t say enough for it.”

On top of all the practice, competitio­n, and work in and around the pool, Ms. Brown insisted on making the Masters more than that. She organized social get-togethers during the holidays or around award ceremonies.

“I began swimming for health and fitness but very much appreciate that Nancy made socializin­g a big part of the program,” said Jack Iliff from the Severna Park Masters group. “Meeting and talking to other swimmers and having parties is great fun.”

She continued coaching and competing through rounds of chemothera­py until retiring from coaching in 2015.

Ms. Brown is survived by longtime companion Geoffrey Revett; daughters Jill Springer of Davidsonvi­lle, Wendy Bradford of Severna Park and Dori Krohn of Arnold; a sister, Susan Yohn of Grantville, Pennsylvan­ia; stepchildr­en Jeff Brown of Timonium, Jenny Seitz of San Diego, Califforni­a, Keith Brown of Round Hill, Virginia and Scott Brown of Alexandria, Virginia; 16 grandchild­ren and six great-grandchild­ren.

She was preceded in death by her parents, John D. and Margaret Lang; two husbands, Richard Whedbee and A. Douglas Brown, a former Evening Sun sports reporter; a daughter, Robin Whedbee Bond; stepdaught­er Elizabeth Brown and sister Esther Fulton.

Her body is being donated to science. Amemorial service will be held at Woods Memorial Presbyteri­an Church, 611 Baltimore Annapolis Blvd. Severna Park, at 11:30 a.m. Jan. 18 with visitation from 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.

 ??  ?? Nancy Brown was a mainstay at U.S. Masters Swimming competitio­ns. for decades.
Nancy Brown was a mainstay at U.S. Masters Swimming competitio­ns. for decades.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States