Monday 1 September 2014

Bill Pickering

Bill Pickering
 a giant amongst Channel swimmers
1921 to 2014

(picture courtesy of the Burton Mail newspaper) 
The Channel Swimming Association  
tribute to Bill Pickering  
Monday, 18 August 2014
It is with great sadness that we have to report the death of Vice President Bill Pickering yesterday, 17th August 2014, in the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Burton on Trent, at the age of 93.
He was a giant amongst Channel swimmers, a gentle giant and a great friend to the Channel Swimming Association all his life and we held him in the highest respect.  In his day (1955), he was the greatest of the great, setting a new World Record for the England France crossing of 14 hours and 6 minutes on the 27th August 1955. He was 1 hour 28 minutes faster than any other man.  But it was Florence Chadwick’s record he broke and it took the incredible Florence Chadwick to wrestle the World Record for the fastest crossing, from him. He was only the 8th man ever to cross the Channel from England to France.
A Baths Manager for most of his career, Bill made the 11th England to France crossing in 1955.  He had to spend a month down in Dover waiting for good weather, much to the irritation of his sponsors back in Bloxwich. His sponsors finally gave him an ultimatum, get on with it or come home. He is one of the few swimmers who can also claim to have competed in the Butlin Cross Channel races.
He was a Vice President of the Channel Swimming Association for many years and we are proud that he was able to honour us by accepting this position.  He was always there when we needed his advice.  He was held in the highest of esteem by all of our members and those who had the privilege of meeting and talking with him, will be forever grateful.
He will be remembered for his care, his kindest, his enthusiasm and commitment to all swimmers and not to forget, being a World Record holder.  He will be remembered for his support, his total dedication and his boundless energy and infectious happiness in support of Channel Swimming and the Channel Swimming Association and we will all miss him greatly.

Our deepest condolences go to his wife Clarrie, who stayed by his side for  more than 70 years and his family. 

Bill all smiles as he gets ready for his record channel attempt in 1955  

 Big Ricks are a midlands club, which meant  some of us  had come into contact with Bill when firstly he was manger at bloxwich swimming baths in the midlands and later on  from the channel swimming association dinners, he was a gentlegiant...a true inspiration and hero to all of us.. Ricks

              "Pickering setting a new World Record for the England France crossing of 14 hours and 6 minutes on the 27th August 1955
(British Pathé Selected originals of offcuts, selected scenes, out-takes, rushes) 


Bill was given a hero's welcome for his Channel crossing
as crowds gathered in the streets of Walsall to recognise his achievements in 1955
(picture courtesy of the Express & Star newspaper) 


Big Bill Pickering
was A true channel & open water superstar, as the article says....not many people become legends in their own lifetime.. an amazing man 
Bill Pickering is featured in this good humored Ken Dodd  
TV clip about  coaching a channel swimming   in 1963
Bill Pickering
(picture courtesy of the Burton Mail newspaper) 
The following is a short resume of Bill Pickering's life so far, and a short history of the Bill Pickering Cup held between four local Probus Clubs, Walsall, Aldridge, Gorway and Bloxwich that started in 1987.
Bill Pickering is not strictly 'Black Country', but he has strong local connections. In fact, he was born at Overseal, near Swadlincote in Derbyshire, on 19th July 1921 and has a lifelong affinity to water, both salt and fresh, and has spent most of his long life in, on or around the stuff.
Fired with enthusiasm by reading books about the many channel swimmers since Captain Matthew Webb who became the first to complete the crossing in August 1875, Bill resolved at the age of eight that he would one day swim the channel himself.
It was to be 26 years before his dream would come true, but he obviously started training in earnest at an early age, taking second place in a race in the River Trent at Burton at the age of fifteen and at his very first attempt. His interest in swimming led him to take up seasonal employment in the swimming baths at Ashby de la Zouch, which not only gave him the opportunity to continue his training, it was where he met his wife, Clarrie, whom he married on 13th September 1941.
Following service in the Royal Navy between 1941 and 1946, mostly on board a minesweeper, Bill worked at the Trent Bridge Baths at Burton (now gone), and then Leicester for two years. He then moved to Market Drayton, to run the baths there, and in 1951 to Bloxwich for a two-year stint as baths manager. That two years actually turned into a marathon session, for he was there for no less than 35 years!
The Bloxwich baths eventually became the Leisure Centre in the early '80s and Bill was the manager there until he retired in 1986. He made many good friends in Bloxwich, and has many fond memories of his time in the town. He still visits it on a monthly basis, in his capacity as a member of the Bloxwich Probus Club, an association of retired businessmen and professional people.
Obviously, working at the various swimming pools gave Bill an opportunity to train and hone his endurance, and it was not uncommon for him to be up at 6.00 am and to spend 6, 8, and sometimes 10 hours in the water. All this paid off when he won the Morecambe Cross Bay Championship in 1954 for the twelve-mile crossing from Grange Over Sands to Morecambe, a course which he competed no less than seventeen times.
The time was coming for him to achieve his ambition of swimming the English Channel, and his chance came in 1955. Most people would be satisfied with just accomplishing the great feat, but Bill is not one to do things by halves. On the 27th August he completed a logged course of some 21 miles in 14 hours 6 minutes to take the world record from American swimmer Florence Chadwick (she was to take the record back just two months later when she completed the crossing in 13 hours 55 minutes).

Bill being prepared for his Channel Swim
Bill was not satisfied with that achievement. In 1958 he also became one of only two people to swim the Firth of Forth, the other being a Canadian, and was the first to swim The Wash in 1960. 1971 saw him swim the Bristol Channel at the age of 50. In 1979, aged 58, he made an attempt at crossing the Irish Sea, but was defeated by fog and the cold waters; at a decidedly chilly 47 degrees Fahrenheit, they drained his strength and forced him to abandon the attempt.
Bill Pickering has a great sense of humour and counts among his friends two well-known personalities, our very own 'Arry 'Arrison, and the inimitable TV and stage comedian Ken Dodd. Bill taught 'Doddy' to swim at Canley in Coventry and at Bournemouth, and they have been friends ever since. In fact, they made a very funny Path Pix colour film together, which Bill would love to see again.
Bill moved back to Overseal after he retired in 1986, to occupy his parents' former home, they having passed away in 1976. In September 2001, he and Clarrie celebrated their Diamond Wedding anniversary, and were very pleased, and honoured, to be visited by the then mayor of Walsall.
On his retirement, he joined Bloxwich Probus Club and donated a Cup to be competed for by four local Probus Clubs, Walsall, Aldridge, Gorway and Bloxwich. The Competition is played at the indoor bowling facility at Bloxwich Leisure Centre and is usually played during February of each year, and the winners have the privilege of organising the following years event.
                         (Information courtesy of Black Country Bugle User posted 9 January 2003)
http://www.walsallprobusclub.co.uk/History_Bill_Pickering_Cup.html

a Lovely write up about Bill Pickering in the Express & Star newspaper.
` Channel swimming legend Bill Pickering dies at 93
He was once the fastest person on the planet to cross the English Channel unaided`
 (link to story http://www.expressandstar.com/ )
simply the best 
 
1921 to 2014
this is  Bill at the channel swimming association champions  dinner
 held in Dover town hall November 2013 aged 92..looking as great as ever   
(picture courtesy of the Simon Griffiths H2o magazine )
www.h2openmagazine.com