Word: quinsigamond
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Freshman crew will row a race with Worcester High School over a one and one-half miles course on Lake Quinsigamond on Saturday, May 23. The race which was to have been held with the Stone's School crew has been cancelled. The crew is being coached regularly by J. F. Perkins 3L., and is gradually improving in form, although many faults are noticeable. Both eights, especially the first are unsteady in the water, and both lack a good leg drive and the clean, hard catch which is so necessary. These faults, however, are being gradually overcome by careful individual...
...race with the Worcester High School will rowed over a 1 1-2 mile course on Lake Quinsigamond on May 23. Arrangements are now being made with the Stone's school for a race in the Basin, probably on June 1. The race with the Yale freshman will be rowed over the regular course on the Thames on June 25. Definite arrangements have not yet been made for a four-oared race with the Yale freshmen, but it will probably be held a day or two before the eight-oared race...
...night with a few amendments to be left to the authority of the chairman: second nine, Freshman nine, and lacrosse team. The appointment of P. Dana '04, as assistant manager of the track team was also approved. The Freshman crew was allowed to row Worcester High School on Lake Quinsigamond and Stone's School in the basin...
...Freshman crew will row a race with Worcester High School over a 1 1-2 mile course on Lake Quinsigamond on Saturday, May 23. The management of the crew is also arranging for a race with the Stone's School crew to be held about three weeks before the race with Yale...
After this regatta the "Harvard" was not used again by the University crew, but was used on several occasions by class crews. The only defeat she suffered between 1857 and 1861 was on the three-mile course on Lake Quinsigamond at the Worcester Citizens' Regatta, July 27, 1859, when she was defeated by two seconds by the Yale six-oared shell...