Elizabeth Ferris (diver)

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Elizabeth Ferris
Elizabeth Ferris (right) in 1961
Personal information
Born(1940-11-19)19 November 1940
Bridgwater, Somerset, Great Britain
Died12 April 2012(2012-04-12) (aged 71)
Height1.57 m (5 ft 2 in)
Weight54 kg (119 lb)
Sport
EventSpringboard diving
ClubMetropolitan Diving Club
Medal record
Women's diving
Representing  United Kingdom
Olympic Games
Bronze medal – third place 1960 Rome Springboard
Summer Universiade
Gold medal – first place 1961 Sofia Springboard
Gold medal – first place 1961 Sofia Platform
Representing  England
British Empire & Commonwealth Games
Bronze medal – third place 1958 Cardiff
3m Springboard
Silver medal – second place 1962 Perth
3m Springboard

Elizabeth Anne Esther "Liz" Ferris (19 November 1940 – 12 April 2012) was a British diver. She was the third of four children to Roy Ferris, a dairyman and Dorothy Philomena. Raised in central London, she attended Francis Holland School and was a member of the Mermaids Swimming Club which was notable for training female athletes for the Olympics. Ferris won a bronze Olympic medal in the women's 3 metre springboard event at the 1960 Rome Summer Olympics.

After her diving career, she worked in medicine and was an advocate for changing perceptions of women in sport. Her efforts were recognised by an Olympic order medal in 1980 and a lifetime achievement award by the British Olympic Association in 2011. Ferris's legacy was in her steadfast work to enhance women's opportunities in the Olympic games, as well as her work on gender biology, which encouraged the IOC to revise their definition of male and female bodies.

Ferris had one daughter to husband Julian Steven. She suffered with breast cancer from 2008 and died at home four years later in April 2012. At the time of her death, no other British female diver had won an Olympic medal in diving since her bronze medal in 1960.

Early life

Ferris was born on 19 November 1940 in Bridgwater, Somerset at the Mary Stanley Nursing Home. She was the 3rd of four children to her dairyman father Roy Ferris (1903–1975) and his wife Dorothy Philomena (1904–1990). Ferris was raised in central London, attending the private Francis Holland School. She was a member of the Mermaids Swimming Club, which had a strong tradition of training female swimmers and divers for the Olympics.[1]

Career

Diving

Ingrid Kramer
and Liz Ferris at the 1960 Olympics

Ferris had an unfavourable introduction to diving, evidently belly-flopping on her first effort, however with training she flourished, winning her first national title in 1957.[1]

She represented England and won a bronze medal in the 3 metre springboard at the 1958 British Empire and Commonwealth Games in Cardiff, Wales.[2] She won a bronze medal in the 3 metre springboard event at the 1960 Summer Olympics,[3] while training as a medical student in Greenford, Middlesex.[4] Despite being sent to bed with a throat infection days before she was due to compete, she made a good recovery and became the first British girl since 1920 to win a medal in a diving event. She expressed that she was unaware of her medal win or that she was in contention, as she would not keep track of marks awarded for each dive, believing that doing so may have affected her performances.[5]

Two years later, she won a silver medal in the 3 metre springboard at the 1962 British Empire and Commonwealth Games in Perth, Western Australia.[6]

Medicine

While competing internationally, Ferris was also studying medicine at the University of London. After competing in Perth in 1962, she retired from diving to focus on her medical career. In 1965, she qualified as a doctor as Middlesex Hospital and would further work across hospitals in London and Gloucestershire. She was a delegate to the International Olympic Committee (IOC) in 1976, at the time its first conference on women in sport, during a period when less than 21 percent of competitors across both summer and winter Olympics were women. Ferris advocated for change, as considerably less sports were available for women compared to men, achieving this through conferences and commissions.[1]

During a lecture in 1978, Ferris expressed concerns over "prescribed tests for femininity", disputing the purpose of the tests and suggesting that instead of deterring male imposters, the test prevented some women with "rare, anomalous chromosome conditions" from participating. She further suggested that there were fundamental flaws in how the test had been devised.[7] In her 1979 article Sportswomen and medicine, she challenged long-held beliefs about the impact of motherboard and hormones on female sports performances, while criticizing the IOC's gender testing system introduced during the 1960s as 'ineffective'. Some sporting bodies chose to review their gender verification procedures in the 1980s due to Ferris's advocacy.[1]

Later life

In 1980, Ferris received a Bronze Olympic Order[8] and in 1983, suggested that pregnant women should not participate in sports.[9] Ferris was known to work on gender equality, notably from 1995 as part of the IOC's women and sport commission, while she also advocated sport and exercise at grassroots. In 2011, she was awarded the British Olympic Association's first lifetime achievement award.[1] In her acceptance speech, Ferris conveyed her sense of achievement:

"Women are almost at parity at the Olympic Games in terms of the number of competitors, only just under half, but we've really made huge strides over the last 15 years in getting female athletes competing on an equal level at the Games … I hope winning this award will encourage girls in sport and show that women have an important role to play."[1]
International Fair Play Committee website, 9 Dec 2011

Her award came a year prior to the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, which was the first Olympic games to have all sports open to women.[1] She was a founder of the World Olympians Association.[10] Ferris's legacy was in her steadfast work to enhance women's opportunities in the Olympic games, as well as her work on gender biology, which encouraged the IOC to amend their restrictive definition of male and female bodies. When recognising gender equity in the Olympic games and scientifically understanding the body's gender can be partly attributed to the work and advocacy by Ferris's.[1]

Personal

Her mother was Dolly Ferris and she was one of four children. She had an older brother Roy, an older sister Barbara and a younger sister Christine.[5]

Ferris married Robert Tyson Knights (b. 1942) on 8 May 1968, but the marriage was short-lived and on 12 November 1973, she married Canadian-born university lecturer Julian Steven (b. 1940), who would later work in investment banking. They had one daughter, Sophie, who was born in 1978.[1]

Since 2008, Ferris had been suffering from breast cancer and died at home in Lechlade, Gloucestershire on 12 April 2012.[1] Her funeral was privately held at St Martin-in-the-Fields Anglican church.[11] At the time of her death, no other British female diver had won an Olympic medal in diving since Ferris's bronze medal in the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome.[1]

References

  1. ^
    doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/104948. Retrieved 11 November 2021. (Subscription or UK public library membership
    required.)
  2. ^ "1958 Athletes". Team England.
  3. ^ "Elizabeth Ferris Olympic Results". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 30 April 2012.
  4. ^ "Ferris in training as medical student". Wells Journal. 9 September 1960. p. 3. (preview) – via British Newspaper Archive.
  5. ^ a b "Father's accident kept a secret". Middlesex County Times and West Middlesex Gazette. 3 September 1960. p. 1 – via newspapers.com.
  6. ^ "Athletes and results". Commonwealth Games Federation.
  7. .
  8. ^ "Elizabeth Anne E. Ferris". International Olympic Committee. Retrieved 9 July 2021.
  9. ^ "Bias and myth keep women from Olympic participation". The Bryan Times. 21 October 1983. p. 16.
  10. ^ "Dr Liz Ferris". The Times. 27 April 2012. Retrieved 27 August 2016.
  11. ^ "British Swimming and ASA mourn Dr Liz Ferris". swimming.org. Archived from the original on 2 June 2012. Retrieved 30 April 2012.

External links