A Tribute to John K Slater

Sporting his BLDSA badge, John appears in the photograph that was taken at the reception for the 2004 Windermere championship swim.
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John K Slater Born in Bradford and raised in Otley in Yorkshire, England, John Slater was a prime force in the development of competitive, open-water, long distance swimming in Great Britain. John was Founding Secretary for the British Long Distance Swimming Association and, in that role, guided it through its first 22 years of development from 1956 to 1978. Formation of the BLDSA In a letter in 1955 to Fred Oldman, congratulating him on his 14:31 France-England crossing of the Channel that year, John proposed the formation of a British Long Distance Swimming Association that would hold an annual championship on Lake Windermere. Together with another dynamic distance swimmer, Trevor Smith of Huddersfield, the three held a meeting and started the process that led to the formation of the BLDSA. From John's words (BLDSA Handbook "The first twenty five years"), they met with two other swimmers: jeweller Philip Rising (Two-way Windermere 17:38 in 1952, and English Channel F-E 15:55 in 1951 and E-F 18:38 in 1952); and Eileen Fenton (English Channel 15:31 in 1950). Subsequently, they were joined by Morecambe Bay swimmer and printer, Lewis Craven and Margaret Hinchcliffe. After these preliminary meetings, an inaugural meeting took place in 1956 and the BLDSA was formed. In those early days, there were strict rules to separate amateurs from professionals - just working at a swimming pool could define you as a Professional! John was the Magistrates Clerk in the Halifax (England) courts and, as members of the BLDSA committee in those early years, we were treated to meetings in the formal surroundings of the court with its associated wonderful woodwork and ornate plumbing. While John always quoted that "A Secretary is a person of many letters and few words", he was instrumental in bringing together representatives of many existing swims (e.g. Morecambe Bay and the Amateur Swimming Association of the England) and the establishment of championships at Windermere, Torbay, Loch Lomond, Bala, Trentham, Rathlin-Ballycastle, Dover-Folkestone and others. In appropriate recognition for his work in the formation of the BLDSA and all of its contributions to long-distance swimming, John was inducted into the International Marathon Swimming Hall of Fame (IMSHOF) in 1980. Other Activities John's boating activities weren't always conducted from conventional vessels. For many years during the 1960s and 1970s, he was recognized as the guy with the inflatable canoe. Percy Bull (Windermere 1967 in 12:37:46) from Coventry gratefully remembered John accompanying him on the 10-mile race across Morecambe Bay which is dry at low tide. With such a large movement of water in-and-out of the Bay, the water can move at up to 10 miles per hour. Not being one of the fastest swimmers, Perce was challenged with trying to find the channels between the sandbanks in the outgoing tide. Perce recalls that without John to accompany him, through the benefit of the low draft of John's rubber boat, then he would not have made it to the finish at Morecambe. That same rubber boat came in handy to guide me, in semi-conscious condition, to cross the finishing line at Torbay in one of the early swims of the 1960s. The 28-Letter Association By 1967, this fun-loving group involved three founding members: John as their playful leader; Academic Jim Robinson, founder of the Sandsend-Whity championship, originator of the Shiver Unit (1962 BLDSA annual report) and promoter of the Emoting Stick; and Windermere swimmer Rex Williams who was the dynamic founding Secretary of the Warwickshire Long Distance Swimming Association. By 1967 "Other Members" included; Ian Thompson as Founding Secretary of the Warrington Dolphins LDSA; Jack Somerfield as the Founding Secretary of the Bala Lake championship; Jack Brown as the secretary of the Morecambe Cross Bay Swimming Association; Derek Gill as Secretary of the Bradford LDSA; Jean Bartlett; and Margaret Butcher who is the only person to have swum from Church Bay on Rathlin Island to Ballycastle, Northern Ireland, and BLDSA President, Margaret Smith, 1985-1986 and 2003-2004 . Channel swimmer Fred Oldman (Founding Torbay Secretary) and Stephanie Taylor (Founding secretary of Fairhaven-Langold championship) had both become inactive by 1967. In the 1963 BLDSA annual report, John provided a light-hearted report of the first social organized by this group and held in the penthouse of the Toby Jug café in Keswick after the annual Windermere swim. The meeting was hosted by Veronica Anderson - the first woman to swim the length of Lake Coniston, and a close friend of John and his wife Marion during their time in Spain. John's strength in the formation of this group was in bringing together such a large group of single-minded individuals and having them work as a team in supporting the growth of the BLDSA. The Last Year One of John's continuing joys was his annual Christmas Newsletter which was very much in the format of the information-packed Annual Reports he produced for the BLDSA during the 22 years he guided the Association. In the 2004 crammed, six-page report, he enthused about the number of high-quality swimmers who were joining them in Spain as expatriate English retirees. He clearly had plans for the formation of a Spanish Masters relay of Super Crocks. John reported "Another ball-and-socket hip operation in January and I now balance nicely with the other of 5 years ago." - his subsequent performance in Riccione was a good measure of his recuperation from the surgery. After the World Games, John and Marion travelled to England and renewed old acquaintances with a number of BLDSA friends in Yorkshire. In his Christmas Newsletter, he reported a highlight for him had been a visit to the Lake District to attend the BLDSA Windermere championship. He lovingly reported sitting on benches dedicated to BLDSA builders john O'Hara and Jeff Ingham, while watching the swimmers finish at Waterhead,. Personal material, family facts, and BLDSA reminiscences all presented in detail with humorous touches. He recalled being seated at Waterhead with BLDSA stalwarts, George Owen and Keith Seymour, and mused how the "younger generation" of swimmers probably viewed this threesome, in their 70s and 80s, as part of the cast of "Last of Summer Wine" - a British TV comedy series, portraying the boyish antics of five-or-six incorrigible, retired Yorkshire men.. The End The last news was that a gathering and fireworks were planned on the beach at Denia where they would say their goodbyes to John and scatter his ashes in the sea. A tribute to a man who was always an enthusiastic leader, a top-class distance swimmer, a man of humour, and a friend to so many swimmers from around the world. Memories John and his wife Marion took a big step and moved to Spain in 1987.
John enjoyed the warmer waters and, like other swimmers who he trained,
Carol Jeffs remembered John's quotation that he only swam on Slater
Days - i.e. Warm and Sunny ! Remembering
the happy times she spent with John when she was young, his daughter,
Alison, lovingly remembers helping with the
production
of the BLDSA Annual Reports - in the days of offset printing, before
the use of photocopiers. She recalls a beautiful memory of their times
establishing a wild-fowl habitat at Lee Dam "I have a lovely close-up
photo of Dad in his canoe with 'Emma' the pet duck on his shoulder." Acknowledgements |