Robert Egerton Swartwout

Robert Egerton Swartwout
Born July 2, 1905
New York, NY
Died June 2, 1951
Hartismere, Eye, UK

Robert Egerton Swartwout (July 2, 1905 – June 2, 1951) was an American-born author, poet, cartoonist, and coxswain. He was the only son of American architect Egerton Swartwout and British-born Geraldine Davenport Swartwout. He drew from his rowing experience to produce a locked room mystery about The Boat Race and many poems.

Rowing

Swartwout rowed and coxed for Middlesex School in Concord, MA, from which he graduated on June 13, 1924.[1] While attending Trinity College at the University of Cambridge he became the first American to cox Cambridge University Boat Club to victory over Oxford in 1930.[2] Swartwout was 5' 6", weighed 105 lb (48 kg), and possessed a powerful bass voice.[3]

Writing

At Trinity College he earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts in 1928, followed by a Masters degree in Literature in 1931; that same year he was president of the Cambridge University Liberal Club. Swartwout was a member and debater with the Cambridge Union Society. Under the pen name R.E. Swartwout he contributed to Granta and Punch, as well as crosswords for The Spectator. He wrote a short Holmesian piece entitled "The Omnibus Murder" and wrote four books:[4]

In 1931 Swartwout wrote the introduction to Sir William Schwenck Gilbert A Topsy Turvy Adventure, by Townley Searle, London: Alexander-Ouseley, Ltd., 1931.

Death

Swartwout died in Hartismere Hospital, Eye, Suffolk, England on June 6, 1951, of esophageal cancer complicated by pulmonary tuberculosis at the age of 45.[6]

See also

References

  1. Date: April 12, 1930, Paper: Boston Herald (Boston, MA), Page: 11
  2. Date: Sunday, April 13, 1930, Paper: Evansville Courier and Press (Evansville, IN), Page: 12
  3. Date: April 13, 1930, Paper: Trenton Evening Times (Trenton, NJ), Page: 30
  4. http://lockedroominternational.com/uploads/3/1/4/4/3144886/50_howdunits_11_09.pdf
  5. The Boat Race Murder, R.E. Swartwout, Paperback: 160 pages, Publisher: Ostara Publishing (August 16, 2007), ISBN 978-1906288006
  6. Certified copy of entry of death, Hartismere in the county of Suffolk, subdistrict of Eye and Stradbroke, 1951, DYD 205600, application number 3828567-1
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