Youth (1920-1936)
Ragnhild Hveger was born in Nyborg in 1920. Her father was a train driver and a member of the Danish Nazi party. Privately she dreamed about being a nurse but was encouraged by her parent to practise competition swimming. She started competing at the age of 12 and at the age of 14 in 1935 she won her first Nordic championship in 400 m crawl. Her style was smooth with effective leg strokes. Her club was Elsinor Svimming club.Olympic Games in Berlin, 1936
Ragnhild Hveger was one of 18 Danish swimmers at the games. She started in three disciplines. In 100 m crawl she reached the semifinal and in 4 × 100 m she and the Danish team reached the final where they came seventh. In her favorite discipline 400 m crawl she won the first heat in a new olympic record and in the semifinal she beat her closest competitorAchievements
Her greatest achievements occurred at the European championships in London 1938. Here she won gold in 100 m crawl, 400 m crawl and 4 × 100 m crawl, which made the British newspaper The Times dubbed her "The Golden Torpedo". Ragnhild Hveger set 42 individual world records between 1935 and 1942. At the beginning of World War II she was at the peak of her career. In 1941 she held 19 world records in crawl at the same time.World War II and Nazism
During most of World War II Denmark was occupied by Germany and the only change of international competition was against swimmers from Germany or German-occupied countries like the Netherlands. Hveger moved in 1943 to Kiel in Germany, where she for at time worked as a swimming teacher. At the time she was living with a German soldier she had met in Denmark. According to Ragnhild Hveger he died on a ship outside Danzig. Together they had a daughter which she managed to get with her back to Denmark when the Nazi regime broke down in 1945.After the war
After the war Ragnhild Hveger was interned for six weeks in Sundholm at a forced labor camp, under suspicion of collaboration with the Germans during the war. Her parents and her brother had been active in the Danish Nazi party. Both her father and her brother fought on the Eastern front and were sentenced to jail, however she was not prosecuted. She nevertheless moved to Sweden for a period. Her association with nazism led to her being banned by the Danish swimming association from going to the Olympic Games in London 1948. Officially, the given reason was that she had violated the amateur rules by working as a swimming teacher. She was restricted until 1950. At the Olympic Games in Helsinki 1952 she participated and came fifth on 400 m crawl in a time better than her final time from 1936. At that time she was still the recordholder on the distance. After her swimming career she worked as a coach and swimming teacher in Copenhagen and stayed out of public life.Legacy
Ragnhild Hvegers performance in swimming have given her a number of awards. In 1968 she was inducted to theRecords
See also
* Jenny Kammersgaard, Danish long-distance swimmer from the same period *References
External links
* Pat Besford, ''Encyclopaedia of Swimming'' (London: St. Martin's Press, 1971). * David Wallechinsky and Jaime Loucky, ''The Complete Book of the Olympics'' (London: Aurum, 2008). {{DEFAULTSORT:Hveger, Ragnhild 1920 births 2011 deaths Danish female swimmers Danish female freestyle swimmers Danish female backstroke swimmers Swimmers at the 1936 Summer Olympics Swimmers at the 1952 Summer Olympics Olympic swimmers of Denmark Olympic silver medalists for Denmark World record setters in swimming European Aquatics Championships medalists in swimming Medalists at the 1936 Summer Olympics Olympic silver medalists in swimming People from Nyborg Sportspeople from the Region of Southern Denmark