Earl Eastwood

Biographical information

RolesCompeted in Olympic Games
SexMale
Full nameEarl Hamilton Richard•Eastwood
Used nameEarl•Eastwood
Born2 November 1905 in Hamilton, Ontario (CAN)
Died4 July 1968 in Hamilton, Ontario (CAN)
AffiliationsLeander Boat Club, Hamilton (CAN)
NOC Canada
Medals OG
Gold 0
Silver 0
Bronze 1
Total 1

Biography

A member of Hamilton, Ontario’s Leander Boat Club, Earl Eastwood’s first major international tournament was the 1930 British Empire Games, where he won a bronze medal in the coxed eights alongside Don Boal, Harry Fry, Les MacDonald, Al Taylor, Bill Thoburn, and the non-Olympians Joseph Bowkes, William Moore, and Joseph Zabinsky. He was equally successful at the 1932 Summer Olympics, where he won a bronze medal in the eights (with Boal, Fry, MacDonald, Taylor, Thoburn, Joe Harris, Cedric Liddell, and Stanley Stanyar), finishing only 0.4 seconds ahead of the British crew in the final. He was also a member of the Leander crew that won Canada’s Henley Royal Regatta in 1932. After retiring from active competition, Eastwood moved to the United States, where he had a career as a railroad worker, but returned to Canada prior to his death in 1968.

Results

Games Discipline (Sport) / Event NOC / Team Pos Medal As
1932 Summer Olympics Rowing CAN Earl Eastwood
Eights, Men (Olympic) Canada 3 Bronze

Special Notes