Euphrasia Donnelly
Euphrasia Louise "Fraze" Donnelly, also known by her married names Euphrasia Donnelly Bungard, and Euphrasia Bungard Berlin, was an American competition swimmer, Olympic champion in the 4x100-meter freestyle relay, and former world record-holder. She would later swim professionally, marry twice, serve as an instructor with Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College, hold a variety of swimming-related jobs, and work for a period as an X-ray and lab technician in Warsaw, Indiana.
Donnelly was born on June 6, 1905, in Indianapolis to Maurice Donnelly, of Irish descent, and Sarah Jane McCarthy. She was one of seven children: Maurice, Eileen, Mary, Cecile, Virginia, and Crawford. Fraze, as she was called by her family and friends, was known for her athleticism and quick sense of humor. She attended Technical High School in Indianapolis. She began competing in races by the age of ten and was soon training and competing with the Hoosier Athletic Club in her hometown of Indianapolis. One of her earliest and most influential coaches was Indianapolis's William S. Merriam, who coached her with the Hoosier Athletic Club. He would later coach swimming and water polo at the University of Pennsylvania from 1927-1943. At a Hoosier Athletic Club meet on November 3, 1923, Donnelly set a 100-yard freestyle AAU Indiana State record of 1:09.2, breaking the old record by a full second. During her swimming career, Donnelly held Indiana State records in the 50, 100, and 220-yard freestyle events. In addition to her highly competitive times in swimming events in Indiana and Kentucky, Donnelly also excelled in several diving competitions.
1924 Paris Olympic gold
Donnelly secured her place on the 1924 U.S. women's team by placing third in the 100-meter freestyle at the June 7-8, 1924 Olympic trials at Briarcliff Lodge, just North of New York City. The U.S. team later sailed to Paris aboard the S.S. America, and the U.S. Women's swim team was favored to win the individual freestyle events, as well as the 4x100 freestyle relay.Donnelly represented the United States at the 1924 Summer Olympics on July 18 in Paris, where she won a gold medal as a member of the winning U.S. Women's team in the finals of the women's 4×100-meter freestyle relay event. Donnelly, who swam the first 100-metre leg of the relay, and her American teammates Gertrude Ederle, famed for later swimming the English Channel, Ethel Lackie of the Illinois Athletic Club and Mariechen Wehselau set a new world record in the event final of 4:58.8, defeating the second-place silver medal team from Great Britain by close to a twenty second margin. The American Women's team's 4x100-metre world record held for four years. In a finish that would not be considered close by modern standards, the British Women's 4x100 team that swam a 5:17.0, placed a full 18 seconds ahead of the Swedish team that took the bronze medal with a time of 5:35.6. Though all three of Euphrasia's 4x100 meter freestyle teammates won individual medals, Euphrasia competed exclusively as part of the 4x100 team relay, and did not enter an individual event. The 1924 U.S. Women's Olympic swimming team Head Coach was Louis De B. Handley, who coached the Women's Swimming Association in New York.
Donnelly's U.S. 1924 Olympic teammates and travelling companions included Johnny Weismuller, Duke Kahanamoku, and Jack Kelly, father of actress Grace Kelly. As part of her Olympic experience, she met the Prince of Wales, actors Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks, and after Olympic competition, the U.S. team performed for Belgium's Queen and King. She was chosen to compete in a 100-meter event as part of the Irish Tailteann Games in Dublin, Ireland, in August, 1924, which she won.
Though known for her achievement of an Olympic gold medal in 1924, and her state titles in swimming events, Donnelly did not win a medal or title on the National level as part of American Athletic Union competition during her swimming career.
Post-Olympic careers
By 1925, Donnelly swam in a few professional meets. In her early post-Olympic career, she won a 9-mile professional distance swim in Toledo, Ohio, and took home $250 for her first place finish. A few years after the Olympics, she worked as an instructor at Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College, a private Catholic liberal arts college in greater Terra Haute area in West Central Indiana, about 80 miles Southeast of her native Indianapolis. During her time with Saint Mary-of-the-Woods, she taught swimming for six years. She subsequently filled a number of other swimming-related jobs, and worked as an instructor for the Riviera Club in Indianapolis in 1936. With her engagement announced in May of 1931, on November 1, 1934, she married Bruce Raymond Bungard of Terra Haute, a fireman who died in 1952. In the 1940's and 50's she lived with husband Bruce Bungard in Indiana's Little Chapman Lake area, and enjoyed bowling to retain her fitness. She worked for a period as a lab and X-ray tech at the Murphy Medical Center in Warsaw, Indiana. In 1957, she married Richard L. Berlin, five years after the death of her former husband Bruce Ray Bungard.Donnelly died at the Murphy Medical Center at the age of 57 on May 20, 1963 in greater Warsaw, Indiana, after being admitted on April 22, and had been in failing health for about a year. She had lived in Warsaw beginning in 1944, where she had been a member of the Sacred Heart Catholic Church and the Tri-Kappa Sorority. Services were held on the morning of May 23 at the Sacred Heart Catholic Church, and she was later buried at Warsaw's Oakwood Cemetery.