Every Place Has a Story

Ivy Granstrom: Queen of the Polar Bears

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October is women’s history month, and I can’t think of anyone more inspirational than Ivy Granstrom: Queen of the Polar Bears

Ivy Granstrom, 92 gets a city police escort to the water at the 84th annual Polar Bear Swim at English Bay. Steve Bosch photo, Vancouver Sun, January 2, 2004

This story is from Vancouver Exposed: Searching for the City’s Hidden History

Meet Ivy Granstrom:

Ivy Granstrom participated in 76 consecutive polar bear swims. She began in 1928, as a 16-year-old, which, incidentally, was the year of the chilliest swim on record with a water temperature of just 2 degrees.

Born in Glace Bay, Nova Scotia, Ivy was one of 14 children.

Legally blind since she was three weeks old, Ivy became a remarkable athlete, and was an unstoppable force even after a car accident left her with a severe back injury at age 60. To rehabilitate, she walked, jogged and ran into the record books of Masters track competitions.

1928 Polar Bear swim and Ivy Granstrom’s first. The 16-year-old is identified by Forbidden Vancouver Walking Tours as the girl on the far right. Vancouver Archives photo
Athlete of the year:

In 1980, the 68-year-old was running 30 kilometres a week with Paul Hoeberigs. Hoeberigs guided her by voice and by holding the other end of a cloth band. When she wasn’t running or swimming she curled, did woodwork, gardened or skied.

Ivy was named Sport BC Athlete of the Year in 1982, appointed a Member of the Order of Canada in 1988 and inducted into the Terry Fox Hall of Fame in 2001.

Spectators watching the Polar Bear swim in 1953. Courtesy Lisa Pantages.

In 1994, Ivy broke five records, two at the Pan Am Masters championships and three at the World Masters Games in Australia.

She died in April 2004, four months after completing her last Polar Bear Swim.

Paul Hoeberigs and Ivy Granstrom, ca.1990. Vancouver Archives photo

Fun Fact: Ivy’s grandson is TV director Richard Martin, whose credits include The New Addams Family, Highlander and Ninja Turtles. In 1979, he directed Poison Ivy, a documentary about his grandmother for the National Film Board of Canada. Richard’s father is Dick Martin of Rowan & Martin’s Laugh-In. (Source: IMDB.Com)

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