Margaret Hoffman
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![]() Hoffman in 1932[1] | |
| Personal information | |
|---|---|
| Full name | Margaret Pierce Hoffman[2] |
Nickname | "Peg" |
| National team | |
| Born | June 19, 1911 |
| Died | March 25, 1991 (aged 79) Indiana, Pennsylvania, U.S.[2] |
| Height | 5 ft 7 in (1.70 m)[3] |
| Weight | 125 lb (57 kg) (1932) |
| Education | |
| Sport | |
| Sport | Swimming |
| Strokes | Breaststroke |
| Club | Scranton Swimming Assoc. (SSA) |
| Coach | Hoadley Hagen (SSA) Wright B. Jones (SSA) Hi Antrim (SSA) Bob Kiphuth ('28 Olympics) |
Margaret Pierce Hoffman (June 19, 1911 – March 25, 1991) was an American competition swimmer who represented the United States in the 200 meter breaststroke at the 1928 Summer Olympics in Amsterdam and the 1932 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. After completing her education at Mount Holyoke and Temple University, she chaired the Physical Education Department at Wyoming Seminary, her former prep school, and later served as a mathematics teacher at the Shipley school in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania[4]
Scranton Swimming Association
Hoffman was born on June 19, 1911, in Wilkes Barre, Pennsylvania, to Mr. Edwin A. Hoffman, who would work as an executive for the Wilkes-Barre Railway Corporation, and Louise Witherow Hoffman.[5][6][7] She attended Kingston's Wyoming Seminary, a college preparatory school very close to her birthplace in Wilkes Barre, Pennsylvania.[8] At Wyoming Seminary, she played basketball and field hockey, but would excel as a swimmer. Around 1927, at a Water Polo-like contest between her Wilkes Barre YMCA team and the recently formed Scranton Swimming Association at the Wilkes Barre YMCA Pool, Hoffman's swimming ability was discovered by Scranton Coach Hoadley Hagen who admired her speed and agility.[9] She soon was signed to swim for the Scranton Swimming Association. At Scranton's Weston Field Pool, she would break a record for the medley relay and tie a local record for the 100-yard freestyle. In the summer of 1928, the Scranton Swimming Association and the Scranton Times sponsored Hoffman to attend the Olympic trials at Far Rockaway on New York's Long Island.[8][10]
Phil Bunnel, a Captain of the Yale Swimming team, had formerly swum for Hy Antrim, a Scranton Swimming Association Coach. Antrim asked Bunnel to bring his Yale swim coach and U.S. Women's Olympic swim team coach Bob Kiphuth, to come to Scranton to observe Hoffman swim breaststroke. Kiphuth, said of Hoffman, "She is one of the finest breaststrokers I have ever seen, with her smooth, long, wide arm sweep." However, Kiphuth modified Hoffman's stroke to make her arm action faster with a short choppy movement, rather than her former wide arm pull, and modified her kick to increase its efficiency.pull, and modified her kick to increase its efficiency.[9]
Hoffman was described as having a "natural athletic ability", being picked in late 1927 as a student with "good free style prospect" by the Scranton Swimming Association, where she trained and was managed by Chief Coach Hoadley Hagen, and coaches Wright B. Jones, and Hi Antrim.[3] Hagen founded the Scranton Swimming Association, served as the Director of the Scranton Bureau of Recreation, and coached High School track and field in addition to swimming. Jones was a Scranton public school teacher and served as both coach and treasurer of the Scranton Swim Association.[11][12] On March 30, 1929, Hoffman competed in the AAU Middle Atlantic championships in the 200-yard breaststroke Atlantic City, winning the event, and setting a meet record of 3:17.[13][3]
With numerous achievements swimming breaststroke, she won the AAU outdoor championship in the 220 yard breaststroke in both 1930 and 1933, and was the indoor AAU championship in the 110 yard breaststroke in both 1931 and 1933.[8] She set a world record, though perhaps unofficial, in the 200-yard breaststroke of 2.55.8 at an international meet between the United States and Hungary in New York, in July 1932.[14]
Hoffman continued to compete and occasionally train with the Scranton Swimming Association during her years at Mount Holyoke particularly in the summers, and was limited in her training as Mount Holyoke lacked a women's swim team. She graduated the Wyoming Seminary in 1929, and began at Mount Holyoke College in Massachusetts in the fall of that year.[15][16]

