Professor Powsey

Albert Edward 'Bert' Powsey (1866–1956), known professionally as Professor Powsey, was a British high diver active between 1900 and 1941.

Professor (Albert Edward 'Bert') Powsey
Postcard of Powsey's bicycle dive from Brighton's West Pier, in 1905
Born1866
Sheerness, Kent, England
Died2 March, 1956
Liverpool
OccupationHigh diver
Years active1900–1941

Powsey was among a number of similar professional high, trick and fancy daredevil divers who performed for crowds on piers and at fairgrounds throughout the UK in the early 20th century.[1] These include Professor Cyril,[2] Professor Gautier,[3] Professor Davenport,[4] Professor Reddish, Zoe Brigden,[5] Walter Tong,[1] and Powsey's own daughter Gladys[6] and son Herbert Powsey.[7]

Early life

Powsey was born in 1866 in Sheerness, Kent. At the age of 13 he embarked on a six-month cruise to the West Indies on a cargo boat and on his return was assistant to a grocer. On 7 September 1880, at 14, he received a Royal Humane Society Bronze Medal for lifesaving as "A. E. Powsey, 'Boy, T S Cornwall" (case number 21075).[8] The T. S. Cornwall, formerly HMS Wellesley, had been a 74-gun ship of the line converted to a floating reformatory or training ship. Powsey apprenticed as a steam pipe fitter, eventually becoming a foreman.[7]

In 1890 he married Rose Emma Ellis, who had been touring the world as the first female deep-sea diver. At the time of their marriage Powsey joined the staff of Marlborough College in Wiltshire for 10 years, and there evolved his high diving act.[7]

Diving career

Powsey first undertook regular diving routines on the Herne Bay Pier for several seasons around the turn of the century. During this time he trained his daughter Gladys and son Herbert. Offered facilities at Brighton's West Pier, he left Herne Bay, leaving son Herbert to perform regularly there.[7]

From Brighton he then moved to Clacton-on-Sea, and then in 1908 to Southport Pier, where he performed three dives daily until 1936, apart from a two-year absence during which he made a world tour.[7][9]

After Southport pier he took to diving at the Southport fair ground/pleasureland.[7]

Online postcard, photographic and film evidence shows that as well as being a regular diving performer at a given location (for example Southport Pier), he also made excursions to dive elsewhere around the country.[10][11][12]

Dives

Powsey's diving routines included the 'Terrible Cycle Dive',[13] which involved cycling off a ramp positioned above the pier deck. Another was the Sack Dive, in which he dived in a sack, and the 'Sensational Dive in Flames' in which he either was placed in a sack with cotton wool affixed and then doused with petrol set alight just before jumping, or dived into water with petrol on the surface that was set alight. He also dived from an 80-foot tower into a tank with four feet of water. In Southport he offered to dive from an aeroplane at 150 feet but was refused permission.[7]

Powsey made his final dive at the age of 75 in 1941 at a gala in Southport for the Soldiers', Sailors' and Airmen's Charity Funds, and retired at his home in Virginia Street, Southport.[7] He died in 1956.[7]

Recollections and legacy

Among the divers' spectators was a young A. J. P. Taylor, who was born in Southport and recalled Saturday visits to its Pleasureland with his father to watch a "deep sea diver called Professor Powsey, who performed spectacular dives which included one on a blazing bicycle".[14]

In 2014, Powsey's grandson Albert recollected watching the dives as a schoolboy, and recalled the following from when he was 11 or 12:

I remember watching and there being a huge crowd of people around. My grandfather would often dive into a small pool and people would wonder why they could not get closer. I remember he would call out "Are you ready, ladies and gentlemen?" Then, as he was about to leap you could hear the intake of breath as everyone gasped, almost as if they did not believe he was going to do it. Then he would plunge down into the water and it would splash out all around him – and that is why they couldn't stand any closer, because they would have got soaked.[15]

'Real photo' postcards of Professor Powsey and contemporary stunt divers are bought, sold and collected to this day, and can be searched and found on online auctions or articles.[16]

On Southport Pier there is a statue of Professor Powsey diving, astride a bicycle.

See also

References

  1. Robertson, Dan (29 September 2021). "Diving on the Piers". Brighton Museums. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  2. Jordan, Paul (1 July 2011). "Albert Huggins Heppell – 'Professor Cyril' (1866–1912)". Brighton Museums. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  3. "Professor Gautier's high dive from Hastings Pier, 1904". Hastings Pier. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  4. "Newspaper coverage of Professor Davenport's diving stunts". Hastings Pier. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  5. Bance, M. (1 September 2012). "Fun in the Water Aquatic Entertainers". ThePostMagazine.co.uk. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  6. The Lady Diver (1926). British Pathé. 13 April 2014.
  7. "Death of Famous High Diver". The World's Fair. 31 March 1956. Retrieved 1 December 2021.
  8. "Life Saving Awards Research Society".
  9. Brown, Andrew (29 August 2016). "14 bizarre facts about Southport Pier only local people would know". southportvisiter. Retrieved 2 December 2021.
  10. "West Cliff Regatta | Canterbury Amateur Film Archive". Canterbury Christ Church University. 27 May 2017. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  11. Farman, Keith. "Eastern Speedway" (PDF). Speedway Researcher: 37.
  12. Crow, Maurice (28 February 2018). Wembley: The History of the Iconic Twin Towers and the Events They Witnessed. Pen and Sword. ISBN 978-1-5267-0209-8.
  13. Corbin, Tianna (13 September 2020). "Fascinating pictures show Brighton's forgotten West Pier divers". Sussex Live. Retrieved 30 November 2021.
  14. Burk, Kathleen (2000). Troublemaker: The Life and History of A.J.P. Taylor. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. p. 6. ISBN 9780300087611.
  15. Koncienzcy, Rebecca (14 August 2014). "Professor Bert – the death defying, pier diving stuntman". Southport Visiter. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  16. OnFife Archives [@onfifearchives] (11 December 2020). "Our #ChristmasJumper for Day 11 of @ARAScot #ArchiveAdventCalendar is world-famous high diver Professor Bert Powsey. We don't know how this signed postcard came to be in our images of Thornton village but I'm delighted by it!" (Tweet) via Twitter.
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