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Dawn Fraser Dawn Fraser i(A82781 works by)
Born: Established: 1927 Sydney, New South Wales, ;
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 1 y separately published work icon What I Learned Along the Way Dawn Fraser , Chatswood : New Holland , 2013 6805867 2013 single work autobiography

''Our Dawn’ is a champion – only one of three swimmers to have won gold in the same event in three consecutive Olympics. In 1999, she was named the World’s Greatest Living Female Water Sports Champion.

She’s been a rule-breaker, a record-breaker and Australian of the Year – and she’s learned a thing or two along the way.

In this thoughtful, wise and funny collection of stories from her colourful life, Dawn Fraser shares personal gems of wisdom about living bravely, honestly and with passion. What I Have Learned Along The Way will appeal not only to Dawn’s legion of fan. (Publisher's blurb)

1 Dawn Dawn Fraser , Andrew Denton , 2008 single work prose
— Appears in: True Blue? : On Being Australian 2008; (p. 168-169)
1 4 y separately published work icon Dawn : One Hell of a Life Dawn Fraser , Sydney : Hodder Headline Australia , 2001 Z1125896 2001 single work autobiography

'Autobiography of a living icon of Australian sport. Fraser won swimming gold medals at the Olympic Games held in Melbourne (1956), Rome (1960) and Tokyo (1964), including 3 successive golds for the 100-metre freestyle. Tells of her childhood in working-class Sydney, family tragedies, her illustrious sporting career, and the impact of a ten-year ban following controversy at the Tokyo Olympics. Also traces Fraser's subsequent experiences as a single parent and a publican, and her come-back as an international ambassador for sport. Foreword by John Singleton. Includes colour and black-and-white photographs, bibliography, timeline and sporting achievements, and index. In 1985, the author became the first Australian to be inducted into the American Women's Sports Foundation Hall of Fame, and was also inducted into the Sport Australia Hall of Fame (and has served as its president). She was named World Female Swimmer of the Century in 1999, and received an Order of Australia in 1998 for her contributions to the environment, sport and disabled sports people.' (Publication summary)

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