Philippa June BakerMBE (born 12 June 1963), now known by her married name Philippa Baker-Hogan, is a former New Zealand rower and politician. She was the first New Zealand woman to win a gold medal at World Rowing Championships and won gold at world championships on two more occasions. She has twice represented New Zealand at the Olympics. She has received numerous awards for her rowing success and in 2012, she and fellow double sculler Brenda Lawson were inducted into the New Zealand Sports Hall of Fame. A trained radiographer, she manages her husband's medical practice. She has been a Whanganui District Health Board and Whanganui District Council member since 2004 and 2006, respectively, and was a mayoral candidate in 2010. She is a member of the New Zealand Labour Party.
Early life
Baker was born in Kaiapoi in 1963. Baker is one of eight children. Her siblings include Erin Baker (New Zealand triathlete) and Kathy and Maureen who were both national champions in swimming and aerobics.[1]
Sporting career
Philippa Baker was initially a triathlete before she switched to rowing. She initially rowed for Canterbury before changing to Cambridge, and took her inspiration from Stephanie Foster, the first New Zealand woman to win a medal at a rowing world championship.[2] In 1992, her coach took up a job with the Swiss rowing team. Baker decided on Dick Tonks as her new coach and thus, in 1993, she moved to Wanganui to join the Union Boat Club.[2][3] Baker has won a total of 19 or 21 national rowing titles during her career (sources differ).[2][3] In the 1987–88 season, she was the first rower to win both the lightweight and premier open single sculls title; it was to be 29 years before the achievement was repeated by Zoe McBride in 2017.[4]
Baker was the Waikato sports person of the year in 1989 and 1991; at the time, she was based in Cambridge.[3] For her 1991 gold medal, she won the 1991 supreme award at the Halberg Awards, and she was named New Zealand sportswoman of the year.[3][16] In the 1993 New Year Honours, both Baker and her sister Erin were appointed Members of the Order of the British Empire, for services to rowing and as a triathlete, respectively.[17] Baker was the Wanganui sports person of the year in 1993 and 1994.[3] Baker and Lawson were named New Zealand team of the year at the 1994 Halberg Awards, and they also won the supreme award.[18] In 2012, Baker and Lawson were inducted into the New Zealand Sports Hall of Fame, the first woman rowers to achieve this accolade.[2] The Sports Hall of Fame citation reads:
It was undoubtedly the dogged determination of Philippa Baker, and later Baker and Brenda Lawson, that set the benchmark, along with the coach they sought out in Wanganui, Richard Tonks, that cemented the arrival and force to be reckoned with—New Zealand women's rowing—as we see it today. They helped build the next significant generation of female rowers; a generation who have and are becoming household names.
Baker trained as a radiographer.[19] She is married to the osteopath Shaun Hogan and manages his practice in Whanganui.[20] Baker and Hogan met as he was one of the team doctors for the Union Boat Club.[21]
Baker was elected to the Whanganui District Health Board at the 2004 local elections.[19][22] In a by-election in 2006, she was elected as a councillor to Wanganui District in support of the then-mayor, Michael Laws.[19][23][24] Baker represents the Aramoho ward.[25] In the 2007 local elections, she was confirmed as a district councillor and health board member.[26] After Laws announced his retirement from the mayoralty at the 2010 local elections, Baker was one of the five mayoral candidates, plus she also stood for the district council and the health board. She came a distant fourth in the mayoral race, but was re-elected for the other two positions.[27] In the 2013 local elections, Baker successfully stood for the district council and health board positions again, but not for mayor, but declared that she was a likely mayoral candidate in 2016.[19]
As a district councillor, she caused controversy in 2011 with her comments over Palmerston North's bid when Whanganui was eliminated from the short-list for the proposed New Zealand Cycling Centre of Excellence;[28][29] in the end, Palmerston North missed out, too, and what has become known as the Avantidrome was built in Cambridge.[30]
Since 2009, she is a trustee of the Whanganui Community Foundation and has been the chair of the organisation since 2013.[31]
References
^Romanos, Joseph (2006). New Zealand's top 100 sports history-makers. Wellington: Trio Books. ISBN0958245584.