Walter Cornelius[a] (born Voldemārs Korņejevs,[citation needed] 11 April 1924 – 23 September 1983) was a Latvian strongman, stuntman and philanthropist who escaped the Iron Curtain and settled in Peterborough, England, where he gained notoriety by taking part in a range of bizarre stunts.[2][3]
Cornelius left Soviet-occupied Latvia and made it to the West by swimming[dubious – discuss] the Baltic Sea. During the swim he was fired at by guards, but despite being shot in the stomach, he made a successful escape. Settling in Peterborough, where he remained for the rest of his life, he worked as a lifeguard at the city's Lido.[4] He received naturalisation in 1971.[5]
Cornelius gained notoriety by exhibiting feats of great strength and stamina, as well as carrying out bizarre novelty stunts such as pushing a pea through the city with his nose, letting people use a sledgehammer to break a slab of concrete that he had on his head, and walking miles on his hands.[6] Perhaps his most famous stunt, as the "Daredevil Birdman", was his annual (unrealistic) attempt to fly across the River Nene by wearing a bird-suit and flapping huge wings attached to his arms. Although doomed to failure, each "flight attempt" gained publicity and drew large crowds.[4] In July 1967, he appeared on BBC's Blue Peter when John Noakes used a sledge hammer to break a concrete slab on Cornelius's head.[7]
A philanthropist in later life, while working at the Lido he would urge the more proficient swimmers to take up bodybuilding. In 2016, Peterborough Lido erected a silhouette of Cornelius as a weathercock on the swimming pool's weather vane.[3]
References
edit- ^ "No. 51084". The London Gazette. 9 October 1987. p. 12609.
- ^ "Anglia News: Strongman Demonstrations in Peterborough" (video). East Anglian film archive. University of East Anglia.
- ^ a b "Walter Cornelius: Life of daredevil 'birdman' remembered". BBC News. 11 October 2018.
- ^ a b "Walter Cornelius, Legend. 1923–1983". Friends of Peterborough Lido. 31 May 2018.
- ^ "No. 45500". The London Gazette. 21 October 1971. p. 11373.
- ^ "Walter Cornelius (1960)" (video). Peterborough Images Archive. September 2018.
- ^ Peterborough Standard 14 July 1967 p. 6