Beate Schramm (born 21 June 1966) is a German rower and Olympic gold medallist. Between 1986 and 1991, she won four senior world championship titles, after having previously twice been junior world champion. She won gold at the
1988 Seoul Olympics in the
quad sculls event for
East Germany, but missed the A final at the
1992 Barcelona Olympics in the
single sculls event when she competed for
Germany. She was national rowing champion a total of six times; four times in East Germany and twice German champion after the
reunification.
Early life
Schramm was born in
Leisnig, Saxony in 1966; at the time, this was in East Germany.[2]
Schramm also competed at the East German rowing championships. In 1983, she came second in the single sculls.[12] In 1984, she came third in the coxed quad sculls (in subsequent years, the quad sculls were held as a coxless event).[13] In 1985, she came second in both the single sculls and the quad sculls.[12][13] In 1986, she won her first national championship (in the double sculls with Sylvia Schwabe), and she came second in both the single sculls and the quad sculls.[12][13][14] In 1987, she came third in the quad sculls.[13] She gained her second national title in 1988 (in the quad sculls) and also came second in the double sculls.[13][14] She was national champion in the double sculls in both 1989 (with Jana Sorgers) and 1990 (with Kathrin Boron), and was also second in 1990 in the quad sculls.[13][14] In total, she was thus East German national rowing champion four times.
Schramm was twice awarded
Patriotic Order of Merit for her international rowing successes; first in 1986 and then in 1988.[15][16]
Germany
The same team won the subsequent
World Championships in 1991 in
Vienna, Austria, but this time they represented Germany, as the
German reunification had occurred in the meantime.[17] At the
1992 Summer Olympics in
Barcelona, Spain, Schramm competed in the
single sculls event. She came fourth in the semi-final, with only the first three progressing to the A final, but was more than 16 seconds behind the third-placed rower and opted not to start in the B final.[1][18]
Schramm continued to contest national championships after the reunification. In 1991, she was national champion in the double sculls (with Kathrin Boron) and in 1992, she was first in the single sculls.[19][20]
Post-rowing career
With the reunification of Germany, Schramm lost her army privileges and took on a half-time role as an economist with the
Ministry of Finance of the
federated state of
Brandenburg.[2] From 2004 to 2005, she was running the restaurant of the rowing club in
Mainz.[21][22] As of 2007, she worked as a criminal officer for the Police.