Sarah Rodman Swift known to her worldwide following as “Sally Swift” passed away
on April 2, 2009. Sally was less than three weeks away from reaching her 96th
birthday. She was born on April 20, 1913 in Hingham, Massachusetts to Rodman
“Tod” Swift and Elizabeth Townsend Swift. She had one sister, Agnes, who died in
2004.
Sally Swift was known all over the world for her innovative
horse-riding methodology known as “Centered Riding.” She was the author of two
books Centered Riding and Centered Riding II – Further Explorations which,
together, have had sales of more than 860,000 copies worldwide in fifteen
different languages. Sally was the Founder of Centered Riding, Inc., which is
the non-profit organization that oversees the worldwide membership of
instructors and horse riders. Sally began Centered Riding at the age of 62 upon
her retirement from the Holstein Association in Brattleboro, Vt. Her first book,
Centered Riding was published in 1985.
In August of 2006, Sally Swift was
inducted into the United States Dressage Foundation’s Hall of Fame. In June of
2008, she was presented with the seventh annual Equine Industry Vision Award by
Pfizer Animal Health and American Horse Publications, an award which recognizes
innovation, ingenuity and service across the entire equine market.
At the age
of 7, Sally was diagnosed with scoliosis, lateral curvature of the spine. She
worked for many years with Mabel Ellsworth Todd, author of “The Thinking Body”
who believed that you could control parts of your body with your mind when you
couldn’t direct them with physical movement. Sally used concepts of her work
with Mabel Todd to develop the Four Basics of Centered Riding.
Sally was home
schooled until 7th grade and then attended Milton Academy in Milton, Mass., for
her 7th through 12th grade education. She graduated from Cornell University in
1947 with a B.S. in agriculture. She worked for 21 years at the Holstein
Association of America retiring in 1975.
Upon her retirement from the
Holstein Association, Sally began teaching her friends at the rate of $10 per
lesson and $50 per day for a clinic. She never advertised – her teachings spread
by word of mouth. Before long, she was going up and down the East coast with her
teachings. In the early 1980’s, when Sally was in her early seventies, she began
traveling to other locations in the U.S., Canada and eventually to Europe. In
1988, at the age of 75, she went to Australia to work alongside Richard Weis,
who was her first apprentice. Sally continued to be very active in Centered
Riding until her recent illness.
During the days of her illness, Sally was
surrounded by her friends and Centered Riding family who loved her. She was
closely attended to by her long-time friend, Lucile Bump, also of Brattleboro,
her devoted friend, Munson Hicks, her care-givers, and her special friend
Francois Lemaire de Ruffieu. Sally was well-loved by many, many people. Despite
her fame, breadth of knowledge and accomplishments, she greeted all who
journeyed down her path with warmth and humbleness.
Plans for a memorial
service in honor of Sally Swift are underway and will be announced on
www.centeredriding.org. In lieu of
flowers, donations in Sally’s memory can be made to Centered Riding, Inc. P.O.
Box 157, Perkiomenville, PA, The Wyndham County Humane Society, 916 W. River
Road, Brattleboro, VT 05301, The Heifer International Foundation, 1015 Louisiana
St., P.O. Box 727, Little Rock, AR 72203 or Amnesty International, 16th Floor, 5
Penn Plaza, New York, NY 1001
The world was made a better place by Sally
Swift, and the horse world and all who came to love her deeply mourn her
passing.