The 31-year-old Frenchman arrived at Quiberon, in north west France at 3.30pm (1430 GMT) on Friday afternoon exhausted after the 73-day journey.





The adventurer, who lives in Austin, Texas, USA, undertook the feat to raise around £100,000 for a Scottish-based cancer charity.

He began his record-setting attempt from Cape Cod, Massachusetts on 16 July.





Good to be back on dry land

She told BBC News 24: "He's tired and he's getting a little cold. He needs to get into a nice hot shower and dry clothes."

Mr Lecomte made one stop in his journey at the Azores in mid-Atlantic after suffering from exhaustion. He stayed for a week to recover and then completed the mammoth swim.

Ms Turner defended him against criticism for not having swum all the way.





"What Ben has done is to set the bar. He swam without a kick board, with his own arms across the North Atlantic in six to eight hour chunks of time."

She said he was highly motivated by his father's death from colon cancer in 1991.

"This was something deep inside of Ben that he needed to do for his father's memory - to help if he can in some small way get rid of the dreaded disease of cancer."

The airline marketing representative caught a strong tide and so made the last 25 mile swim ahead of time.

"We weren't expecting him until a bit later, but he caught a strong tide coming into shore. It was so exciting watching him arrive," said Ms Turner.

On his knees

Shortly after he came ashore Mr Lecomte was down on his knees. Not from exhaustion, but because he asked his girlfriend to marry him.





Lecomte: Faced sharks, storms and 20ft waves

In fact he had proposed as he entered the water off Massachusetts - but she told him to ask her again "on the other side".

Not content to wait, he asked her again on the phone from the Azores - but once more she coyly declined to answer.

Finally, when he came ashore in France, he asked a third time and she said, 'Yes'.

How he did it

Mr Lecomte achieved his remarkable feat by swimming for six hours a day beside his support boat and within a 25ft electromagnetic field called a 'protective ocean device' which protects him from sharks.

He trained for six years before undertaking the swim to raise money for the Association for International Cancer Research.

Mr Lecomte, who had to eat for four hours every day to replace more than 9,000 calories burned while swimming, battled through force eight storms, 45-60 knot winds and 10-20ft waves, in addition to tackling sea turtles, dolphins, jellyfish and incredibly cold water on the way to a place in the record books.

Other transatlantic records