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Jim Thorpe

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008

Jim Thorpe (James Thorpe), 1888-1953, American athlete, b. near Prague, Okla. Thorpe was probably the greatest all-round male athlete the United States has ever produced. His mother, a Sac, named him Bright Path, and in 1907 he entered the Carlisle Indian School at Carlisle, Pa. He joined (1908) the Carlisle football team, coached by Glenn ( "Pop" ) Warner, and in 1911-12 Thorpe, playing left halfback, led Carlisle in startling upsets over such highly rated teams as Harvard, Army, and the Univ. of Pennsylvania. In 1912, Thorpe took part in the Olympic games held at Stockholm, Sweden, and performed magnificently. He won the broad jump and the 200-meter and 1,500-meter runs of the pentathlon; won the shot put, the 1,500-meter run, and the hurdle race of the decathlon; and was the runner-up in the other events of the pentathlon and decathlon. In 1913, however, Thorpe surrendered his awards, at the request of the Amateur Athletic Union and the insistence of Glenn Warner, to the Olympic headquarters in Switzerland; it had been discovered that Thorpe had played (1909-10) semiprofessional baseball with the Rocky Mount, N.C., team of the North Carolina Eastern League. The medals were restored posthumously in 1982. In 1919, Thorpe played briefly with the New York Giants baseball team. He afterward played professional football with the Canton (Ohio) Bulldogs and other teams and later became supervisor of recreation for the Chicago parks. Jim Thorpe, Pa., where he was buried in 1954, is named in his honor. With T. F. Collison, he wrote Jim Thorpe's History of the Olympics (1932).

Bibliography: See R. W. Wheeler, Jim Thorpe (1981).



Author not available, THORPE, JIM., The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008



The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press

Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research

Story of Jim Thorpe, Pa., includes greed, hope, tender moments and tragedy.(Originated from Knight-Ridder Newspapers)
Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service; 7/5/1996; Fitzpatrick, Frank; 1563 words ; ... they had taken money. Although other than Thorpe, I cannot think of another person who actually ... return a medal.'' After his death, some of Thorpe's eight children wanted the body returned ... wife, Patricia, preferred a memorial near Thorpe's boyhood home in Yale, Okla. As the parties ... Oklahoma ... Read more
Jim Thorpe's remains may be given Native burial.
Wind Speaker; 3/1/1996; John Lejins; 672 words ; Jim Thorpe's family would have the circle closed ... Oklahoma, he said. After the athletics, Jim Thorpe's life wasn't an easy one. When the glory ... going, gentle and funny, Thorpe said. Jim Thorpe became an alcoholic. The former champion ... Read more
Body and sold Jim Thorpe's 3rd wife auctioned his remains; his sons want proper burial
Chicago Sun-Times; 1/24/2001; MIlan Simonich; 1117 words ; ... blew it as far as Dad was concerned." After Jim Thorpe died in the Los Angeles suburb of Lomita ... Garden Grove Cemetery, only a mile or so from Thorpe's boyhood home. Many other Thorpes are buried there. But Patricia Askew Thorpe, who grew up in Louisville, Ky., and had ... and farmed him out ... Read more
Jim Thorpe lines up for visitors. (Pennsylvania town)
Saturday Evening Post; 3/1/1990; Forbes, Charlotte; 883 words ; JIM THORPE LINES UP FOR VISITORS No one came when ... town after a famous athlete. But now Jim Thorpe's scoring points with its potent lineup ... woodland. The tiny 19th-century village of Jim Thorpe, its chocolate-brown clock tower commanding ... Read more
HE NEVER SLEPT HERE : A SLEEPY PENNSYLVANIA TOWN HE DIDN'T KNOW IS JIM THORPE'S FINAL HOME.(SPORTS)
Daily News (Los Angeles, CA); 7/6/1996; 1274 words ; ... to return a medal.'' After his death, some of Thorpe's eight children wanted the body returned to ... third wife, Patricia, preferred a memorial near Thorpe's boyhood home in Yale, Okla. As the parties ... Oklahoma legislature approved $25,000 for a Thorpe memorial but Gov. William Murray vetoed the ... the ... Read more
Jim Thorpe remembered as one of a kind athlete.
Wind Speaker; 3/1/2000; Black, Joan; 1348 words ; ... parts in order to support his family, Jim Thorpe's daughter Grace says. But mainly she ... States Olympic Committee wants to ensure Jim Thorpe's name is not forgotten either, although ... most influential people. On Feb. 17, the Jim Thorpe Sports Association in Oklahoma City honored ... Read more
Years later, Jim Thorpe story still being written
The Topeka Capital-Journal; 8/15/2001; Capital-Journal; 735 words ; Jim Thorpe was born in Prague, Okla., in 1888; was ... California, and this time the movie, "Jim Thorpe, All- American," was made. His career ... merge with East Mauch Chunk and become Jim Thorpe, Pa. No kidding. The three surviving ... Read more
JIM THORPE'S 'VISIT' TO UNION IS UNCERTAIN.(NEWS)(Column)
The Kentucky Post (Covington, KY); 1/12/2000; 551 words ; ... replied Barlow. Ferguson's account would put Thorpe in Union in the early 1940s. Barlow figures Thorpe's visit was in the mid-1920s, before Ferguson ... during Prohibition - when taverns were illegal. Thorpe's daughter, Grace, who lives in Prague, Okla ... making public appearances,'' she said. While ... Read more
[ "Jim Thorpe is greatest of all time anywhere, but I do not get the Kansas connection." ]
The Topeka Capital-Journal; 8/18/2002; Ric Anderson Capital-Journal; 398 words ; "Jim Thorpe is greatest of all time anywhere, but ... by Kansas sports enthusiasts. Should Jim Thorpe be considered one of the state's greatest ... has a thin tie to the Sunflower State. "Jim Thorpe would have had my first vote under a ... Read more
[ The plot only thickened after Jim Thorpe's death ]
The Topeka Capital-Journal; 8/17/2001; Capital-Journal; 737 words ; The plot only thickened after Jim Thorpe's death Almost every town of any size has a ... Shawnee, Okla. The subject was the death of Jim Thorpe, world- renowned athlete and native Oklahoman ... Porter, oilman and publisher of the Shawnee News-Star, was the recognized leader of the group ... an ... Read more

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition ... Native Americans to be established off a reservation; it was founded in 1879 by Richard Henry Pratt . Its football team, led by Jim Thorpe and coached by Glenn Warner , brought the school nationwide attention. Pratt, who strenuously opposed the Indian Bureau's ... Read more

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