On this day: Born May 28, 1888: Jim
Thorpe, American athlete
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[May 27, 2020]
By Rory Carroll
(Reuters) - Jim Thorpe, a two-time
Olympic gold medallist and formidable American football and baseball
player, was one of the greatest U.S. athletes of all time but the
public often failed to recognise him as one of their own during his
lifetime.
Thorpe was born on May 28, 1888 (though some reports have him born
on May 22 while others put the year as 1887) on Sac and Fox Nation
land in Oklahoma to parents who were each half American Indian and
half Caucasian.
American Indians were not considered U.S. citizens when Thorpe,
already a two-time All-American running back under coach Pop Warner
at Carlisle, won the right to compete on the U.S. Team at the 1912
Games in Stockholm.
At the Games he took gold in the pentathlon and then in the final
event of the Games, the decathlon, set an Olympic record, leading
King Gustav V of Sweden to call him "the greatest athlete in the
world".
Yet when Thorpe returned to the United States he was barred from
some hotels and restaurants, especially in the South, while
travelling with his teams because of his race.
"He dealt with adversity his whole life," Justin Lenhart, museum
curator for the Oklahoma Sports Hall of Fame, told Reuters.
"Thorpe's legacy is perseverance. He wasn't a perfect man ... but he
also accomplished a lot under some really tough circumstances."
Despite the obstacles he faced in everyday life, Thorpe dazzled on
whatever field he played.
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In 1913, Thorpe signed with baseball's New York Giants and would go
on to play six MLB seasons, posting a career .252 batting average.
But his bigger impact came playing his favourite sport, American
football.
He joined the Canton Bulldogs in 1915 and led them to three
championships and was named an NFL All-Pro in 1923. He was later
inducted into the Hall of Fame for both collegiate and professional
football.
After his playing career, Thorpe struggled to find work during the
Great Depression and ended up going to Hollywood, where he played
bit parts in Westerns.
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In Hollywood he fought for equal pay for American Indians in the
entertainment industry and later helped those demanding a fair share
of revenues derived from oil and gas production on their tribal
lands.
Thorpe was later portrayed by Burt Lancaster in the 1951 film: Jim
Thorpe – All-American.
Later in life Thorpe struggled financially and with alcoholism. He
died in California in 1953 at age 65 of heart failure, leaving
behind his third wife, Patricia.
He fathered eight children.
(Reporting by Rory Carroll in Los Angeles; Editing by Peter
Rutherford)
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