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Why Are Jim Thorpe’s Olympic Records Still Not Recognized?

100 years ago, Jim Thorpe became the greatest American Olympian of all time, but not if you ask the IOC

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  • By Sally Jenkins
  • Smithsonian magazine, July-August 2012, Subscribe
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Jim Thorpe 1912 Stockholm Games
Jim Thorpe's epic performance in the 15 events that made up the pentathlon and decathlon at the 1912 Summer Games remains the most solid reflection we have of him. (Bettmann / Corbis)

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It’s been 100 years since Jim Thorpe dashed through the 1912 Summer Olympics in Stockholm, and we’re still chasing him. Greatest-evers are always hard to quantify, but Thorpe is especially so, a laconic, evasive passerby who defies Olympic idealizing. A breakfast of champions for Thorpe was no bowl of cereal. It was fried squirrel with creamed gravy after running all night in the woods at the heels of his dogs. Try catching up with that.

He was a reticent Sac and Fox Indian from the Oklahoma frontier, orphaned as a teenager and raised as a ward of government schools, uncomfortable in the public eye. When King Gustaf V of Sweden placed two gold medals around Thorpe’s neck for winning the Olympic pentathlon and decathlon and pronounced him the greatest athlete in the world, he famously muttered, “Thanks,” and ducked more illustrious social invitations to celebrate at a succession of hotel bars. “I didn’t wish to be gazed upon as a curiosity,” he said.

Thorpe’s epic performance in the 15 events that made up the pentathlon and decathlon at the 1912 Summer Games remains the most solid reflection we have of him. Yet even that has a somewhat shadowy aspect. The International Olympic Committee stripped his medals and struck his marks from the official record after learning that he had violated the rules of amateurism by playing minor-league baseball in 1909-10.

“Those Olympic records are the best proof that he was superb, and they aren’t official,” says Kate Buford, author of a new biography of Thorpe, Native American Son. “He’s like the phantom contender.”

Phantomness has left him open to stigma and errors. For instance, it was popularly believed that Thorpe was careless of his feats, a “lazy Indian” whose gifts were entirely bestowed by nature. But he was nonchalant only about celebrity, which he distrusted. “He was offhand, modest, casual about everything in the way of fame or eminence achieved,” recalled one of his teachers, the poet Marianne Moore.

In fact, Thorpe was a dedicated and highly trained athlete. “I may have had an aversion for work,” he said, “but I also had an aversion for getting beat.” He went to Stockholm with a motive: He wanted to marry his sweetheart, Iva Miller. Her family disapproved of the match, and Thorpe was out to prove that a man could make a good enough living at games to support a wife. Point proved: They would be married in 1913. Photographs of him at the time verify his seriousness of purpose, showing a physique he could only have earned with intense training. He was a ripped 185 pounds with a 42-inch chest, 32-inch waist and 24-inch thighs.

“Nobody was in his class,” says Olympic historian Bill Mallon. “If you look at old pictures of him he looks almost modern. He’s cut. He doesn’t look soft like the other guys did back then. He looks great.”

The physique was partly the product of hard labor in the wilderness of the Oklahoma Territory. By age 6, Thorpe could already shoot, ride, trap and accompany his father, Hiram, a horse breeder and bootlegger who would die of blood poisoning, on 30-mile treks stalking prey. Jim Thorpe was an expert wrangler and breaker of wild horses, which he studied for their beautiful economy of motion and tried to emulate. Clearly the outdoors taught him the famous looseness of movement so often mistaken for lassitude. “He moved like a breeze,” sportswriter Grantland Rice observed.


It’s been 100 years since Jim Thorpe dashed through the 1912 Summer Olympics in Stockholm, and we’re still chasing him. Greatest-evers are always hard to quantify, but Thorpe is especially so, a laconic, evasive passerby who defies Olympic idealizing. A breakfast of champions for Thorpe was no bowl of cereal. It was fried squirrel with creamed gravy after running all night in the woods at the heels of his dogs. Try catching up with that.

He was a reticent Sac and Fox Indian from the Oklahoma frontier, orphaned as a teenager and raised as a ward of government schools, uncomfortable in the public eye. When King Gustaf V of Sweden placed two gold medals around Thorpe’s neck for winning the Olympic pentathlon and decathlon and pronounced him the greatest athlete in the world, he famously muttered, “Thanks,” and ducked more illustrious social invitations to celebrate at a succession of hotel bars. “I didn’t wish to be gazed upon as a curiosity,” he said.

Thorpe’s epic performance in the 15 events that made up the pentathlon and decathlon at the 1912 Summer Games remains the most solid reflection we have of him. Yet even that has a somewhat shadowy aspect. The International Olympic Committee stripped his medals and struck his marks from the official record after learning that he had violated the rules of amateurism by playing minor-league baseball in 1909-10.

“Those Olympic records are the best proof that he was superb, and they aren’t official,” says Kate Buford, author of a new biography of Thorpe, Native American Son. “He’s like the phantom contender.”

Phantomness has left him open to stigma and errors. For instance, it was popularly believed that Thorpe was careless of his feats, a “lazy Indian” whose gifts were entirely bestowed by nature. But he was nonchalant only about celebrity, which he distrusted. “He was offhand, modest, casual about everything in the way of fame or eminence achieved,” recalled one of his teachers, the poet Marianne Moore.

In fact, Thorpe was a dedicated and highly trained athlete. “I may have had an aversion for work,” he said, “but I also had an aversion for getting beat.” He went to Stockholm with a motive: He wanted to marry his sweetheart, Iva Miller. Her family disapproved of the match, and Thorpe was out to prove that a man could make a good enough living at games to support a wife. Point proved: They would be married in 1913. Photographs of him at the time verify his seriousness of purpose, showing a physique he could only have earned with intense training. He was a ripped 185 pounds with a 42-inch chest, 32-inch waist and 24-inch thighs.

“Nobody was in his class,” says Olympic historian Bill Mallon. “If you look at old pictures of him he looks almost modern. He’s cut. He doesn’t look soft like the other guys did back then. He looks great.”

The physique was partly the product of hard labor in the wilderness of the Oklahoma Territory. By age 6, Thorpe could already shoot, ride, trap and accompany his father, Hiram, a horse breeder and bootlegger who would die of blood poisoning, on 30-mile treks stalking prey. Jim Thorpe was an expert wrangler and breaker of wild horses, which he studied for their beautiful economy of motion and tried to emulate. Clearly the outdoors taught him the famous looseness of movement so often mistaken for lassitude. “He moved like a breeze,” sportswriter Grantland Rice observed.

The discovery of Thorpe at the Carlisle Indian Industrial School in Pennsylvania, the government-run boarding institution for Native Americans he attended from 1904 to 1913, between bouts of truancy, is a well-worn story. In 1907 he was ambling across the campus when he saw some upperclassmen practicing the high jump. He was 5-foot-8, and the bar was set at 5-9. Thorpe asked if he could try—and jumped it in overalls and a hickory work shirt. The next morning Carlisle’s polymath of a football and track coach, Glenn “Pop” Warner, summoned Thorpe.

“Have I done anything wrong?” Thorpe asked.

“Son, you’ve only broken the school record in the high jump. That’s all.”

Carlisle, a hybrid trade school and academy, was devoted to the forcible cultural assimilation of American Indian children. Those who knew Thorpe as a schoolboy received the purest impression of him; before he was a champion at his peak, or a guarded celebrity, he was just a head ducker with an uncertain mouth who would have been happy to hunt and handle horses for the rest of his life. He hated the shut-in strictures of school, and he bolted every formal institution he attended.

Carlisle’s piano teacher, Verna Whistler, described Thorpe as guileless. “He had an open face, an honest look, eyes wide apart, a picture of frankness but not brilliance. He would trust anybody.” Moore was an unconventional young Bryn Mawr graduate when she went to work as a teacher at Carlisle. She taught typing, stenography and bookkeeping, basic courses designed to help students conduct their business in the white man’s world. She recalled Thorpe as “liked by all rather than venerated or idolized....[His] modesty, with top performance, was characteristic of him, and no back talk, I never saw him irascible, sour or primed for vengeance.” Moore noted that Thorpe “wrote a fine, even clerical hand—every character legible; every terminal curving up—consistent and generous.” His appearance on the gridiron, she said, was the “epitome of concentration, wary, with an effect of plenty in reserve.”

With students from 6 to college age, at its height Carlisle had an enrollment of no more than 1,000 pupils, yet on the collegiate playing fields it was the equal of the Ivy League powers, one of the more remarkable stories in American sports. This was partly thanks to Thorpe, who won renown in football, baseball, track and lacrosse, and also competed in hockey, handball, tennis, boxing and ballroom dancing. At track meets, Warner signed him up for six and seven events. Once, Thorpe single-handedly won a dual meet against Lafayette, taking first in the high hurdles, low hurdles, high jump, long jump, shot put and discus throw.

The result of all this varied activity was that he became highly practiced in two methods modern athletes now recognize as building blocks of performance: imitation and visualization. Thorpe studied other athletes as closely as he had once studied horses, borrowing their techniques. He was “always watching for a new motion which will benefit him,” Warner said.

Until 1912, Thorpe had never thrown a javelin or pole-vaulted. He was so inexperienced in the javelin that when he competed in the Eastern Olympic Trials in New York’s Celtic Park, he didn’t know he could take a running start. Instead he threw from a standing position with “the awkwardness of a novice,” according to a reporter. Nevertheless, he managed second place.

By the time Thorpe embarked for Stockholm aboard the ocean liner Finland with the rest of the U.S. Olympic contingent—among whom numbered a West Pointer named George Patton and a Hawaiian swimmer named Duke Kahanamoku—he was in the peak shape of his life and spent a good deal of his time tapering and visualizing. This led to the legend that he was merely a skylarker. Newspaperman Francis Albertanti of the New York Evening Mail saw Thorpe relaxing on a deck chair. “What are you doing, Jim, thinking of your Uncle Sitting Bull?” he asked.

“No, I’m practicing the long jump,” Thorpe replied. “I’ve just jumped 23 feet eight inches. I think that will win it.”

It’s a favorite game of sportswriters to argue the abstract question of which athletes from different eras would win in head-to-head competition. The numbers Thorpe posted in Stockholm give us a concrete answer: He would.

Thorpe began the Olympics by crushing the field in the now-defunct pentathlon, which consisted of five events in a single day. He placed first in four of them, dusting his competition in the 1,500-meter run by almost five seconds.

A week later the three-day decathlon competition began in a pouring rain. Thorpe opened the event by splashing down the track in the 100-meter dash in 11.2 seconds—a time not equaled at the Olympics until 1948.

On the second day, Thorpe’s shoes were missing. Warner hastily put together a mismatched pair in time for the high jump, which Thorpe won. Later that afternoon came one of his favorite events, the 110-meter hurdles. Thorpe blistered the track in 15.6 seconds, again quicker than Bob Mathias would run it in ’48.

On the final day of competition, Thorpe placed third and fourth in the events in which he was most inexperienced, the pole vault and javelin. Then came the very last event, the 1,500-meter run. The metric mile was a leg-burning monster that came after nine other events over two days. And he was still in mismatched shoes.

Thorpe left cinders in the faces of his competitors. He ran it in 4 minutes 40.1 seconds. Faster than anyone in 1948. Faster than anyone in 1952. Faster than anyone in 1960—when he would have beaten Rafer Johnson by nine seconds. No Olympic decathlete, in fact, could beat Thorpe’s time until 1972. As Neely Tucker of the Washington Post pointed out, even today’s reigning gold medalist in the decathlon, Bryan Clay, would beat Thorpe by only a second.

Thorpe’s overall winning total of 8,412.95 points (of a possible 10,000) was better than the second-place finisher, Swede Hugo Wieslander, by 688. No one would beat his score for another four Olympics.

Mallon, co-founder of the International Society of Olympic Historians, who has served as a consultant statistician to the IOC, believes that Thorpe’s 1912 performances establish him as “the greatest athlete of all time. Still. To me, it’s not even a question.” Mallon points out that Thorpe was number one in four Olympic events in 1912 and placed in the top ten in two more—a feat no modern athlete has accomplished, not even the sprinter and long-jumper Carl Lewis, who won nine Olympic gold medals between 1984 and 1996. “People just don’t do that,” Mallon says.

The Olympics weren’t the only highlights of 1912 for Thorpe. He returned to lead Carlisle’s football team to a 12-1-1 record, running for 1,869 yards on 191 attempts—more yards in a season than O.J. Simpson would run for USC in 1968. And that total doesn’t include yardage from two games Thorpe played in. It’s possible that, among the things Thorpe did in 1912, he was college football’s first 2,000-yard rusher.

Numbers like those are the ghostly outline of Thorpe’s athleticism; they burn through time and make him vivid. Without them, myth and hyperbole replace genuine awe over his feats, and so does pity at his deterioration from superstar to disgraced hero. The Olympic champion would become a barnstormer—major-league baseball player, co-founder of the National Football League and even pro basketball player—before winding up a stunt performer and Hollywood character actor. In his later life Thorpe struggled to meet financial obligations to his seven children and two ex-wives, especially during the Great Depression. He worked as a security guard, construction worker and ditch digger, among other things. When he contracted lip cancer in 1951 he sought charity treatment from a Philadelphia hospital, which led his opportunistic third wife, Patricia, to claim weepingly at a press conference that they were destitute. “We’re broke. Jim has nothing but his name and his memories. He has spent money on his own people and given it away. He has often been exploited.” Despite Patricia’s claims, however, they weren’t impoverished; Thorpe hustled tirelessly on the lecture circuit, and they lived in a modest but comfortable trailer home in suburban Lomita, California. He died there of heart failure in 1953 at age 64.

The IOC’s decision in 1912 to strip Thorpe’s medals and strike out his records was not just intended to punish him for violating the elitist Victorian codes of amateurism. It was also intended to obscure him—and to a certain extent it succeeded.

Thorpe’s public reserve didn’t help his cause. He refused to campaign for his reputation, or to fight for his Olympic medals. “I won ’em, and I know I won ’em,” he told his daughter Grace Thorpe. On another occasion he said, “I played with the heart of an amateur—for the pure hell of it.”

It’s an astonishing fact that the greatest athlete in American history would not appear on a Wheaties box, the ratification of champions, until 2001, and only after a tireless letter-writing campaign.

Here’s another fact: Thorpe’s Olympic victories still have not been properly reinstated in the official record.

It’s commonly believed that Thorpe at last received Olympic justice in October of 1982 when the IOC bowed to years of public pressure and delivered two replica medals to his family, announcing, “The name of James Thorpe will be added to the list of athletes who were crowned Olympic champions at the 1912 Games.” What’s less commonly known is that the IOC appended this small, mean sentence: “However, the official report for these Games will not be modified.”

In other words, the IOC refused even to acknowledge Thorpe’s results in the 15 events he competed in. To this day the Olympic record does not mention them. The IOC also refused to demote Wieslander and the other runners-up from their elevated medal status. Wieslander’s results stand as the official winning tally. Thorpe was merely a co-champion, with no numerical evidence of his overwhelming superiority. This is no small thing. It made Thorpe an asterisk, not a champion. It was lip service, not restitution.

On this 100-year anniversary of the Stockholm Games, there are several good reasons for the IOC to relent and fully recognize Thorpe as the sole champion that he was. Countless white athletes abused the amateurism rules and played minor-league ball with impunity. What’s more, the IOC did not follow its own rules for disqualification: Any objection to Thorpe’s status should have been raised within 30 days of the Games, and it was not. It was nice of the IOC to award replica medals to Thorpe’s family, but those are just souvenirs. After 100 years of phantom contending, Thorpe should enter the record as the incomparable that he was.


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The issue of Thorpe's medal's and records stripping by the IOC seems to have been incorrectly attributed to a racial(non-white) prejudice by the IOC. Her last paragraph alluding to "countless white atheletes that broke the amateurism rules with impunity" gives rise to this native american racial bias. Acually she has missed the true kernel of truth to the real history. The force behind the punishment and obscurity was Avery Brundage, one of the losing competitors in both the pentathlon and the decathlon. He became the Head of the US Olympic Comm. and eventually Head of the IOC and imposed strict amateur-only rules for decades. Only with his death was the 1982 IOC reinstatement to the Thorpe family made possible. Still missing are the original medals, and a Viking ship statue,and a jeweled chalice that the King of Sweden gave to Jim. The mystery of where these went should make for a great book!

Posted by Edward H. Martin on November 19,2012 | 06:50 PM

I'm confused by the statement that Thorpe's time in the 100 meters was not bested until 1948 as Thorpe came 3rd in the race ( co-third at that.) Both Jacobsson of Sweden and Eddie Mercer of the United States posted times of 11:00 seconds for equal first place. Also Vijoen of South Africa ran a time of 11:00 at the Amsterdam Olympics.

Posted by Colin Cox on September 22,2012 | 06:30 PM

Thank you, Sally Jenkins, for your poignant story about Jim Thorpe. I had known about his dominance at the 1912 Olympic Games, but I did not know how long it took for some of his achievements to be surpassed. Yes, it is time for the IOC to officially recognize his records, but, as implied in your closing paragraph, there is an unfortunate element of racism at work. That the IOC also seems to be inherently anti-American does not help, either. It would have been nice if NBC had shown some courage during its coverage of the Olympics to state Thorpe's case, but, alas, they did not.

Posted by John Dilyard on August 21,2012 | 07:42 PM

It is truly a pig headed IOC that has not succumbed to the initial mistake of 100 years ago,and reinstated the greatest Olympian to compete in any games ever what is rightfully due to him. Everyone knows his medals should be reinstated if only for the fact that the Russians for years competed with "professionals" who were given everything they needeed to live very comfortably but no NFL,NBA or what have you paychecks,so they were allowed, but Jim Thorpe possibly made $100 or so playing barnyard baseball so he's out.This is,and continues to be absolutely disgusting and it will forever taint the politically motivated Olympic games. Shame on you IOC and your stupid,unfair,racist,double-standard rules.

Posted by Mike Dennis on August 14,2012 | 10:06 PM

While there isn't a doubt in my mind Jim Thorpe is one of, if not the greatest athletes of all time, he did in fact break the rules that were in place in 1912. The rules have changed and today you'd be hard pressed to find a true amatuer in the olympics. I think its wrong to say just because professionals compete today, the IOC should let a professionals records and medals to reinstated from 100 years ago. Also to say the IOC is racist, Thorpe was only half native, he was also half white. If any commitee should be assumed of being racist, i would pick the USOC. The US in USOC has a proven track record of crimes against natives

Posted by steve on August 11,2012 | 01:01 PM

The IOC reinstated Jim Thorpe's medals in the 1980s. This article is just plain wrong. Just go to the official Olympic website and you can see his medals listed.

Posted by macgruder on August 9,2012 | 01:54 PM

I'm confused about the claims regarding Jim's 'amazing' 1500m Decathlon time run in 1912 of 4;40. Enrique Thompson of Argentina ran the 1500m in 4:32 in 1924. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Athletics_at_the_1924_Summer_Olympics_–_Men%27s_decathlon). In 1960 Markus Khama ran 1500m in the decathlon in 4:22. How this the claim "No Olympic decathlete, in fact, could beat Thorpe’s time until 1972" held? It is only true that his time was fast among eventual gold medalists.

Posted by Graydon Snider on August 9,2012 | 12:21 PM

I am so sick of Michael Phelps being called the greatest athlete in the world. What about Jim Thorpe. He was a Native American and of course white American does not want to give him credit. Give Jim Thorpe his props and shut up about Michael Phelps. I don't want to hear any more about Michael Phelps. The Olympic committee here in the US should give Jim Thorpe his props. It is never too late. Put it in the record books so everyone can read about it. Let all Americans be proud especially Native Americans. After all, Micheal Phelps only swam. Jim Thorpe did more, much more. Just remember that. Michael may be the greatest in swimming and that's all. Let's understand what we are saying.

Posted by katherine hunter on August 9,2012 | 08:15 AM

Today, August 8, 2012 comes word that Olympic "gold medalist" Cameron van der Burgh admitted he cheated to win. Nothing will happen to him. Can the racism be more blatant?

Posted by Mari on August 8,2012 | 09:41 PM

One big problem with this article. The IOC restored his medals in 1983 and you can see his result on the official homepage http://goo.gl/sDxVZ

Posted by Gazzer on August 7,2012 | 12:56 AM

Thought y'all might want to know that your content is being lifted by others, particularly this site: http://rblsportsnet.com/2012/07/04/jim-thorpes-raw-deal/ Just letting you know so you can address it if needed. Cheers.

Posted by DDP on August 2,2012 | 04:57 PM

Of course I only know what I read and hear, but long live the Jim Thorpe legacy. By winning both of the most demanding events he proved his right as the GREATEST.As a native American we are all proud and humbled by his ability.

Posted by Gerry Farrell on July 31,2012 | 10:44 PM

Many years later another Native American from Oklahoma named Edward "Wahoo" McDaniel would become an outstanding competitor in professional football, golf, and bass fishing. His greatest achievements, however, were in the world of professional wrestling. Little remembered today, he was a major star in the AFL during the mid 1960s, often referred to as "the hardest hitting man in football" once scoring 23 tackles in a single game. He passed away from complications of diabetes at the relatively early age of 63. Like Thorpe, McDaniel's race as well as his choice of sports overshadows his tremendous athletic ability.

Posted by Joe on July 31,2012 | 04:32 PM

IOC stripped Jim Thorpe of his Olympic medals and records due to some activity in the semiprofessional baseball [1909-10] but today pro athletes compete in basketball,tennis etc and do not have their medals,wins,records taken away from them. I do not understand the double standard. Jim Thorpe was the GREATEST ATHLETE ever and IOC should reinstate his medals and records in the books. No excuses or exceptions. The spirit of the Olympics I was under the understanding was to recognize the best athlete. I am not a Native American but I am a true American and feel justice should be given to those who earned our respect thru hard work,determiation and spirit. I for one American believe that JIM THORPE was and is the GREATEST ATHLETE EVER and should be recognized by all as such. For what it is worth -Thank you Jim Thorpe. Colleen

Posted by Colleen West on July 28,2012 | 11:31 AM

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