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NAME: Wilma Glodean Rudolph

BIRTHDATE: June 23, 1940

BIRTHPLACE: Clarksville, Tennessee

EDUCATION: At first, Wilma was tutored at home by her family because she was crippled. She
first began school at the age of seven. In 1947, the schools of the Southern states were segregated
-- black students and white students had to attend separate schools. Even though blacks had to
pay the same taxes as whites, the schools for black students were usually poorly funded, so they
were less likely to have adequate books, teachers, classrooms, or equipment.

In junior high, Wilma followed her older sister Yolanda's example and joined the basketball team.
The coach, Clinton Gray, didn't put her in a single game for three years. Finally, in her sophomore
year, she became the starting guard. During the state basketball tournament, she was spotted by
Ed Temple, the coach for the famous Tigerbells, the women's track team at Tennessee State
University. Because Burt High School didn't have the funding for a track team, coach Temple
invited Wilma to Tennessee State for a summer sports camp.

After graduating from high school, Wilma received a full scholarship to Tennessee State. Because
of all the celebrity she received from her track career, she took a year off from her studies to make
appearances and compete in international track events. She returned and received a Bachelor's
degree in education, graduating in 1963.

FAMILY BACKGROUND: Wilma Rudolph was born into a large family -- she was the 20th of
22 children! Her parents, Ed and Blanche Rudolph, were honest, hardworking people, but were
very poor. Mr. Rudolph worked as a railroad porter and handyman. Mrs. Rudolph did cooking,
laundry and housecleaning for wealthy white families.

In 1940 millions of Americans were poor -- our of work and homeless because of the Great
Depression. The Rudolphs managed to make ends meet by doing things like making the girls'
dresses out of flour sacks.

Wilma was born prematurely and weighed only 4.5 pounds. Again, because of racial segregation,
she and her mother were not permitted to be cared for at the local hospital. It was for whites only.
There was only one black doctor in Clarksville, and the Rudolph's budget was tight, so Wilma's
mother spent the next several years nursing Wilma through one illness after another: measles,
mumps, scarlet fever, chicken pox and double pneumonia. But, she had to be taken to the doctor
when it was discovered that her left leg and foot were becoming weak and deformed. She was told
she had polio, a crippling disease that had no cure. The doctor told Mrs. Rudolph that Wilma
would never walk. But Mrs. Rudolph would not give up on Wilma. She found out that she could be
treated at Meharry Hospital, the black medical college of Fisk University in Nashville. Even
though it was 50 miles away, Wilma's mother took her there twice a week for two years, until she
was able to walk with the aid of a metal leg brace. Then the doctors taught Mrs. Rudolph how to
do the physical therapy exercises at home. All of her brothers and sisters helped too, and they did
everything to encourage her to be strong and work hard at getting well. Finally, by age 12, she
could walk normally, without the crutches, brace, or corrective shoes. It was then that she decided
to become an athlete.

In 1963, Wilma married her high school sweetheart, Robert Eldridge, with whom she had four
children: Yolanda (1958), Djuanna (1964), Robert Jr. (1965), and Xurry (1971). They later
divorced.
DESCRIPTION OF ACCOMPLISHMENTS: Wilma Rudolph's life is a story of achieving against
the odds. Her first accomplishments were to stay alive and get well!

In high school, she became a basketball star first, who set state records for scoring and led her
team to a state championship. Then she became a track star, going to her first Olympic Games in
1956 at the age of 16. She won a bronze medal in the 4x4 relay.

On September 7th, 1960, in Rome, Wilma became the first American woman to win 3 gold medals
in the Olympics. She won the 100-meter dash, the 200-meter dash, and ran the anchor on the
400-meter relay team.

This achievement led her to become one of the most celebrated female athletes of all time. In
addition, her celebrity caused gender barriers to be broken in previously all-male track and field
events.

AWARDS

• United Press Athlete of the Year 1960


• Associated Press Woman Athlete of the Year 1960
• James E. Sullivan Award for Good Sportsmanship 1961 *
• The Babe Zaharias Award 1962
• European Sportswriters' Sportsman of the Year *
• Christopher Columbus Award for Most Outstanding International Sports Personality
1960*
• The Penn Relays 1961 *
• New York Athletic Club Track Meet *
• The Millrose Games *
• Black Sports Hall of Fame 1980
• U.S. Olympic Hall of Fame 1983
• Vitalis Cup for Sports Excellence 1983
• Women's Sports Foundation Award 1984

* indicates first woman to receive the award/invitation

There were other honors as well. In 1963 she was selected to represent the U. S. State Department
as a Goodwill Ambassador at the Games of Friendship in Dakar, Senegal. Later that year she was
invited by Dr. Billy Graham to join the Baptist Christian Athletes in Japan.

There was one "first" accomplishment that was more special than any of the others, however. For
Wilma, the fact that she insisted that her homecoming parade in Clarksville, Tennessee be open to
everyone and not a segregated event as was the usual custom. Her victory parade was the first
racially integrated event ever held in the town. And that night, the banquet the townspeople held
in her honor, was the first time in Clarksville's history that blacks and whites had ever gathered
together for the same event. She went on to participate in protests in the city until the segregation
laws were struck down.

After retiring from track competition, Wilma returned to Clarksville to live. She taught at her old
school, Cobb Elementary, and was the track coach at her alma mater, Burt High School. She
replaced her old coach, Clinton Gray, who, tragically, had been killed in an auto accident. But
small town life proved to be too conservative after all her worldly experiences. She moved on to
coaching positions, first in Maine, and then, Indiana. She was invited to be the guest speaker at
dozens of schools and universities. She also went into broadcasting and became a sports
commentator on national television and the co-host of a network radio show.

In 1967 Vice-President Hubert Humphrey invited Wilma to participate in "Operation Champ," an


athletic outreach program for underprivileged youth in the ghettoes of 16 major cities. She started
her own non-profit organization, The Wilma Rudolph Foundation, to continue this kind of work.
The foundation provided free coaching in a variety of sports, and academic assistance and support
as well.

In 1977 she wrote her autobiography, simply titled, "Wilma." It was adapted as a television movie;
Wilma worked on it as a consultant.

In 1997, Governor Don Sundquist proclaimed June 23 as Wilma Rudolph Day in Tennessee.

DATE OF DEATH: Saturday, November 12, 1994, at the age of 54.

PLACE OF DEATH: Wilma died in her home in Nashville, Tennessee. She had been in and out
of hospitals for several months after brain cancer was diagnosed. Leroy Walker, president of the
U.S. Olympic Committee, said, "All of us recognize that this is obviously a tremendous loss.
Wilma was still very much involved with a number of Olympic programs. It's a tragic loss. She
was struck with an illness that, unfortunately, we can't do very much about."
Rudolph ran and world went wild
By M.B. Roberts
Special to ESPN.com

Wilma Rudolph was the first


American woman to win three gold
medals in one Olympics.
Wilma Rudolph was a sight to behold. At 5-foot-11 and 130 pounds, she was lightning
fast. Wilma watchers in the late 1950s and early '60s were admonished: don't blink. You
might miss her. And that would be a shame.

At the 1960 Rome Olympics, Rudolph became "the fastest woman in the world" and the
first American woman to win three gold medals in one Olympics. She won the 100- and
200-meter races and anchored the U.S. team to victory in the 4 x 100-meter relay,
breaking records along the way.

In the 100, she tied the world record of 11.3 seconds in the semifinals, then won the final
by three yards in 11.0. However, because of a 2.75-meter per second wind -- above the
acceptable limit of two meters per second -- she didn't receive credit for a world record.
In the 200, she broke the Olympic record in the opening heat in 23.2 seconds and won the
final in 24.0 seconds. In the relay, Rudolph, despite a poor baton pass, overtook
Germany's anchor leg, and the Americans, all women from Tennessee State, took the
gold in 44.5 seconds after setting a world record of 44.4 seconds in the semifinals.

Rudolph's Olympic performances (she also won a bronze medal at age 16 in the relay at
Melbourne in 1956) were spectacular. But it is the story of how she got there that makes
her accomplishments legendary.

She was born prematurely on June 23, 1940 in St. Bethlehem, Tenn. She weighed 4 1/2
pounds. The bulk of her childhood was spent in bed. She suffered from double
pneumonia, scarlet fever and later she contacted polio. After losing the use of her left leg,
she was fitted with metal leg braces when she was 6.
"I spent most of my time trying to figure out how to get them off," she said. "But when
you come from a large, wonderful family, there's always a way to achieve your goals."

Rudolph grew up in a poor family, the 20th of her father Ed's 22 children (from two
marriages). Although she never shared a home with all her siblings and half-siblings at
once, there were still plenty of brothers and sisters to serve as "lookouts" if she
mischievously removed her braces.

Her brothers and sisters took turns massaging her crippled leg every day. Once a week
her mother Blanche, a domestic worker, drove her 90 miles roundtrip to a Nashville
hospital for therapy.

Years of treatment and a determination to be a "normal kid" worked. Despite whooping


cough, measles and chicken pox, Rudolph was out of her leg braces at age 9 and soon
became a budding basketball star.

When she was 11, her brothers set up a basketball hoop in the yard. "After that," her
mother said, "it was basketball, basketball, basketball."

At the all-African-American Burt High School, Rudolph played on the girls' basketball
team, where her coach, C.C. Gray, gave her the nickname, "Skeeter."

"You're little, you're fast and you always get in my way," he said.

Rudolph became an all-state player, setting a state record of 49 points in one game. Then
Ed Temple came calling.

Temple, the Tennessee State track coach, asked Gray to form a girls' track team so he
could turn one of the forwards into a sprinter. And Wilma was the one.

She had natural ability she couldn't explain. "I don't know why I run so fast," she said. "I
just run."

She loved it enough to begin attending Temple's daily college practices while still in high
school. Temple's dedication was inspiring. He was a sociology professor at Tennessee
State and unpaid coach. He drove the team to meets in his own car and had the school
track, an unmarked and unsurfaced dirt oval, lined at his own expense.

But Temple was no soft touch. He made the girls run an extra lap for every minute they
were late to practice. Rudolph once overslept practice by 30 minutes and was made to run
30 extra laps. The next day she was sitting on the track 30 minutes early.

Unity and teamwork were Temple's passions. He reminded reporters after Rudolph
became famous that there were three other gold medalists on the platform with her during
the relay event. Almost the entire 1960 Olympic team, coached by Temple, came from
his Tennessee State team.
Rudolph didn't forget her teammates, either. She said her favorite event was the relay
because she got to stand on the platform with them. Regardless, the press and fans in
Rome flocked to her.

The newspapers called her "The Black Pearl" and "The Black Gazelle." After the
Olympics, when the team competed in Greece, England, Holland and Germany, it was
the charming, beautiful Rudolph, fans wanted to watch perform.

Sports Illustrated reported that mounted police had to keep back her admirers in Cologne.
In Berlin, fans stole her shoes then surrounded her bus and beat on it with their fists until
she waved.

"She's done more for her country than what the U.S. could have ZONE POLL
paid her for," Temple said.

She did more than promote her country. In her soft-spoken,


gracious manner, she paved the way for African-American
athletes, both men and women, who came later.

When she returned from Rome, Tennessee Gov. Buford Ellington,


who was elected as "an old-fashioned segregationist," planned to
head her welcome home celebration. Rudolph said she would not attend a segregated
event.

Rudolph's parade and banquet were the first integrated events in her hometown of
Clarksville.

Rudolph especially inspired young African-American female athletes. Most notable was
Florence Griffith Joyner, the next woman to win three gold medals in one Olympics
(1988).

"It was a great thrill for me to see," Rudolph said. "I thought I'd never get to see that.
Florence Griffith Joyner -- every time she ran, I ran."

Bob Kersee, husband and coach of Jackie Joyner-Kersee, said Rudolph was the greatest
influence for African-American women athletes that he knows. His wife went further.
"She was always in my corner," said Joyner-Kersee, winner of six Olympic medals. "If I
had a problem, I could call her at home. It was like talking to someone you knew for a
lifetime."

Rudolph touched Olympians and non-Olympians alike. She had four kids of her own and
in her post-Olympic years she worked as a track coach at Indiana's DePauw University
and served as a U.S. goodwill ambassador to French West Africa.

She said her greatest accomplishment was creating the Wilma Rudolph Foundation, a
not-for-profit, community-based amateur sports program.
"I tell them that the most important aspect is to be yourself and have confidence in
yourself," she said. "I remind them the triumph can't be had without the struggle."

Honors kept coming for Rudolph. She was voted into the Black Athletes Hall of Fame in
1973 and the National Track and Field Hall of Fame in 1974. NBC made a movie about
her life from her autobiography, "Wilma."

Rudolph died of brain cancer at age 54 on Nov. 12, 1994 in Nashville. Her extraordinary
calm and grace are what people remember most about her. Said Bill Mulliken, a 1960
Olympics teammate of Rudolph's: "She was beautiful, she was nice, and she was the
best."

Bill Mazeroski – 1960 Baseball World Series


1964 Summer Olympics – Tokyo, Japan

William Mervin Mills or "Billy" Mills (born June 30, 1938) is the second Native
American ever to win an Olympic gold medal. [1] He accomplished this feat in the 10,000
meter run at the 1964 Tokyo Olympics making him the only American ever to win the
Olympic gold in this event. A former United States Marine, Billy Mills is a member of
the Oglala Lakota (Sioux) Tribe. His 1964 victory is considered one of the greatest of
Olympic upsets.[2]

William Mervin Mills ("Billy") was born in Pine Ridge, South Dakota, a Native
American (Oglala Lakota (Sioux)), and was raised on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.
He was orphaned at the age of 13. Mills took up running while attending the Haskell
Institute, which is now known as Haskell Indian Nations University in Lawrence, Kansas.
Both a boxer and a runner in his youth, Mills gave up boxing to focus on running.

He attended the University of Kansas on an athletic scholarship. He was named a NCAA


All-America cross-country runner three times and in 1960 he won the individual title in
the Big Eight cross-country championship. The University of Kansas track team won the
1959 and 1960 outdoor national championships while Mills was on the team. After
graduating with a degree in Physical Education, Mills entered the United States Marine
Corps. He was a First Lieutenant in the Marine Corps Reserves when he competed in the
1964 Olympics.[2]

William "Billy" Mills (born June 30, 1938) is the only American ever to win an Olympic gold
medal in the 10,000 m run which he did at the 1964 Tokyo Olympics. That race has been called
the greatest upset in Olympic history. Athletics, also known, especially in American English, as
track and field or track and field athletics, is a collection of sport events, which can roughly be
divided into running, throwing, and jumping. ... The 1964 Summer Olympics, officially known as
the Games of the XVIII Olympiad, were held in 1964 in Tokyo, Japan. ... Billy Mills (born 1954) is
an Irish experimental poet. ... June 30 is the 181st day of the year (182nd in leap years) in the
Gregorian Calendar, with 184 days remaining. ... 1938 (MCMXXXVIII) was a common year
starting on Saturday (link will take you to calendar). ... For months before the Olympic Games,
runners relay the Olympic Flame from Olympia to the opening ceremony. ... The 1964 Summer
Olympics, officially known as the Games of the XVIII Olympiad, were held in 1964 in Tokyo,
Japan. ...

No American had ever won the 10,000 m before Billy Mills did it, and no one from the Western
Hemisphere has done it since.

Mills later set U.S. records for 10,000 m and the three mile run, and a world record for the six mile
run. A mile is a unit of distance (or, in physics terminology, length) currently defined as 5,280 feet,
1,760 yards, or 63,360 inches. ... A world record is the best performance in a certain discipline,
usually a sports event. ...

Billy Mills was inducted into the United States Track and Field Hall of Fame in 1976, and the
United States Olympic Hall of Fame in 1984. He is also in the National Distance Running Hall of
Fame, the Kansas Hall of Fame, the South Dakota Hall of Fame, the San Diego Hall of Fame,
and the National High School Hall of Fame. 1976 (MCMLXXVI) was a leap year starting on
Thursday (the link is to a full 1976 calendar). ... 1984 (MCMLXXXIV) was a leap year starting on
Sunday of the Gregorian calendar. ... The National Distance Running Hall of Fame was
established on July 11, 1998 to honor those who have contributed to the sport of distance
running. ...

Billy Mills is the subject of the 1984 film Running Brave, starring Robby Benson.

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