American Decades
Jesse: The Man Who Outran Hitler
Autobiography
By: Jesse Owens, with Paul Neimark
Date: 1978
Source: Owens, Jesse, with Paul Neimark. Jesse: The Man Who Outran Hitler. New York: Fawcett, 1978, 86–90.
About the Author: James Cleveland "Jesse" Owens (1913–1980) was born in Alabama and later moved with his family to Cleveland, Ohio, where he blossomed as a high school track star. He continued his success while attending Ohio State University, breaking a number of world records in competition. At the infamous 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin, he won four gold medals in track and field, becoming a symbol of American patriotism in the process. Owens died in Tucson, Arizona, in 1980.
Introduction
The athletic achievements of the 1936 Olympics were largely overshadowed by politics, as Germany's chancellor, Adolf Hitler, used the Games to showcase his ideology of Aryan superiority. Leni...
[The entire page is 2726 words long]
1930's Sports Primary Sources
- "Dizzy Dean's Day"
- Fifteen-Thirty: The Story of a Tennis Player
- Cincinnati Reds v. Brooklyn Dodgers, June 15, 1938, Box Score
- "Seabiscuit vs. War Admiral"
- "61,808 in Gehrig Tribute"
- "Sepia Stars Only Lukewarm Toward Campaign to Break Down Baseball Barriers"
- Wings on My Feet
- The Babe Ruth Story
- This Life I've Led: My Autobiography
- Golf Is My Game
- Maybe I'll Pitch Forever
- Jesse: The Man Who Outran Hitler
- Copyright Page
- Acknowledgments
