MarketJesse Owens
Company Profile

Jesse Owens

James Cleveland "Jesse" Owens was an American track and field athlete who made history at the 1936 Olympic Games by winning four gold medals, setting Olympic records in each event. He is widely regarded as one of the greatest athletes in track and field history.

Early life and education
Jesse Owens, originally known as J. C., was the youngest of ten children (three girls and seven boys) born to Henry Cleveland Owens (1881–1942), a sharecropper, and Mary Emma Fitzgerald (1876–1940) in Oakville, Alabama, on September 12, 1913. He was the grandson of a slave. In his younger years, Owens took different menial jobs in his spare time: he delivered groceries, loaded freight cars, and worked in a shoe repair shop while his father and older brother worked at a steel mill. During this period, Owens realized that he had a passion for running. Throughout his life, Owens attributed the success of his athletic career to the encouragement of Charles Riley, his junior high school track coach at Fairmount Junior High School. Since Owens worked after school, Riley allowed him to practice before school instead. Owens and Minnie Ruth Solomon (1915–2001) met at Fairmont Junior High School in Cleveland when he was 15 and she was 13. They dated steadily through high school. Ruth gave birth to their first daughter Gloria in 1932. They married on July 5, 1935, and had two more daughters together: Marlene, born in 1937, and Beverly, born in 1940. They remained married until his death in 1980. Owens first came to national attention when he was a student of East Technical High School in Cleveland; he equaled the world record of 9.4 seconds in the dash, broke the national high school record with 20.7 seconds in the 220 yards (201 m) dash, and long-jumped at the 1933 National High School Championship in Chicago. His 100-yard dash remained the national high school record until 1967, while his 200-yard dash held the national record for 20 years. ==Career==
Career
Ohio State University Owens entered Ohio State University in 1933 after his father found employment, which ensured that the family could be supported. Affectionately known as the "Buckeye Bullet" and under the coaching of Larry Snyder, Owens won a record eight individual NCAA championships, four each in 1935 and 1936. Though Owens enjoyed athletic success, he had to live off campus with other African-American athletes. When he traveled with the team, Owens was restricted to ordering carry-out or eating at "blacks-only" restaurants. Similarly, he had to stay at "blacks-only" hotels. Owens did not receive a scholarship for his efforts, so he continued to work part-time jobs to pay for school. Owens struggled as a student at Ohio State, and was placed on academic probation in 1936 and 1940. He dropped out of Ohio State in 1941 without a degree. On that day, Owens battled through a lower back injury and set five world records and tied a sixth in a span of 45 minutes from 3:15–4 p.m. during the Big Ten meet at Ferry Field in Ann Arbor, Michigan. He equaled the world record for the 100-yard dash (9.4 seconds) (not to be confused with the 100-meter dash), and set world records in the long jump (, a world record that would last for 25 years); sprint (20.3 seconds); and 220-yard low hurdles (22.6 seconds, becoming the first to break 23 seconds). Both 220-yard records had also beaten the metric records for 200 meters (flat and hurdles), which counted as two additional world records from the same performances. 1936 Big Ten Championships At the 1936 Big Ten Championships, Owens dominated the competition, winning the long jump, 100-yard dash, 220-yard dash, and 100-yard low hurdles. With these victories, he concluded his Big Ten Championship career undefeated—nine titles in nine events. Two years later, at his final appearance at the Outdoor Championships in 1936, he shattered the long jump world record once again with a remarkable jump of 26 feet, 8¼ inches. That same meet, he also set a new championship record in the 100 meters, clocking in at 10.4 seconds. Over the course of his career at these championships, Owens amassed a total of six gold medals—five in the long jump and one in the 100 meters. He was trying to dissuade Owens from taking part in the 1936 Summer Olympics in Nazi Germany, arguing that an African American should not promote a racist regime after what his race had suffered at the hands of racists in his own country. In the months prior to the Games, a movement gained momentum in favor of a boycott. Owens was convinced by the NAACP to declare: "If there are minorities in Germany who are being discriminated against, the United States should withdraw from the 1936 Olympics." Yet he and others eventually took part after Avery Brundage, president of the American Olympic Committee branded them "un-American agitators". In 1936, Owens and his United States teammates sailed on the SS Manhattan and arrived in Germany to compete at the Summer Olympics in Berlin. Just before the competitions, founder of Adidas athletic shoe company Adi Dassler visited Owens in the Olympic village and persuaded Owens to wear Gebrüder Dassler Schuhfabrik shoes; this was the first sponsorship for a male African American athlete. On August 3, Owens won the 100 m dash with a time of 10.3 seconds, defeating a teammate and a college friend On August 5, he won the 200 meter sprint with a time of 20.7 seconds, defeating fellow American teammate Mack Robinson (the older brother of Jackie Robinson). On August 9, Owens won his fourth gold medal in the 4 × 100 m sprint relay when head coach Lawson Robertson replaced Jewish-American sprinters Marty Glickman and Sam Stoller with Owens and Ralph Metcalfe, who teamed with Frank Wykoff and Foy Draper to set a world record of 39.8 seconds in the event. Owens had initially protested the last-minute switch, but assistant coach Dean Cromwell said to him, "You'll do as you are told." Owens's record-breaking performance of four gold medals was not equaled until Carl Lewis won gold medals in the same events at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. Owens had set the world record in the long jump with a leap of in 1935, the year before the Berlin Olympics, and this record stood for 25 years until it was broken in 1960 by countryman Ralph Boston. Coincidentally, Owens was a spectator at the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome when Boston took the gold medal in the long jump. The long-jump victory is documented, along with many other 1936 events, in the 1938 film Olympia by Leni Riefenstahl. On August 1, 1936, Nazi Germany's leader, Adolf Hitler, shook hands with the German victors only and then left the stadium. International Olympic Committee president Henri de Baillet-Latour insisted that Hitler greet every medalist or none at all. Hitler opted for the latter and skipped all further medal presentations. Owens ran his first race on Day 2 of the Olympics (August 2). That day, He ran in the first (10:30 a.m.) and second (3:00 p.m.) qualifying rounds for the 100-meter final. He tied the Olympic and world record in the first race and broke them in the second race, but the new time was not recognized, because it was wind-assisted. Later the same day, Owens's African-American team-mate Cornelius Johnson won gold in the high jump final (which began at 5:00 p.m.) with a new Olympic record of 2.03 meters. Hitler did not publicly congratulate any of the medal winners this time; even so, the communist New York City newspaper the Daily Worker claimed Hitler received all the track winners except Johnson and left the stadium as a "deliberate snub" after watching Johnson's winning jump. Hitler was subsequently accused of failing to acknowledge Owens (who won gold medals on August 3, 4 (two), and 9) or shake his hand. Owens responded to these claims at the time: Hitler had a certain time to come to the stadium and a certain time to leave. It happened he had to leave before the victory ceremony after the 100 meters [race began at 5:45 p.m.]. But before he left I was on my way to a broadcast and passed near his box. He waved at me and I waved back. I think it was bad taste to criticize the "man of the hour" in another country. In an article dated August 4, 1936, the African-American newspaper editor Robert L. Vann describes witnessing Hitler "salute" Owens for having won gold in the 100 m sprint (August 3): . (L–R) Naoto Tajima, Owens, Luz Long. In 2014, Eric Brown, British fighter pilot and test pilot, aged 17 in 1936 and later becoming the Fleet Air Arm's most decorated pilot, stated in a BBC documentary: "I actually witnessed Hitler shaking hands with Jesse Owens and congratulating him on what he had achieved". Additionally, an article in The Baltimore Sun in August 1936 reported that Hitler sent Owens a commemorative inscribed cabinet photograph of himself. Later, on October 15, 1936, Owens repeated this claim when he addressed an audience of African Americans at a Republican rally in Kansas City, remarking: "Hitler didn't snub me—it was our president who snubbed me. The president didn't even send me a telegram." Owens's success at the games caused consternation for Hitler, who was using them to show the world a resurgent Nazi Germany. He and other government officials had hoped that German athletes would dominate the games. Nazi minister Albert Speer wrote that Hitler "was highly annoyed by the series of triumphs by the marvelous colored American runner, Jesse Owens. People whose antecedents came from the jungle were primitive, Hitler said with a shrug; their physiques were stronger than those of civilized whites and hence should be excluded from future games." In Germany, Owens had been allowed to travel with and stay in the same hotels as whites, at a time when African Americans in many parts of the United States had to stay in segregated hotels that accommodated only blacks. When Owens returned to the United States, he was greeted in New York City by Mayor Fiorello La Guardia. During a Manhattan ticker-tape parade in his honor along Broadway's Canyon of Heroes, someone handed Owens a paper bag. Owens paid it little mind until the parade concluded. When he opened it up, he found that the bag contained $10,000 in cash (). Owens's wife Ruth later said: "And he [Owens] didn't know who was good enough to do a thing like that. And with all the excitement around, he didn't pick it up right away. He didn't pick it up until he got ready to get out of the car". After the parade, Owens was not permitted to enter through the main doors of the Waldorf Astoria New York and instead forced to travel up to the reception honoring him in a freight elevator. President Franklin D. Roosevelt (FDR) never invited Jesse Owens to the White House following his triumphs at the Olympic Games. When the Democrats bid for his support, Owens rejected those overtures: as a staunch Republican, he endorsed Alf Landon, Roosevelt's Republican opponent in the 1936 presidential race. Owens was employed to do campaign outreach for African American votes for Landon in the 1936 presidential election. ==Life after the Olympics==
Life after the Olympics
stamp Owens was quoted saying the secret behind his success was, "I let my feet spend as little time on the ground as possible. From the air, fast down, and from the ground, fast up." After the 1936 Olympics, Avery Brundage organized a grueling European exhibition tour to profit the AAU and USOC, both of which he led. Owens, exhausted but pressured to compete, ran multiple races across Europe with little rest, food, or support. Despite such treatment, Brundage continued booking events across Scandinavia. Owens, drained and frustrated, eventually refused to continue. Brundage retaliated by having Owens permanently suspended from amateur competition which immediately ended his career. Owens was angry and stated that "A fellow desires something for himself." As Ruth Owens later recalled, "That Avery Brundage feller tore a big hole inside Jesse." Owens argued that the racial discrimination he had faced throughout his athletic career, such as not being eligible for scholarships in college and therefore being unable to take classes between training and working to pay his way, meant he had to give up on amateur athletics in pursuit of financial gain elsewhere. After returning to the United States following his Olympic success, racism back home led to difficulty earning a living despite his international acclaim. Owens struggled to find work and took on menial jobs as a gas station attendant, playground janitor, and manager of a dry cleaning firm and at times resorted to racing against motorbikes, cars, trucks and horses for a cash prize. People say it was degrading for an Olympic champion to run against a horse, but what was I supposed to do? I had four gold medals, but you can't eat four gold medals. Jesse wasn't being treated like an Olympic gold medalist but instead, just like any other African American at that time. Another quote said "So I sold myself into a new kind of slavery. I was no longer a proud man who had won four Olympic gold medals. I was a spectacle, a freak who made his living by competing—dishonestly—against dumb animals." Owens was banned from attending amateur events to enhance his visibility, and soon discovered that commercial opportunities had almost completely dried up. In 1937, he briefly toured with a twelve-piece jazz band under contract with Consolidated Artists but found it unfulfilling. He also made appearances at baseball games and other events. Owens was involved politically and lent his support to the Republican Party and Alf Landon in the 1936 United States Presidential Election, saying that Adolf Hitler congratulated him but that he was snubbed by President Franklin Roosevelt after winning a gold medal. In 1942, Willis Ward—a friend and former competitor from the University of Michigan—who was then working at Ford Motor Company as Assistant Personnel Director, invited Owens to Detroit. Ward worked for the Ford Motor Company's "ad hoc civil rights division, serving as the liaison between black and white workers" and was an advocate for African American employees in the personnel department. Owens wound up replacing him, and remained with Ford until 1946. In the late 1940s, Owens moved his family to Chicago and opened his own public relations agency. In 1946, Owens collaborated with Abe Saperstein to establish the West Coast Negro Baseball League, where he served as Vice-President and owned the Portland (Oregon) Rosebuds franchise in Oregon. He toured with the Rosebuds, sometimes entertaining the audience in between doubleheader games by competing in races against horses. The WCBA disbanded after only two months. He tried to make a living as a sports promoter, essentially an entertainer. He would give local sprinters a 10- or 20-yard start and still beat them in the 100-yd (91-m) dash. He also challenged and defeated racehorses; as he revealed later, the trick was to race a high-strung Thoroughbred that would be frightened by the starter's shotgun and give him a bad jump. On the lack of opportunities, Owens added, "There was no television, no big advertising, no endorsements then. Not for a black man, anyway." During spring training in 1965, Owens was hired by the New York Mets as a running instructor. Owens ran a dry cleaning business and worked as a gas station attendant to earn a living, but he eventually filed for bankruptcy. In 1966, he was successfully prosecuted for tax evasion. At rock bottom, he was aided in beginning his rehabilitation. Republican President Dwight D. Eisenhower enlisted Owens as a goodwill ambassador in 1955 and sent the world-renowned track star to India, the Philippines, and Malaya to promote physical exercise as well as tout the cause of American freedom and economic opportunity in the developing world. He would continue his goodwill tours in the 1960s and 1970s. Although he lost his patronage job with the Illinois Youth Commission in 1960, Owens continued his product endorsement work for such corporations as Quaker Oats, Sears and Roebuck, and Johnson & Johnson. Owens traveled the world and spoke to companies such as the Ford Motor Company and stakeholders such as the United States Olympic Committee. In 1972, he and his wife retired to Arizona. Owens initially refused to support the black power salute by African-American sprinters Tommie Smith and John Carlos at the 1968 Summer Olympics. He told them: The black fist is a meaningless symbol. When you open it, you have nothing but fingers—weak, empty fingers. The only time the black fist has significance is when there's money inside. There's where the power lies. Four years later in his 1972 book I Have Changed, he revised his opinion: I realized now that militancy in the best sense of the word was the only answer where the black man was concerned, that any black man who wasn't a militant in 1970 was either blind or a coward. Owens traveled to Munich for the 1972 Summer Olympics as a special guest of the West German government, meeting West German Chancellor Willy Brandt and former boxer Max Schmeling. From 1974 to 1977, Owens served on the Boys Town Board of Directors, frequently meeting with students to share his life experiences and the challenges he overcame. A few months before his death, Owens had unsuccessfully tried to convince President Jimmy Carter to withdraw his demand that the United States boycott the 1980 Moscow Olympics in protest of the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. He argued that the Olympic ideal was supposed to be observed as a time-out from war and that it was above politics. Death Owens was a pack-a-day cigarette smoker for 35 years, starting at age 32. Beginning in December 1979, he was hospitalized on and off with an extremely aggressive and drug-resistant type of lung cancer. He died of the disease at age 66 in Tucson, Arizona, on March 31, 1980, with his wife and other family members at his bedside. He was buried next to the Lake of Memories at Oak Woods Cemetery in Chicago, near where his children and extended family still lived. The grave is inscribed: President Jimmy Carter issued a tribute to Owens, stating: "Perhaps no athlete better symbolized the human struggle against tyranny, poverty and racial bigotry." ==Legacy==
Legacy
, London Owens is widely considered one of the greatest athletes in the history of track and field. Over the course of his career, he earned nine Big Ten titles, eight NCAA titles, and six USA Track & Field titles. Several of his world records endured for decades, including his long jump record, which lasted 25 years, and his 100-meter dash record, which stood for 20. Following his athletic career, Owens experienced difficulties securing financial stability, a circumstance attributed in part to limited opportunities available to African American athletes during that period. Although he was celebrated for his Olympic accomplishments, he was not invited to the White House or formally recognized by the U.S. government at the time. Later in life, his contributions to sport and society were acknowledged through various honors, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1976 and the Congressional Gold Medal posthumously in 1990. "Giants like Jesse Owens show us why politics will never defeat the Olympic spirit. His character, his achievements have continued to inspire Americans as they did the whole world in 1936." — Gerald Ford Owens has been honored with schools, streets, and athletic facilities named after him—including Jesse Owens Memorial Stadium—and his life has inspired documentaries, books, and the biopic Race. Notably, the documentary Olympic Pride, American Prejudice also highlights his story as part of a broader examination of the 18 Black American athletes who competed in the 1936 Berlin Olympics. He is also a member of several halls of fame, including the U.S. Olympic and National Track and Field Hall of Fame. The dormitory that Owens occupied during the Berlin Olympics has been fully restored into a living museum, with pictures of his accomplishments at the games, and a letter (intercepted by the Gestapo) from a fan urging him not to shake hands with Hitler. ==Athletic achievements==
Athletic achievements
Sources: Fairmount Junior High School Note: Annual Cleveland Athletic Club Indoor Meet at Cleveland Public Hall • 3× High jump champion (1928–1930) • 40-yard low hurdles champion (1929) • 40-yard dash champion (1929) East Technical High School Note: Mansfield Interscholastic Relays • 2× Long jump champion (1932, 1933) • 100-yard dash champion (1933 tied H.S. record) • 220-yard dash champion (1933) • 4 × 220 yard relay champion (1933) Intraschool Meet in Cleveland (June 3, 1933) • 4 × 220 yard relay champion OHSAA State Championships • 2× 100-yard dash champion (1932, 1933) • 2× 220-yard dash champion (1932, 1933 H.S. record) • 2× 4 × 220-yard relay champion (1932, 1933) National High School Championships(June 17, 1933) • National Champions – East Technical HS100-yard dash champion (tied ) • 220-yard dash champion (H.S. record) • Long jump champion Ohio State Fair (August 31, 1933) • 100-yard dash champion College – Ohio State University Note: West Virginia Indoor Relays (February 10, 1934) • 60 metres champion (tied ) Freshman Dual Meet vs. Indiana (February 20, 1934) • 60-yard dash champion • Long jump champion Freshman Dual Meet vs. Michigan (February 26, 1934) • 60-yard dash champion (tied ) • Long jump champion Freshman Dual Meet vs. Chicago (March 3, 1934) • 60-yard dash champion • Long jump champion AAU Meet in Cleveland (March 24, 1934) • 50-yard dash champion (tied ) City of Cincinnati AAU Indoor Meet (March 31, 1934) • 50-yard dash champion (tied ) • Long jump champion Freshman Dual Meet vs. Purdue (May 4, 1934) • 100-yard dash champion • 220-yard dash champion • Long jump champion Freshman Dual Meet vs. Michigan (May 11, 1934) • 100-yard dash champion • 220-yard dash champion • Long jump champion Annual Intramural Meet (May 22, 1934) • 100-yard dash champion • 220-yard dash champion • Long jump champion Big Ten Freshman Championships (May 26, 1934) • 100-yard dash champion • 220-yard dash champion • Long jump champion Millrose Games (February 2, 1935) • 60-yard dash champion Dual Meet vs. Indiana (February 9, 1935) • 60-yard dash champion • Long jump champion Dual Meet vs. Illinois (February 15, 1935) • 60-yard dash champion • 70-yard high hurdles champion • 75-yard low hurdles champion • Long jump champion Dual Meet vs. Michigan (March 2, 1935) • 65-yard low hurdles champion St. Louis Relays (April 5, 1935) • 50-yard dash champion (tied ) Drake Relays (April 26, 1935) • Long jump champion () Dual Meet vs. Notre Dame (May 4, 1935) • 100-yard dash champion • 220-yard dash champion • Long jump champion Dual Meet vs. Michigan (May 11, 1935) • 100-yard dash champion • 220-yard dash champion • 220-yard low hurdles champion • Long jump champion Quad Meet vs. Wisconsin, Northwestern and Chicago (May 18, 1935) • 100-yard dash champion (tied ) • 220-yard dash champion • 220-yard low hurdles champion () • Long jump champion Dual Meet vs. USC (June 15, 1935) • 100-yard dash champion • 220-yard dash champion • 220-yard low hurdles champion • Long jump champion Butler Indoor Relays • 2× 60-yard dash champion (1935 , 1936) • 2× 60-yard low hurdles champion (1935, 1936) • Long jump champion (1936) Penn Relays (April 25, 1936) • 100 metres champion • Long jump champion • Sprint medley relay champion Dual Meet vs. Michigan (May 2, 1936) • 100-yard dash champion (tied ) • 220-yard dash champion • 220-yard low hurdles champion • Long jump champion Tri-Meet vs. Notre Dame and Michigan State (May 9, 1936) • 100-yard dash champion • 220-yard dash champion • 220-yard low hurdles champion • Long jump champion Dual Meet vs. Wisconsin (May 16, 1936) • 100-yard dash champion () • 220-yard dash champion • 220-yard low hurdles champion • Long jump champion Dual Meet vs. USC (June 13, 1936) • 100-yard dash champion (tied ) • 220-yard dash champion • 220-yard low hurdles champion • Long jump champion Central Intercollegiate Conference Championships (1935, 1936) • Central Intercollegiate Conference Champions – Ohio State University (1935) • 2× 100-yard dash champion (1935, 1936) • 2× 220-yard dash champion (1935, 1936) • 2× Long jump champion (1935, 1936) Big Ten Indoor Championships (March 9, 1935) • 60-yard dash champion (1935 ) Big Ten Outdoor Championships • 2× Long jump champion (1935 , 1936) • 2× 100-yard dash champion (1935 tied , 1936) • 2× 220-yard dash champion (1935 , 1936) • 2× 220-yard low hurdles champion (1935 , 1936) NCAA Championships • 2× Long jump champion (1935, 1936) • 100-yard dash champion (1935) • 100 metres champion (1936 ) • 2× 220-yard low hurdles champion (1935, 1936) • 220-yard dash champion (1935) • 200 metres champion (1936) USA Track and Field Championships USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships100 metres silver medalist (1934) • 2× 100 metres bronze medalist (1933, 1935) • Long jump silver medalist (1935) • 2× Long jump gold medalist (1934 , 1935 ) 1936 Olympics Olympic Trials100 metres champion200 metres champion () • Long jump champion Olympics100 metres gold medalist () • 200 metres gold medalist () • Long jump gold medalist () • 4 × 100 metres relay gold medalist () World records Sources: 50-yard dash • 1933: 5.2 seconds • February 19, 1939: Broken by Henry Norwood Ewell in 5.1 seconds 60-yard dash (indoor) • March 23, 1935: 6.09 seconds • February 28, 1959: Broken by Herb Carper in 6 seconds flat 60 metres dash (indoor) • February 23, 1935: 6.6 seconds • March 12, 1955: Broken by Heinz Fütterer in 6.5 seconds 100-yard dash • June 17, 1933: Tied in 9.4 seconds • May 15, 1948: Broken by Melvin E. Patton in 9.3 seconds 100 metres dash • June 20, 1936: 10.2 seconds • Broken by Jesse Owens on April 23, 1935 in 8.6 seconds 120-yard dash • Set by Howard Drew in 1914 with a time of 11.6 seconds • Broken by Jesse Owens on May 4, 1934 with a time of 11.5 seconds ==Awards and honors==
Awards and honors
Halls of FameHelms Athletic Foundation Hall of Fame – Inaugural Class of 1949 • Drake Relays Hall of Fame – Inaugural Class of 1959 • Alabama Sports Hall of Fame – Class of 1970 • OATCCC Hall of Fame – Class of 1970 • National Track and Field Hall of Fame – Inaugural Class of 1974 • Greater Cleveland Sports Hall of Fame – Inaugural Class of 1976 • Ohio State Athletics Hall of Fame – Inaugural Class of 1977 • NSMA Hall of Fame – Class of 1978 • U.S. Olympic Hall of Fame – Inaugural Class of 1983 • National High School Hall of Fame – Class of 1983 • Arizona Runner's Hall of Fame – Class of 2012 • National High School Track and Field Hall of Fame – Inaugural Class of 2018 • Collegiate Athlete Hall of Fame – Inaugural Class of 2022 • Ohio Sports Hall of Fame – Inaugural Class of 2024 • East Technical High School Hall of Fame – Honorary Inductee Awards and tributes • 1930: The city's athletic council voted him the most outstanding junior high athlete. • 1936: The Associated Press named Owens the most outstanding athlete of the Olympic Trials. • 1936: Four English oak saplings, one for each Olympic gold medal, from the German Olympic Committee, planted. One of the trees was planted at the University of Southern California, one at Rhodes High School in Cleveland, where he trained, and one is rumored to be on the Ohio State University campus but has yet to be identified. The fourth tree was at the home of Jesse Owens's mother but was removed when the house was demolished. • 1950: Voted the greatest black athlete of all time and the greatest track and field athlete for the first half of the century in a poll conducted by the Associated Press. • 1955: President Dwight D. Eisenhower honored Owens by naming him an "Ambassador of Sports". • October 18, 1955: Track and Field magazine names Owens all-time Track and Field athlete. • 1956: Owens was elected an honorary member of OSU's chapter of the Senior honor society Sphinx. • 1959: Owens returned to Des Moines and was celebrated at the Drake Relays as the most outstanding athlete to compete in the first 50 years of the competition. • October 1963: Track & Field News named Owens the athlete of the decade from 1931–1940. • 1965: The Ohio State Alumni Association presented Owens with the Alumni Citizenship Award. • 1970: Receives OSU Centennial Award. • 1971: The Ivory Coast named the street on which the U.S. embassy is located "Rue Jesse Owens". • 1972: The Ohio State University awarded Owens an honorary doctorate of athletic arts. • 1974: The NCAA presented Owens with the Theodore Roosevelt Award. • 1976: Awarded Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Gerald Ford. • 1976: Recipient of the Silver Olympic Order for his quadruple victory in the 1936 games and his defense of sport and the ethics of sport. • 1978: Receives the Roy Wilkins Award from the NAACP. • 1979: Awarded Living Legend Award by President Jimmy Carter. • 1979: The Spirit of America Festival honored Owens with the Audie Murphy Patriotism Award. • 1980: Asteroid newly discovered by Antonín Mrkos at the Kleť Observatory named 6758 Jesseowens. • 1980: Jesse Owens Academy in Chicago was named in his honor, but it closed in 2013 and merged with Gompers Elementary. Following public outcry, the merged school was once again named after him. • 1980: The Chicago Park District renamed Stony Island Park, Jesse Owens Park in his honor. • 1980: Jesse Owens Park, in Tucson, Arizona, is a center of local youth athletics there. • 1980: The Ohio Stadium track and University Recreation Centers were named after Owens. • 1981: USA Track and Field created the Jesse Owens Award which is given annually to the country's top track and field athlete. • 1981: The International Athletic Association has annually presented the Jesse Owens International Trophy, with the exception of a ten-year break from 2004 to 2014. • 1982: In Cleveland, Ohio, a statue of Owens in his Ohio State track suit was installed at Fort Huntington Park, west of the old Courthouse. • 1982: The Big Ten Athlete of the Year award is named in his honor. • 1983: Track and field stadium at Cal State Los Angeles is named in Owens's honor. • 1984: Street south of the Olympic Stadium in Berlin renamed Jesse-Owens-Allee • 1984: For his contribution to sports in Los Angeles, Owens was honored with a Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum "Court of Honor" plaque by the Coliseum commissioners. • 1984: Secondary school Jesse Owens Realschule/Oberschule in Lichtenberg, Berlin named for Owens. • March 28, 1990: Posthumously presented a Congressional Gold Medal by President George H. W. Bush. • 1990 and 1998: Two U.S. postage stamps have been issued to honor Owens, one in each year. • 1999: Ranked the sixth greatest North American athlete of the twentieth century and the highest-ranked in his sport by ESPN. • 1999: On the six-man shortlist for the BBC's Sports Personality of the Century. • 2001: Ohio State University dedicated Jesse Owens Memorial Stadium for track and field events. A sculpture honoring Owens occupies a place of honor in the esplanade leading to the rotunda entrance to Ohio Stadium. Owens competed for the Buckeyes on the track surrounding the football field that existed prior to the 2001 expansion of Ohio Stadium. The campus also houses three recreational centers for students and staff named in his honor. • 2002: Scholar Molefi Kete Asante listed Owens on his list of 100 Greatest African Americans. • 2005: Posthumously receives the IAAF Golden Order of Merit. • 2009: At the 2009 World Athletic Championships in Berlin, all members of the United States Track and Field team wore badges with "JO" on them to commemorate Owens's victories in the same stadium 73 years before. • 2009: The Drake Relays honored Owens as the Athlete of the Century. • 2010: Ohio Historical Society proposed Owens as a finalist from a statewide vote for inclusion in Statuary Hall at the United States Capitol. • November 15, 2010: The city of Cleveland renamed East Roadway, between Rockwell and Superior avenues in Public Square, Jesse Owens Way. • 2011: Ohio State University paid tribute to Owens by unveiling the Jesse Owens Memorial Statue outside the Jesse Owens Memorial Stadium. • 2011: In the Big Ten Icons countdown of the Top 50 Athletes on the Big Ten Network, Owens was ranked the third greatest athlete in Big Ten history. • 2012: 80,000 individual pixels in the audience seating area were used as a giant video screen to show footage of Owens running around the stadium in the London 2012 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, just after the Olympic cauldron had been lit. • 2012: The Jesse Owens Room, named in his honor at the NCAA campus in Indianapolis. • 2016: A portion of Highway 36 beginning at I-65 Exit 328 and ending at the Lawrence County line just west of Danville was renamed Jesse Owens Parkway. • 2016: The Jesse Owens Olympic Spirit Award is presented annually by the U.S. Olympic Committee to recognize those who have served as an inspiration in society. • 2017: Inaugural recipient of the AAU Gussie Crawford Lifetime Achievement Award. • July 2018: Ohio governor John Kasich dedicated the 75th state park Jesse Owens State Park. It is located on AEP reclaimed mining land south of Zanesville, OH. • 2021: A horticulturally propagated tree from the original Jesse Owens Olympic Oak was planted by the Rockefeller Park Lagoon. In 2022, another was planted beside the original tree at James Ford Rhodes High School. • 2023: The team at University Circle Inc. dedicated the Jesse Owens Olympic Oak Plaza in Rockefeller Park. • 2024: Posthumously received the Olympians for Life award by World Olympians Association. • 2024: Named the greatest U.S. Summer Olympic athlete of all time by The Sporting News. • 2024: A plaque in honor of Owens's track and field accomplishments on the Day of days is dedicated outside the University of Michigan's Ferry Field. • 2024: The former home of Owens was unanimously approved to become a Cleveland landmark. • Phoenix, Arizona named the Jesse Owens Medical Centre in his honor, as well as Jesse Owens Parkway. • LA County Parks and Recreation renamed Sportsman Park to Jesse Owens Park in his honor. • P.S. 26 in Brooklyn, New York is named the Jesse Owens School. Literature • 2006: The Book Thief by Markus Zusak is released, in which a character named Rudy Steiner idolizes Owens. • 2025: The book Jesse Owens by was awarded the Sportilivre Prize by the Voies Civiles think tank. == The Jesse Owens Rising Star Award ==
The Jesse Owens Rising Star Award
Beginning in 2024, a collaboration among the Owens family, the Jesse Owens Foundation, and the Wanda Diamond League will recognize two exceptional emerging top-performing male and female athletes, aged 23 or under. Each winner will receive a bronze statuette of Owens designed by Belgian sculptor Jan Desmarets. Two oak trees will also be planted in the host city in honor of the two winners. The inaugural awards ceremony was held in Brussels in September 2024, honoring 2023 World Championship silver medalist Diribe Welteji as the top female performer and 2024 Olympic gold medalist Letsile Tebogo as the top male performer. ==Filmography==
Filmography
Other • 2017: In Get Out, a film directed by Jordan Peele, the villainous patriarch Roman Armitage lost the qualification round for the 1936 Olympics to Owens, instigating his neurosurgical research and theft of young black men via brain transplant. • 2019: In Jojo Rabbit, directed by Taika Waititi, an incarnation of Adolf Hitler humorously refers to the character Elsa as "a little female Jewish Jesse Owens". • 2023: In The Boys in the Boat, Jyuddah Jaymes portrays Owens in a cameo as the University of Washington Eight rowing team enters the stadium with the United States Olympic team. ==Further reading==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com