1904 St. Louis Olympics
In the 1904 Olympics he won a silver medal as a member of the American 4×50 yard freestyle relay team, consisting of
David Hammond,
Bill Tuttle, and
Hugo Goetz. A team from the New York Athletic Club won the event with a time of 2:04.6. The bronze medal was taken by a team from the Missouri Athletic Club. After the Olympics, on March, 25, 1905, in a meet against the Missouri Athletic Club in St. Louis, Thorne placed second in the 100-yard freestyle event against the Missouri Athletic Club's Marquard Schwartz, who swam a winning time of 1:07.8. The Missouri Club soundly won the meet.
Marriage In an elopement while he was a Sophomore at
Dartmouth College, he married R. Maymie Woods of Boston in Providence, Rhode Island on May 10, 1909. He met Miss Woods while studying business at a Boston area college she was attending. He returned to Dartmouth in 1909, as part of the class of 1911, and was a member of the DKE Fraternity, but returned to Chicago after marrying, and did not complete college. In his professional life, he worked for Chicago's Montgomery, Ward and Company, and in the field of aviation.
Post swimming careers In 1913, Raymond C. Thorne was the Superintendent of the Purchasing department of the Montgomery Ward in Kansas City, which had 2,300 employees. When the company's founder Aaron Montgomery Ward died on December 7, 1913, the Kansas City office closed on the day of the funeral. Raymond had a relative George R. Thorne, who was an original partner and brother-in-law of Aaron Montgomery Ward when the company was first founded. Ray C. Thorne worked for Montgomery Ward for many years, but moved to the West Coast before his death in 1921. In WWI, Thorne attended the School of Aerial Gunnery in New London, Connecticut, served with the Aviation Corps by 1917, and later served in the field of aviation. Raymond Thorne's mother married wealthy heir William Carpenter Camp in 1919 in Los Angeles, California. After the death of Raymond Thorne's father William C. Thorne, Raymond's mother became heir to William Thorne's estate valued at $2,500,000.
Death An automobile accident in Los Angeles on January 10, 1921, was the cause of Thorne's death at 33, when his new small car skidded and lost control on a wet street on Wilshire Boulevard. Thorne was a large stockholder in Montgomery, Ward, and Company. He was reported to have been driving fast, around midnight when his car lost control on an embankment. He was travelling to his very large newly built home in Beverley Hills, which he used in the winter months, when not residing in his home in Chicago. He was survived by his widow Mamie Thorne, who was in their home in Chicago, though she normally accompanied him on his winter trips to Southern California. Services for Mr. Thorne were held at 2 PM on January 15, at the Chapel of Rosehill Cemetery. He was buried at Rosehill Cemetery after services were conducted, and was survived by his widow Mayme Wood, his mother William C. Camp, his brother Gordon and a sister. ==See also==