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Europe/Germany : 1936 Olympic Games and Jesse Owens

 

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Kiwi
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The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated. Mahatma Gandhi.

18 Jul 2013
10:54:01am
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Hi to all! I've got those 1936 sheets and stamp blocks on the Berlin Olympic games.
However, I was trying to search on internet to see if there were any US stamp issues
concerning Jesse Owens (between 1937 and 1941). So far I found none? My question is: were there any stamp issues on J. Owens during that period in the States? If not, What's the oldest issue concerning this athlete?I found many stamps, of course, on Jesse, but they are more recent.Thanks for your help.
Daniel.
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amsd
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Editor, Seal News; contributor, JuicyHeads

18 Jul 2013
11:14:09am
re: 1936 Olympic Games and Jesse Owens

the oldest US stamp to honor Jesse Owens was part of an Olympians issue from 1990 (2496); the other is from 1998, part of the CTC series, 3185i.

David

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Kiwi
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The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated. Mahatma Gandhi.

18 Jul 2013
11:28:28am
re: 1936 Olympic Games and Jesse Owens

Thanks for your answer David. What a surprise, nothing before that time then!!!

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Kiwi
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The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated. Mahatma Gandhi.

18 Jul 2013
11:53:52am
re: 1936 Olympic Games and Jesse Owens

I found one issue but a 1955 Dominican Republic issue on Jesse Owens.Maybe I'm wrong, but was it because he belonged to the black community? In those days things were very different for black people in the States as we all know.

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BobbyBarnhart
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They who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety. -Benjamin Franklin

18 Jul 2013
12:18:08pm
re: 1936 Olympic Games and Jesse Owens

The policy in the US at that time was to not issue a stamp featuring the likeness of a living person (that was not changed until very recently). However, there was obviously no taboo against honoring a living person (see Scott C10), but as far as I know, Lindbergh was the only one so honored.

Of course there is no question that blacks were second class citizens in the 1930s (and beyond, unfortunately) especially in the South with its "Jim Crow" laws and in inner city ghettos in New York, Boston, Chicago, etc.). I do not know why Lindbergh was singled out, but as he was the only person so honored (black, white, Latin, Asian, etc.), I presume that was it was not a racial thing.

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"The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing. -Edmund Burke"

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Kiwi
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The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated. Mahatma Gandhi.

18 Jul 2013
12:39:27pm
re: 1936 Olympic Games and Jesse Owens

OK Thanks. Didn't know that part of American sort of History. I've learnt something here. thanks a lot. It shows how much one can learn with stamps!

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cdj1122
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Silence in the face of adversity is the father of complicity and collusion, the first cousins of conspiracy..

19 Jul 2013
01:53:01am
re: 1936 Olympic Games and Jesse Owens

Dan, there is a "edit" icon at the bottom, right of your posts so you can slip back in and correct typos or mis-spellings. I use it all the time, sometimes several times as often I do not find all the problems, grammar, spellings, syntax and soon, even using a preview of my post.

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".... You may think you understood what you thought I said, but I'm not sure you realize that what you think you heard is not what I thought I meant. .... "
Kiwi
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The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated. Mahatma Gandhi.

19 Jul 2013
04:53:48am
re: 1936 Olympic Games and Jesse Owens

cdj, thanks so much for the hint concerning "edit". The real JESSE is back!Laughing

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tomiseksj
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19 Jul 2013
07:49:02pm
re: 1936 Olympic Games and Jesse Owens

Here is Jesse Owens' biography for those who might be interested (Source: JesseOwens.com):

"Jesse Owens, the son of a sharecropper and grandson of a slave, achieved what no Olympian before him had accomplished. His stunning achievement of four gold medals at the 1936 Olympic games in Berlin has made him the best remembered athlete in Olympic history.

The seventh child of Henry and Emma Alexander Owens was named James Cleveland when he was born in Alabama on September 12, 1913. "J.C.", as he was called, was nine when the family moved to Cleveland, Ohio, where his new schoolteacher gave him the name that was to become known around the world. The teacher was told "J.C." when she asked his name to enter in her roll book, but she thought he said "Jesse". The name stuck and he would be known as Jesse Owens for the rest of his life.

His promising athletic career began in 1928 in Cleveland, Ohio where he set Junior High School records by clearing 6 feet in the high jump, and leaping 22 feet 11 3/4 inches in the broad jump. During his high school days, he won all of the major track events, including the Ohio state championship three consecutive years. At the National Interscholastic meet in Chicago, during his senior year, he set a new high school world record by running the 100 yard dash in 9.4 seconds to tie the accepted world record, and he created a new high school world record in the 220 yard dash by running the distance in 20.7 seconds. A week earlier he had set a new world record in the broad jump by jumping 24 feet 11 3/4 inches. Owens' sensational high school track career resulted in him being recruited by dozens of colleges. Owens chose the Ohio State University, even though OSU could not offer a track scholarship at the time. He worked a number of jobs to support himself and his young wife, Ruth. He worked as a night elevator operator, a waiter, he pumped gas, worked in the library stacks, and served a stint as a page in the Ohio Statehouse, all of this in between practice and record setting on the field in intercollegiate competition.

Jesse gave the world a preview of things to come in Berlin, while at the Big Ten Championships in Ann Arbor on May 25, 1935, he set three world records and tied a fourth, all in a span of about 45 minutes. Jesse was uncertain as to whether he would be able to participate at all, as he was suffering from a sore back as a result from a fall down a flight of stairs. He convinced his coach to allow him to run the 100-yard dash as a test for his back, and amazingly Jesse recorded an official time of 9.4 seconds, once again tying the world record. Despite the pain, he then went on to participate in three other events, setting a world record in each event. In a span of 45 minutes, Jesse accomplished what many experts still feel is the greatest athletic feat in history...setting 3 world records and tying a fourth in four grueling track and field events.

His success at the 1935 Big Ten Championships gave him the confidence that he was ready to excel at the highest level. Jesse entered the 1936 Olympics, which were held in Nazi Germany amidst the belief by Hitler that the Games would support his belief that the German "Aryan" people were the dominant race. Jesse had different plans, as he became the first American track & field athlete to win four gold medals in a single Olympiad. This remarkable achievement stood unequaled until the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles, when American Carl Lewis matched Jesse's feat. Although others have gone on to win more gold medals than Jesse, he remains the best remembered Olympic athlete because he achieved what no Olympian before or since has accomplished. During a time of deep-rooted segregation, he not only discredited Hitler's master race theory, but also affirmed that individual excellence, rather than race or national origin, distinguishes one man from another.

Jesse Owens proved in Berlin and thereafter that he was a dreamer who could make the dreams of others come true, a speaker who could make the world listen and a man who held out hope to millions of young people. Throughout his life, he worked with youths, sharing of himself and the little material wealth that he had. In this way, Jesse Owens was equally the champion on the playground of the poorest neighborhoods as he was on the oval of the Olympic games.

Athletes didn't return from the Olympics to lucrative advertising and product endorsement campaigns in those days, and Owens supported his young family with a variety of jobs. One was of special significance - playground director in Cleveland. It was his first step into a lifetime of working with underprivileged youth, which gave him his greatest satisfaction. After relocating to Chicago, he devoted much of his time to underprivileged youth as a board member and former director of the Chicago Boys' Club.

Owens traveled widely in his post-Olympic days. He was an inspirational speaker, highly sought after to address youth groups, professional organizations, civic meetings, sports banquets, PTAs, church organizations, brotherhood and black history programs, as well as high school and college commencements and ceremonies. He was also a public relations representative and consultant to many corporations, including Atlantic Richfield, Ford and the United States Olympic Committee.

A complete list of the many awards and honors presented to Jesse Owens by groups around the world would fill dozens of pages. In 1976, Jesse was awarded the highest civilian honor in the United States when President Gerald Ford presented him with the Medal of Freedom in front of the members of the U.S. Montreal Olympic team in attendance. In February, 1979, he returned to the White House, where President Carter presented him with the Living Legend Award. On that occasion, President Carter said this about Jesse, "A young man who possibly didn't even realize the superb nature of his own capabilities went to the Olympics and performed in a way that I don't believe has ever been equaled since...and since this superb achievement, he has continued in his own dedicated but modest way to inspire others to reach for greatness".

Jesse Owens died from complications due to lung cancer on March 31, 1980 in Tucson, Arizona. Although words of sorrow, sympathy and admiration poured in from all over the world, perhaps President Carter said it best when he stated: "Perhaps no athlete better symbolized the human struggle against tyranny, poverty and racial bigotry. His personal triumphs as a world-class athlete and record holder were the prelude to a career devoted to helping others. His work with young athletes, as an unofficial ambassador overseas, and a spokesman for freedom are a rich legacy to his fellow Americans."

Jesse's spirit still lives in his three daughters, Gloria, Marlene, and Beverly, and their work with the Jesse Owens Foundation. The Foundation continues to carry on Jesse's legacy by providing financial assistance, support, and services to young individuals with untapped potential in order to develop their talents, broaden their horizons, and become better citizens. There is no doubt that Jesse would be proud.


Accomplishments & Awards


- Jesse set or tied national high school records in the 100 yard dash, 200-yard dash, and the long jump.
- After a stellar high school career, he attended Ohio State University.
- On May 25, 1935, at the Big Ten Conference Championships in Ann Arbor, Michigan, Owens broke three world records (long jump, 220-yard dash and 220-yard low hurdles) and tied a fourth (100-yard dash), all in a 45 minute span.
- In his junior year at Ohio State, Owens competed in 42 events and won them all, including four in the Big Ten Championships, four in the NCAA Championships, two in the AAU Championships and three at the Olympic Trials.
- In 1936, Jesse became the first American in Olympic Track and Field history to win four gold medals in a single Olympiad by winning four gold medals: 100 meter dash in 10.3 seconds (tying the world record), long jump with a jump of 26' 5 1/4" (Olympic record), 200 meter dash in 20.7 seconds (Olympic record), and 400 meter relay (first leg) in 39.8 seconds (Olympic and world record).
- In 1976, Jesse was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest award bestowed upon a civilian, by Gerald R. Ford.
- Owens was posthumously awarded the Congressional Gold Medal in 1990 by President George H.W. Bush."



NOTE: Any typos or grammatical errors within the quoted text should be addressed with the Luminary Group at JesseOwens.com. Winking

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sponthetrona2
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Keep Postal systems alive, buy stamps and mail often

20 Jul 2013
07:02:52pm
re: 1936 Olympic Games and Jesse Owens

While assigned to photograph the Tokyo Olympics in 1964 I had the great honor of meeting and lunching with the great human being, Jesse Owens. He still had his wit and personality in tact and I wish I would have asked for his autograph, discouraged by my employer at the time. He and Raefer Johnson let me interview them for some time, a great joy in my life experiences. Perry

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smaier
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Sally

21 Jul 2013
10:04:53am
re: 1936 Olympic Games and Jesse Owens

Had to google Rafer Johnson - wonder if he will be on a USA stamp someday. What an experience that interview must have been!

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Author/Postings

The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated. Mahatma Gandhi.
18 Jul 2013
10:54:01am

Image Not FoundImage Not FoundImage Not FoundImage Not Found
Hi to all! I've got those 1936 sheets and stamp blocks on the Berlin Olympic games.
However, I was trying to search on internet to see if there were any US stamp issues
concerning Jesse Owens (between 1937 and 1941). So far I found none? My question is: were there any stamp issues on J. Owens during that period in the States? If not, What's the oldest issue concerning this athlete?I found many stamps, of course, on Jesse, but they are more recent.Thanks for your help.
Daniel.

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this post
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amsd

Editor, Seal News; contributor, JuicyHeads
18 Jul 2013
11:14:09am

re: 1936 Olympic Games and Jesse Owens

the oldest US stamp to honor Jesse Owens was part of an Olympians issue from 1990 (2496); the other is from 1998, part of the CTC series, 3185i.

David

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this post

"Save the USPS, buy stamps; save the hobby, use commemoratives"

juicyheads.com/link. ...

The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated. Mahatma Gandhi.
18 Jul 2013
11:28:28am

re: 1936 Olympic Games and Jesse Owens

Thanks for your answer David. What a surprise, nothing before that time then!!!

Like
Login to Like
this post

The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated. Mahatma Gandhi.
18 Jul 2013
11:53:52am

re: 1936 Olympic Games and Jesse Owens

I found one issue but a 1955 Dominican Republic issue on Jesse Owens.Maybe I'm wrong, but was it because he belonged to the black community? In those days things were very different for black people in the States as we all know.

Like
Login to Like
this post

They who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety. -Benjamin Franklin
18 Jul 2013
12:18:08pm

re: 1936 Olympic Games and Jesse Owens

The policy in the US at that time was to not issue a stamp featuring the likeness of a living person (that was not changed until very recently). However, there was obviously no taboo against honoring a living person (see Scott C10), but as far as I know, Lindbergh was the only one so honored.

Of course there is no question that blacks were second class citizens in the 1930s (and beyond, unfortunately) especially in the South with its "Jim Crow" laws and in inner city ghettos in New York, Boston, Chicago, etc.). I do not know why Lindbergh was singled out, but as he was the only person so honored (black, white, Latin, Asian, etc.), I presume that was it was not a racial thing.

Like
Login to Like
this post

"The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing. -Edmund Burke"

www.bobbybarnhart.ne ...

The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated. Mahatma Gandhi.
18 Jul 2013
12:39:27pm

re: 1936 Olympic Games and Jesse Owens

OK Thanks. Didn't know that part of American sort of History. I've learnt something here. thanks a lot. It shows how much one can learn with stamps!

Like
Login to Like
this post

Silence in the face of adversity is the father of complicity and collusion, the first cousins of conspiracy..
19 Jul 2013
01:53:01am

re: 1936 Olympic Games and Jesse Owens

Dan, there is a "edit" icon at the bottom, right of your posts so you can slip back in and correct typos or mis-spellings. I use it all the time, sometimes several times as often I do not find all the problems, grammar, spellings, syntax and soon, even using a preview of my post.

Like
Login to Like
this post

".... You may think you understood what you thought I said, but I'm not sure you realize that what you think you heard is not what I thought I meant. .... "

The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated. Mahatma Gandhi.
19 Jul 2013
04:53:48am

re: 1936 Olympic Games and Jesse Owens

cdj, thanks so much for the hint concerning "edit". The real JESSE is back!Laughing

Like
Login to Like
this post
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tomiseksj

19 Jul 2013
07:49:02pm

re: 1936 Olympic Games and Jesse Owens

Here is Jesse Owens' biography for those who might be interested (Source: JesseOwens.com):

"Jesse Owens, the son of a sharecropper and grandson of a slave, achieved what no Olympian before him had accomplished. His stunning achievement of four gold medals at the 1936 Olympic games in Berlin has made him the best remembered athlete in Olympic history.

The seventh child of Henry and Emma Alexander Owens was named James Cleveland when he was born in Alabama on September 12, 1913. "J.C.", as he was called, was nine when the family moved to Cleveland, Ohio, where his new schoolteacher gave him the name that was to become known around the world. The teacher was told "J.C." when she asked his name to enter in her roll book, but she thought he said "Jesse". The name stuck and he would be known as Jesse Owens for the rest of his life.

His promising athletic career began in 1928 in Cleveland, Ohio where he set Junior High School records by clearing 6 feet in the high jump, and leaping 22 feet 11 3/4 inches in the broad jump. During his high school days, he won all of the major track events, including the Ohio state championship three consecutive years. At the National Interscholastic meet in Chicago, during his senior year, he set a new high school world record by running the 100 yard dash in 9.4 seconds to tie the accepted world record, and he created a new high school world record in the 220 yard dash by running the distance in 20.7 seconds. A week earlier he had set a new world record in the broad jump by jumping 24 feet 11 3/4 inches. Owens' sensational high school track career resulted in him being recruited by dozens of colleges. Owens chose the Ohio State University, even though OSU could not offer a track scholarship at the time. He worked a number of jobs to support himself and his young wife, Ruth. He worked as a night elevator operator, a waiter, he pumped gas, worked in the library stacks, and served a stint as a page in the Ohio Statehouse, all of this in between practice and record setting on the field in intercollegiate competition.

Jesse gave the world a preview of things to come in Berlin, while at the Big Ten Championships in Ann Arbor on May 25, 1935, he set three world records and tied a fourth, all in a span of about 45 minutes. Jesse was uncertain as to whether he would be able to participate at all, as he was suffering from a sore back as a result from a fall down a flight of stairs. He convinced his coach to allow him to run the 100-yard dash as a test for his back, and amazingly Jesse recorded an official time of 9.4 seconds, once again tying the world record. Despite the pain, he then went on to participate in three other events, setting a world record in each event. In a span of 45 minutes, Jesse accomplished what many experts still feel is the greatest athletic feat in history...setting 3 world records and tying a fourth in four grueling track and field events.

His success at the 1935 Big Ten Championships gave him the confidence that he was ready to excel at the highest level. Jesse entered the 1936 Olympics, which were held in Nazi Germany amidst the belief by Hitler that the Games would support his belief that the German "Aryan" people were the dominant race. Jesse had different plans, as he became the first American track & field athlete to win four gold medals in a single Olympiad. This remarkable achievement stood unequaled until the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles, when American Carl Lewis matched Jesse's feat. Although others have gone on to win more gold medals than Jesse, he remains the best remembered Olympic athlete because he achieved what no Olympian before or since has accomplished. During a time of deep-rooted segregation, he not only discredited Hitler's master race theory, but also affirmed that individual excellence, rather than race or national origin, distinguishes one man from another.

Jesse Owens proved in Berlin and thereafter that he was a dreamer who could make the dreams of others come true, a speaker who could make the world listen and a man who held out hope to millions of young people. Throughout his life, he worked with youths, sharing of himself and the little material wealth that he had. In this way, Jesse Owens was equally the champion on the playground of the poorest neighborhoods as he was on the oval of the Olympic games.

Athletes didn't return from the Olympics to lucrative advertising and product endorsement campaigns in those days, and Owens supported his young family with a variety of jobs. One was of special significance - playground director in Cleveland. It was his first step into a lifetime of working with underprivileged youth, which gave him his greatest satisfaction. After relocating to Chicago, he devoted much of his time to underprivileged youth as a board member and former director of the Chicago Boys' Club.

Owens traveled widely in his post-Olympic days. He was an inspirational speaker, highly sought after to address youth groups, professional organizations, civic meetings, sports banquets, PTAs, church organizations, brotherhood and black history programs, as well as high school and college commencements and ceremonies. He was also a public relations representative and consultant to many corporations, including Atlantic Richfield, Ford and the United States Olympic Committee.

A complete list of the many awards and honors presented to Jesse Owens by groups around the world would fill dozens of pages. In 1976, Jesse was awarded the highest civilian honor in the United States when President Gerald Ford presented him with the Medal of Freedom in front of the members of the U.S. Montreal Olympic team in attendance. In February, 1979, he returned to the White House, where President Carter presented him with the Living Legend Award. On that occasion, President Carter said this about Jesse, "A young man who possibly didn't even realize the superb nature of his own capabilities went to the Olympics and performed in a way that I don't believe has ever been equaled since...and since this superb achievement, he has continued in his own dedicated but modest way to inspire others to reach for greatness".

Jesse Owens died from complications due to lung cancer on March 31, 1980 in Tucson, Arizona. Although words of sorrow, sympathy and admiration poured in from all over the world, perhaps President Carter said it best when he stated: "Perhaps no athlete better symbolized the human struggle against tyranny, poverty and racial bigotry. His personal triumphs as a world-class athlete and record holder were the prelude to a career devoted to helping others. His work with young athletes, as an unofficial ambassador overseas, and a spokesman for freedom are a rich legacy to his fellow Americans."

Jesse's spirit still lives in his three daughters, Gloria, Marlene, and Beverly, and their work with the Jesse Owens Foundation. The Foundation continues to carry on Jesse's legacy by providing financial assistance, support, and services to young individuals with untapped potential in order to develop their talents, broaden their horizons, and become better citizens. There is no doubt that Jesse would be proud.


Accomplishments & Awards


- Jesse set or tied national high school records in the 100 yard dash, 200-yard dash, and the long jump.
- After a stellar high school career, he attended Ohio State University.
- On May 25, 1935, at the Big Ten Conference Championships in Ann Arbor, Michigan, Owens broke three world records (long jump, 220-yard dash and 220-yard low hurdles) and tied a fourth (100-yard dash), all in a 45 minute span.
- In his junior year at Ohio State, Owens competed in 42 events and won them all, including four in the Big Ten Championships, four in the NCAA Championships, two in the AAU Championships and three at the Olympic Trials.
- In 1936, Jesse became the first American in Olympic Track and Field history to win four gold medals in a single Olympiad by winning four gold medals: 100 meter dash in 10.3 seconds (tying the world record), long jump with a jump of 26' 5 1/4" (Olympic record), 200 meter dash in 20.7 seconds (Olympic record), and 400 meter relay (first leg) in 39.8 seconds (Olympic and world record).
- In 1976, Jesse was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest award bestowed upon a civilian, by Gerald R. Ford.
- Owens was posthumously awarded the Congressional Gold Medal in 1990 by President George H.W. Bush."



NOTE: Any typos or grammatical errors within the quoted text should be addressed with the Luminary Group at JesseOwens.com. Winking

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"APS Member #130102; SRS Member #1570"

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sponthetrona2

Keep Postal systems alive, buy stamps and mail often
20 Jul 2013
07:02:52pm

re: 1936 Olympic Games and Jesse Owens

While assigned to photograph the Tokyo Olympics in 1964 I had the great honor of meeting and lunching with the great human being, Jesse Owens. He still had his wit and personality in tact and I wish I would have asked for his autograph, discouraged by my employer at the time. He and Raefer Johnson let me interview them for some time, a great joy in my life experiences. Perry

Like
Login to Like
this post
Members Picture
smaier

Sally
21 Jul 2013
10:04:53am

re: 1936 Olympic Games and Jesse Owens

Had to google Rafer Johnson - wonder if he will be on a USA stamp someday. What an experience that interview must have been!

Like
Login to Like
this post
        

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