BRONZE ICON
JIM THORPE, MAN OF BRONZE
At the 1912 Olympics in
Stockholm, Sweden, Native-American athlete Jim Thorpe electrified the world by
winning the gold medal for both the pentathlon and the decathlon. Swedish
King Gustav V spoke for the world when he said, "You, sir, are the
greatest athlete in the world. I would consider it an honor to shake your
hand." Thorpe was 24 years old at the time and his record for the
decathlon would not be broken until two decades later. Returning to New York he
was recognized as a national figure and honored with a ticker-tape parade.
His stature as an Olympic
athlete was short-lived, however. The Olympic committee unjustly stripped
Thorpe of his gold medals in 1913 after it was learned that he had received
some small payments for playing sport and thus was not a true
“amateur.” It should be noted that the Olympic committee
violated its own regulations of the time when it ruled against Jim Thorpe. Much
of this appears to have been instigated by his fellow team mate, Avery
Brundage, who later went on to become president of the International Olympic
Committee. It was not until 1982 the Olympic committee corrected its past
wrong and restored Thorpe’s name to the record books.
It is possible racism
played some part in the extreme reluctance to reinstate Thorpe who was of mixed
Native-American, French, and Irish ancestry. That was certainly not the
case with the public who enthusiastically admired him. Playing professionally
in both baseball and football, Jim Thorpe personified athletic competition from
the time he entered professional sports in 1913 until he retired in
1928. He was a superb athlete who weighed in at 190 lbs and stood
6’1” tall. He was gifted with extraordinary speed, stamina,
and agility. The public seized upon Jim Thorpe with a remarkable fervor.
Thorpe finally retired from
professional sports when he was 41 years old. Thorpe was the first
president of the American Professional Football Conference – an
organization that later evolved into the National Football League. In
1950 the Associated Press recognized him as the” greatest male athlete of
the half-century.” Later in 2001, the ABC television
network’s popular show “Wide World of Sports” selected him as
“Athlete of the Century.”
As successful as his
athletic career was, Jim Thorpe’s personal life was a tragedy. He
had problems with alcohol abuse and spent the last years of his life living in
poverty.
In 1932, Street & Smith
executive Henry Ralston along with Editor John Nanovic were cobbling together a
character that would later electrify the pulp magazine field and become known
as Doc Savage. Many of the physical abilities of Clark Savage, Jr. would
parallel those of Jim Thorpe. Doc Savage burst upon the scene as
“The Man of Bronze.” He was described as a living bronze
statue and his skin coloring was dark, dark, dark. Readers are informed
that Doc’s remarkable skin coloration comes from a permanent tan derived
from long hours spent under the tropical sun. Of course this is pure
malarkey as no tan is permanent and in fact Doc Savage himself comments on this
subject in one of his later adventures, “Birds of Death” in October
1941. “Doc Savage remarked thoughtfully, ‘It does not take long for
a man to lose a tan in civilization.’”
In the first adventure from
March 1933, author Lester Dent sent Doc Savage to the remote reaches of the
Central American republic of Hidalgo. There Clark Savage, Jr. claimed a
fabulous fortune in gold as his legacy from a Mayan tribe that had secluded
themselves in the fastness of the tropical mountains. The Mayan people
are described as having handsome features and a golden skin coloring.
Dent lays out a story pointing to Doc Savage's mixed racial heritage. In particular,
he emphasizes the similarities between King Chaac’s features and those of
Doc Savage, but he never directly states it as a fact. Logically it could
be reasonably assumed that Doc was some relation to the Mayans living in the
"Valley of the Vanished." But this was all happening some 75
years ago and the racial moirés of the country were not then what they
are now.
The first Doc Savage story,
The Man of Bronze, was built largely on an outline created by Ralston and
Nanovic. Dent fleshed out that story but Doc Savage’s outstanding
physical abilities were not completely apparent until the next adventure. The
Land of Terror was purely Dent’s doing and highlighted Doc Savage’s
extraordinary athletic ability. Doc easily jumps a fence with what
readers are told in a new world's record were he an athlete.
Dent puts Doc Savage
through a pulp version of the decathlon while tossing in parts of the modern
pentathlon. Doc runs faster than a horse; he fights with a sword; he
hurls a pike; he tosses a spar; he swims a lake and then wounds the pilot of a
plane with his expert pistol marksmanship; he uses a javelin. The story
explains that "Were Doc Savage to become a professional athlete, there is
no doubt in my mind but that he would be the wonder of all time.”
A further comment in the
fifth issue, “Pirate of the Pacific,” echoes the idea once again:
"One of the scientists at the banquet told me in entire seriousness that,
were Savage to enter athletic competition, his name would leap to the headlines
of every paper in the country.” Any reader of the times would instantly
associate Doc Savage’s fantastic athletic abilities with those of Jim
Thorpe. This allowed Street & Smith to capitalize on the popularity
of the popular athlete in the form of the bronze-skinned Doc Savage without
directly committing themselves to his ethnicity.
Lester Dent’s
notebook states “This thing started December 10, 1932.” When
Doc Savage first meets King Chaac we learn that Doc was to appear before him
upon the passage of twenty years. Going back twenty years from
Dent’s start date brings us to 1912 – the very same year Jim Thorpe
won the Pentathlon and the Decathlon and became the greatest athlete of the
century.
Jim Thorpe’s story
finally reached the big screen in 1951. Burt Lancaster played the Indian
athlete in “Jim Thorpe -- All-American.” The movie was
renamed for release in the United Kingdom as “Jim Thorpe – Man of Bronze.”
