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Cunningham Calls it a Career
The following is republished
with permission from
"This Week In KU History," a project of the KU Memorial
Unions.
April 20, 1940: Glenn Cunningham, the nation's most
popular Depression-era greatest track star, competes in his
final race at the Kansas Relays.
In January 1940, Glenn Cunningham announced over the radio
that the 1940 track season would be his last. He had "continued
in competition [for the] past two years," he asserted,
"with the hope of trying for [his] third successive Olympic
team" However, the onset of World War II had "made
the holding of the games impossible," and the man long
known as the "Kansas Flyer" had decided to hang
up his cleats.
The thirty-year old Elkhart, Kansas, native and KU graduate
had insinuated that he might retire for a number of years
prior to his January proclamation, so no one knew how seriously
to take it. As the 1940 season wore on, however, it became
apparent that the man who had been the world's greatest middle-distance
runner for the past decade had, in fact, finally resolved
to end his athletic career. A headline in the March 19, 1940,
edition of the Kansas City Journal bluntly declared "Cunningham
Is Sincere About Quitting." The accompanying article
suggested the Kansas Relays of that year would likely represent
his final competition. The cinder track of KU's Memorial Stadium,
which had seen Cunningham burst into the national limelight
eight years earlier, would thus host his finale.
Cunningham,
whom the press would later dub the "Iron Horse of Kansas"
and the "Elkhart Express," arrived on Mt. Oread
in 1930 as the greatest scholastic miler in history. During
his senior year in high school, he had set a new state record
for the mile of 4:28.3 at the state meet in Manhattan. In
July 1930, at the National Interscholastic Meet in Chicago,
he had set a new national record for high school runners by
posting a time of 4:24.7. Since NCAA rules prohibited freshmen
from competing in intercollegiate competitions, Cunningham
would have to wait until his sophomore year to begin what
would amount to one of the greatest careers of any KU track
star.
Although the Big Six Conference named him the outstanding
runner of the 1931 cross-country season, he would not truly
distinguish himself until his first outdoor track season the
following spring. Competing in the half-mile, mile, and two-mile
races, KU's star sophomore rolled through the 1932-conference
schedule undefeated. At the end of the season, he became the
first runner in conference history to win both the half-mile
and mile runs in the Big Six Championships before becoming
the University's first NCAA track champion by winning the
mile run at the National Intercollegiate Meet. That summer
he qualified for the 1932 Olympic team and at the Los Angeles
games finished fourth in 1,500-meter run.
By the start his junior year, Cunningham had grown into a
minor international celebrity. The Amateur Athlete published
an article about him in March 1933 in which former Jayhawk
track coach Brutus Hamilton praised the KU runner as "the
strongest miler ever to step on a track." The Kansas
junior, Hamilton prognosticated, would go on to "establish
some records before his running days [were] over that [would]
stand for some time to come." When Cunningham traveled
to Europe to compete in international track meets after successfully
defending his NCAA title in June 1933, Europeans flocked to
watch him race.
When he returned to Lawrence for his final year as a Jayhawk,
expectations for Cunningham transcended his capture of additional
championships. Students on Mount Oread and track fans around
the world fully expected Cunningham to establish a world record
in the mile run. In February 1934, on the boards of Madison
Square Garden's track, the "Kansas Flyer" obliged
these wishes when he set a new indoor record of 3:52.3 for
the 1,500-meter run. The following month at the Columbian
Mile in the same arena Cunningham impressed the cynical New
York press when he ran an indoor mile of 4:08.4, toppling
the indoor world record. Anticipation mounted that he would
shatter the outdoor mile record as well.
With the weight of enormous expectations on his back, Cunningham
managed to compile victory after victory during the spring
season, but the record for the outdoor mile remained elusive.
In April he disappointed the throngs of fans who had turned
out at the Kansas Relays "with the hope that [he] would
smash the world record on his home cinders." Nonetheless,
both he and his fans remained confident that he would soon
set a new mark. As the outdoor season wound to a close, he
again won the Big Six titles in the mile and half-mile runs
and then headed to the Princeton Relays, an invitational that
was to serve as a warm-up for the 1934 NCAA championships.
A KU graduate with one last chance to defend his NCAA title,
Cunningham found himself in Princeton, New Jersey, running
against two of his biggest rivals, Princeton's Bill Bonthron
and the University of Pennsylvania's Gene Venske. On June
16, 1934, on the same cinder track which had seen Jack Lovelock
set a world record the previous year, Cunningham defeated
Princeton's star miler by forty yards and established a new
world record of 4:06.7. When the race had finished, Cunningham
could lay claim to seven of the 13 fastest miles ever managed
by a human. (Ironically, however, he lost the NCAA title to
Bonthron the following week.)
In the fall of 1934, following a "running honeymoon
to the Orient " in which he and his bride "were
acclaimed by multitudes" much like the ones in Europe
that had hailed Cunningham the summer before, the "Iron
Horse of Kansas" returned the United States. He entered
graduate school at the University of Iowa to pursue a master's
degree in physical education. Predictably, he continued to
compete in Amateur Athletic Union meets. At the Knights of
Columbus games in March 1935, the "Kansas Flyer"
broke the world record for the 1,000-yard run. He capped the
season at the AAU championships where he crushed his own indoor
record for the 1,500-meter run by almost two seconds. Daniel
J. Ferris, national secretary for the AAU, reflected back
over the season and could only marvel at Cunningham's achievements.
Ultimately, the leading officer of the single most important
athletics organization of the day concluded that the former
Jayhawk "defie[d] all track tradition."
The great KU miler grew into something of a media darling
whom people admired as much for his character as for his accomplishments.
A particularly good sportsman who never denigrated the performances
of others, his humility endeared him to sports columnists.
One sportswriter of the time observed that what he and his
peers had "first liked about Cunningham was that he was
a great runner who didn't go around telling everyone that
he was." The fact that the former Jayhawk "never
made a practice," the columnist continued, "of criticizing
his opponents" stood him in even higher stead. His good
sportsmanship (coupled with his otherwise wholesome image
- he claimed never to have smoked or consumed either coffee
or alcohol) made him very popular with fans as well as journalists.
(In an era in which smoking was tolerated even in athletic
arenas, fans would dutifully extinguish their cigarettes and
forebear to light new ones out of respect for Cunningham while
he raced. In 1948, long after he had retired from running,
his celebrity and well-known antipathy towards alcohol made
him an excellent figurehead for the "Temperance Tornado,"
a movement that opposed the repeal of prohibition in Kansas.)
While Cunningham's moral character made him appealing, his
story of overcoming childhood adversity touched a particular
nerve throughout the United States. It had many of the elements
of a Horatio Alger novel, a standard American favorite most
any time, but especially resonant during the Great Depression-era
1930s. By 1933, many Americans were already familiar with
the account of a near fatal accident that had befallen the
NCAA mile champion in his youth. Indeed it was, perhaps, Cunningham's
oft-repeated (though frequently exaggerated) story that most
endeared him to his countrymen. Due to various embellishments,
iterations of the story showed some discrepancies, but in
essence went roughly as follows:
As a child, Cunningham would run with his older brother,
Floyd, to their one-room schoolhouse in western Kansas. There,
Floyd would fulfill his responsibility to get the fire in
the kerosene stove started. When the future star was 8 years
old, a delivery truck inadvertently left gasoline rather than
kerosene at the building. Unaware of this, Floyd poured the
liquid into the stove to ignite it. When he did, the stove
exploded into flames that killed the elder brother and left
the younger Cunningham in critical condition for six weeks.
So severely burned were the future Jayhawk's legs that the
doctors had considered amputating them and doubted that he
would ever be able to walk normally. With a dogged determination,
Glenn forced himself to walk again and in time discovered
that he found it less painful to run than to walk. When he
was 12, a victory in a foot race against some schoolmates
encouraged him to pursue competitive running. As an adult,
the Jayhawk great would claim that he had run "in some
big races - including the Olympics - but [that] no race [had
proven] more important than that race [he] ran at 12."
The story would invariably end by celebrating the glory and
fame that attended his athletic achievement as a testament
to the power of good, old-fashioned American stick-to-itiveness.
However much the account of Cunningham's childhood accident
may have contributed to his popularity, it could not sustain
it without continued success in races. When a slow start to
the 1936 season enabled some of his biggest rivals (most especially
Penn's Venske) to defeat the former Jayhawk in a number of
competitions, criticism of the great miler began to rise.
The sports editor for the Kansas City Star, for instance,
asserted, "Glenn Cunningham has slipped beyond the zenith
of his running career." Although the editor claimed that
he would "like to see Cunningham win [that year's] Olympic
1,500-meter run," he doubted that it was possible. The
New York Sun maintained that the "Iron Horse of Kansas"
had looked "haggard and drawn" of late. Indeed,
the Sun continued, the Kansan had "looked like a beached
mackerel" after a loss to Venske in the Baxter Mile.
By late February 1936, sports columnists had nearly universally
tabbed the Penn runner as Cunningham's heir apparent for the
position of the nation's premier miler. The Kansan, of course,
was loath to relinquish his crown prematurely, but characteristically
wanted his actions rather than words to speak in his defense.
As the 1936 Olympics approached, the "Kansas Flyer"
regained his old form and defied his detractors who thought
that the time had come for him to transition from athlete
to coach. His resurgence began in March of that year when
he made good on a promise "to beat Venske [at Madison
Square Garden's annual Columbian Mile] if they [had] to carry
[him] out of [the building] on a stretcher." It continued
at the Berlin games where Adolf Hitler showed up just in time
to watch Cunningham compete in the 1,500-meter run. The "Iron
Horse of Kansas" ran the race four-tenths of a second
faster than the previous world mark. However, he finished
six-tenths of a second behind Lovelock, the Englishman whose
mile record Cunningham had beaten two years earlier, and so
took home a silver medal rather than the gold one for which
he had hoped. (Lovelock, who beat Cunningham both times they
raced, was the only runner against whom the Kansan did not
own a head-to head advantage for his career.) By the fall
of 1936, his success had refuted the reports of his demise
and he had emerged from the biggest slump of his career.
After the Olympics, Cunningham returned to the United States,
where he enrolled in a doctoral program at New York University.
He continued dominating the middle-distance events at AAU
meets for the next three years. Although the demands posed
by his working toward a PhD and the arrival of his first child
in 1937 diminished his training time, his performances, almost
miraculously, did not ebb apace. A southern sportswriter marveled
at Cunningham's victory over world-class competition at a
Memphis invitational given the fact that at 11 a.m. on the
morning of the race, the "Kansas Flyer" had sat
down to take an examination at NYU and thus had not even arrived
in Tennessee until nearly 6:30 that evening. Yet two hours
later, his feet had "carried him to victory in the mile
- a victory won on an empty stomach and one sockless foot."
The Memphis sportswriter was not alone in wondering how Cunningham
could continue to tower above the nation's other milers. If
his good sportsmanship and the story of his childhood had
made him an appealing international celebrity, his longevity
as an athlete transformed him into an icon.
Nonetheless, Cunningham toyed with the idea of retirement.
In September 1937, he hinted that the demands of fatherhood
and the academy might force him to give up competitive running.
By January 1938, however, the consummate competitor had refused
to allow himself to quit while he was still "the man
to beat." That month, Cunningham told the press he would
hang up his cleats only when he could no longer "keep
up with the rest of the boys." Of course, he could still
more than just "keep up" with his competition. When
less than world-class athletes were at events in which he
was participating, he would often spot them leads of up to
600 yards and win anyway. In a one-week stretch that spanned
late February and early March 1938, the KU alumnus ran two
of the best races of his life. Both came on Dartmouth College's
indoor track. The first, a 3:48.4 1,500-meter run would stand
as the world record for 17 years. The second, a 4:04.4 mile,
lopped more than four seconds off his own indoor record and
more than a second from the outdoor record (which was no longer
his as England's Syd Woodersen had beaten it in 1937). However,
because Cunningham had used four quarter-milers to set the
pace for him, the International Amateur Athletic Federation
refused to accept his time as an official record. If the international
governing body of the sport would not acknowledge his accomplishment,
his peers certainly did and the 4:04.4 mile augmented his
reputation as the world's premier miler.
Although the AAU selected him for the seventh consecutive
year to its All-America team following the 1939 track season,
Cunningham had continued to run primarily in the hope of getting
one last shot at an Olympic gold medal. However, after World
War II broke out in Europe, the possibility of a 1940 Olympics
dissipated entirely, and so Cunningham finally announced his
impending retirement. After concluding his indoor career with
a race in Portland, Oregon, the "Iron Horse of Kansas"
returned to his alma mater to race in his last competitive
meet, the Kansas Relays. A special invitational mile (of the
sort that Cunningham had won the year before) pitted the former
Jayhawk against the Rideout twins from North Texas State University
and Wichita's Archie San Romani of Emporia State. The former
of his opponents were quickly emerging as America's next great
middle-distance runners while San Romani had finished fourth
in the 1936 Olympic 1,500-meter run and had beaten Cunningham
at the Kansas Relays in 1938.
The 30-year old Cunningham finished last in the race, despite
the urging of a partisan crowd, as the Rideout twins took
first and second and established a new record for the Relays.
Although he did not win his last race, the great KU runner
ended a career that had been the envy of the milers of his
era. His career had included 13 Big Six Conference Championships,
two NCAA titles in the mile, the 1933 Sullivan Award as the
nation's top amateur athlete, nine AAU Championships, multiple
world records, and an Olympic silver medal. (If he was not
the most dominant track star of the 1930s - Jesse Owens would
probably claim that distinction - he ranked as one of them.)
He was undoubtedly the best middle-distance runner of the
1930s and was almost certainly the most popular track athlete
of his time. It is hardly surprising then that when in 1974
the Athletics Congress (which later changed its name to USA
Track and Field) established its Hall of Fame in Charleston,
West Virginia, it inducted Cunningham in its inaugural class.
In 1978, a decade before his death, Madison Square Garden
recognized him as the most outstanding track athlete to perform
in the building over the course of its first 100 years - an
extraordinary honor considering the caliber of those athletes
who could conceivably lay claim to such an award.
His alma mater continues to honor him in a number of ways.
The KU track team, for example, presents an annual Glenn Cunningham
Award to the track athlete who best exemplifies the triumph
of an individual over personal adversity. And at Rim Rock
Farm, the KU cross country team's home course, the "Kansas
Flyer's" metal silhouette stands watch over the starting
line. Fittingly, the finish line bears his name as well. Even
at a university that has produced some of the finest middle-distance
runners in U.S. athletic history - Wes Santee, Jim Ryun, and
Billy Mills to name just a few - Cunningham's name and accomplishments
stand out. That, perhaps, is distinction enough.
Mark D. Hersey
University of Kansas
A project of the KU Memorial Unions,
This Week In KU History will go online in Fall 2002. Learn
more.
This Week In KU History contains more than 20 articles about
great moments in KU Sports. For more information, contact
the project director at hjf@ku.edu
[Source notes: Lyle Niedens and Steve Buckner,
Portraits of Excellence: A Heritage of Athletic Achievement
at the University of Kansas (Marceline, MO, 1999), 54-57;
Glen Cunningham File, University Archives, Spencer Research
File, University of Kansas - this contains several boxes full
of newspaper clippings primarily from regional papers, but
including some national publications, that span a period from
roughly 1930 until 1998, as well as magazine articles, KU
News Bureau Releases, and several biographical sketches. Unfortunately,
not all of the articles are as well documented as might be
desirable.]
© 2002 University of Kansas Memorial
Corporation. All rights reserved.
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