- Joie Ray (athlete)
Joie W. Ray (1894–1978) was an American
track and field athlete and member of the United States National Track and Field Hall of Fame. He held world records for the convert|1|mi|km|sing=on|adj=on and convert|2|mi|km|sing=on|adj=on distances. He represented the United States in the threeOlympic Games held the 1920s, earning a bronze medal for the 3000 m team race in 1924.Biography
Ray was born in Kankakee,
Illinois , onApril 13 1894 . Early in his career, the convert|5|ft|5|in|m|sp=us|sing=on|adj=on and convert|118|lb|kg|adj=on|sing=on runner—considered short and stocky—competed for theIllinois Athletic Club .cite web | title = Joie Ray | url = http://www.usatf.org/halloffame/TF/showBio.asp?HOFIDs=132 | publisher =USA Track & Field | date = | accessdate = 2008-07-03 ] Ray was nicknamed "The Kankakee Kid", after his hometown, and "Chesty" or "Chesty Joie" after a newspaper, early in his career, called him "a chesty little guy with a great heart".cite news | title = Joie Ray, 84, dead; starred as runner | work =The New York Times | date =1978-05-16 | page = 69 ] Ray was considered one of the most versatile distance runners of the 1920s, competing in races from the1500 metres tomarathon s. Among his 13 nationalAAU titles were 8 outdoormile titles. Ray won theMillrose Games ' Wannamaker 1½-mile (2400 m) race (which changed to theWanamaker Mile in 1926) seven times in the eight-year span from 1917 to 1924, losing in 1925 toPaavo Nurmi ofFinland . Later that same year he tied the indoor mile world record at 4 minutes 12 seconds, and was part of a 4 × 1-mile relay that set a world record.Ray competed for the United States in the
1920 Summer Olympics atAntwerp , placing 8th in the 1500 metre race. In the 1924 Games inParis , Ray competed in only the 3000 metre team race for which he won a bronze medal. In the 1928 Olympics he placed 14th in the 10000 metres and 5th in the marathon. Though Ray's Olympic results were lackluster, he won over 950 medals in his career. His favorite career moment was his firstBoston Marathon in 1928. He finished third despite considerable pain for the last two miles (3.2 km).In the 1920s, when not competing in running events, Ray was a cab driver, and also competed in other events, dabbling in
boxing ,roller derby , andsnowshoe races inCanada . He preceded his third-place finish in the 1928 Boston Marathon by competing in adance marathon for 1,730 hours. Later in life, Ray worked in a steel mill in Gary,Indiana , moving toMichigan after retiring.Ray continued to run throughout his life. At age 68, he was timed at 6:18.3 on a convert|1|mi|m|adj=on course, a time he bettered on his 70th birthday, with a time of 6:11.5. Ray was elected to the U.S. National Track and Field Hall of Fame in 1976. Ray died on
13 May 1978 in Berrien Springs, Michigan, after a short illness.Notes
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