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| Joe American Horse, Gordon. Joe is the first Native American to be inducted into the Hall of Fame. His prowess was distance running. He had an four outstanding years in high school, winning the Class B mile three times and two times was all class gold medal champion. In his senior year, he set the Class B state record Of 4:28.1, Joe competed in an era when an athlete could only run in one race over 440 yards and one can only surmise what he could have accomplished had the rules been the same as today. By all accounts, Joe was a real crowd pleaser when he ran in meets. He would get standing ovations on every lap and deafening cheers when he crossed the finish line. One sports writer maintains that he would have broken Bill Mountford's record if would have someone pushing him. After high school Joe attended UNL for a couple of years competing in cross country and track. In 1959 he placed sixth at the Big 8 cross country meet leading the Huskers to their best finish since 1940. |
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Story by Indian Country Today, April, 2000
OGLALA, S.D. - In 1959, on a gray and
rainy spring day, two Oglala Lakota athletes stood side by side on a track in Lincoln,
Neb. The stadium, more notorious for hosting Cornhusker football games, was about to
witness a quiet milestone.
Down on the track the 2 mile race was ready to start. The Lakota men, Billy Mills of
Kansas University and Joe American Horse of the University of Nebraska, were ready to run.
The gun sounded and the duel began. Silently, the two men kept pace with each other: 5
laps, 6 laps, 7 laps - just one to go. Rounding the corner for the final 220 yard sprint,
American Horse was right on Mills shoulder.
Mills began his kick. American Horse struggled gamely, then fell back. After the race the
two acknowledged each other with smiles and a friendly hand shake. The following year at
the Tokyo Olympics, Mills would shock the sports world with a gold medal in the 10
thousand meter run, the last American to win at that distance in 40 years. Meanwhile,
American Horse would go on to become one of the few two time tribal presidents in Oglala
Lakota Tribal History.
In the case of Billy Mills, thousand of words have followed his worthy deeds, and rightly
so. The career of Joe American Horse has been less well known, though in its way, his
story is equally inspiring. With American Horses pending induction into the Nebraska
High School Sports Hall of Fame this Oct. 8, that oversight will at least be partially
corrected. The Oglala resident will be the first Native American so honored.
American Horse began his track career in the 8th grade at tiny Gordon High School just
south of the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. At his first practice the youth, barely a
teenager, competed in a mile race against the high school runners. "I came in second,
and I dont know who was more surprised - them or me," said American Horse.
The former tribal chairman admits the recollection has a storybook quality to it. "Its
like what I saw in the movies. When I was a kid they took me to see Burt Lancaster play
Jim Thorpe. I always wanted to be like that. Here, at least in a little way, it seemed
like it happened."
The following spring it happened in a bigger way. In his freshman year in high school,
American Horse placed second again, this time at the state track meet in Lincoln.
Recalling that day, the elderly Lakota relived his awe. "It was in Cornhusker Stadium
you know - they used to have track meets there. There was thousands of people everywhere.
It was a little overwhelming."
Eventually, by dint of his growing prowess, American Horse was able to get used to it.
American Horse placed first in the mile at the next three consecutive state track meets.
As a sophomore he won it with a time of 4:43.6. His junior year he clocked in at 4:28.9,
and broke a record for the class B mile that had stood for 32 years. By his senior year,
the Lakota youth had developed a following that included Omaha World Herald sportswriter
Gregg McBride. Running under wet and windy conditions, the Gordon High School senior
finished the race in 4:28.1. McBride called the mile the best ever run by a Nebraska high
school athlete.
An old and, by todays standards, odd regulation in those days prevented American
Horse from gaining even more victories. Runners at that time were only allowed to compete
in one race that was a half-mile or longer. Still, American Horse anchored his high schools
mile relay team to a state championship in 1957.
Perhaps because of his feats in Lincoln, Neb., American Horse was given a track
scholarship to attend the University of Nebraska. Besides receiving two letters in track
there, he led the universitys cross country team to its best Big 8 Cross Country
finish in 19 years. Finally in 1960, American Horse set an indoor 2 mile record of 9:24.6
and an outdoor record of 9:18.2. Both performances were University of Nebraska records at
the time.
Recently, in an interview, American Horse revealed he has slowed down some. The 61 year
old confessed he pulled a muscle while out on a 6-mile jog. "I finished the run, but
it still hurts a little bit. I may have to cut back on my distance a little," he
said. While his running may no longer be world class (he was ranked 10th in the nation as
a miler in 1960) the former tribal chairman does show up in some unusual places. He gave a
recent speech on economic development at the University of Chicago. More recently, he
delivered another speech on the same topic at Frankfurt University in Germany.
Economic development on Indian reservations is now the baton Joe American Horse carries.
And, in his usual quiet and confident way, when he talks about it he smiles. Much the way
he used to smile in stadiums over 40 years ago.