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James Naismith

James Naismith

Male 1861 - 1939  (78 years)

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  • Name James Naismith  [1
    Born 6 Nov 1861  Ramsay, Lanark Co., Ontario, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    Died 29 Nov 1939  Lawrence, Douglas Co., Kansas, USA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I63106  Munro
    Last Modified 17 Feb 2012 

    Father John Naismith,   b. Est 1836,   d. Est 1870  (Age ~ 34 years) 
    Mother Margaret Young,   b. Est 1838,   d. Est 1870  (Age ~ 32 years) 
    Family ID F22012  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • **********
      «i»Born in Ramsay Township (in Lanark County in Eastern Ontario, just west of the City of Ottawa) on 6 Nov 1861, James was the eldest son of Scottish immigrants John and Margaret Naismith. In 1869, the family moved to Grand Calumet where his father began work as a saw hand. He was orphaned at age nine, when his parents contracted typhoid fever while working in the milling community. When their grandmother died in 1872, the Naismith children, Annie, James and Robbie, were left under the care of their uncle, Peter Young, back in Ramsay. James attended the one-room schoolhouse in Bennies' Corners. He was known in the neighbourhood as a strong and skillful boy, but at school his monthly report cards showed poor grades. Although not the head of his class in academics, he was a leader among his peers in all physical activities and showed signs of becoming a fine athlete. James attended high school in Almonte, ON.

      Despite the burden of farm duties, there was also time for play. In Bennies' Corners, the local blacksmith shop was the gathering spot for the children. Here they enjoyed watching the blacksmith work his materials and playing in the sugarbush behind the shop. Where a tree or boulder served as a convenient base, they played variations of tag and hide-and-seek or tried their skill at Duck on the Rock - a game which combined throwing with tag using a large base stone to be guarded by the one player. This stone sat in the blacksmith's yard adjacent to the Bennies' Corners school. Players formed a line from a distance of 15-20 feet from the base stone. Each player used a fist-sized stone. The object was to dislodge the "guards" stone from the top of the base stone, by throwing and taking turns.

      After graduating from Almonte High School, he attended McGill University. Jim headed for McGill's gymnasium where he soon began participating in the gymnastic and rugby program. By his junior year, he was winning the university's highest honours for his athletic involvement. Jim had time for extracurricular interests, joining the student government and Literary Society for which he debated. In 1887, he was cited on the Prize and Honour List for having passed the Bachelor of Arts in Honours in philosophy and Hebrew. He graduated as one of the top ten in his class on 30 Apr 1887. After graduation, Jim enrolled in the largest theological school affiliated with McGill University, the Presbyterian College. To finance his education, he accepted an appointment as instructor of physical education in the gymnasium at McGill. Although James won theological scholarships, he dismayed colleagues and professors by continuing his involvement in athletics. Naismith learned of the YMCA International Training School in Springfield, MA, for the education of layment-leaders of youth. Shortly thereafter, in the summer of 1890, Jim left the Presbyterian College as a non-ordained minister to pursue a career with an emphasis on physical education. Remembering Duck on a Rock and how successful the lobbed arcing shot proved, Naismith incorporated a set of rules for throwing a soccer ball aimed at two peach baskets, thus creating a new game of his design called "Basket Ball". That was in 1891. Within a few years, this game caught on and was soon being played at other institutions.

      Naismith then embarked on a career in Physical Education through the YMCA, but took time out to earn his Medical Degree in 1889 while operating the Denver YMCA. This led him to accept the positions of Physical Education Director, Campus Chaplain and Basketball Coach at the University of Kansas. He remained there from 1898 until his retirement in 1938. He served twice in military conflict, including WWI in France. From time to time, Naismith returned to visit the area of his boyhood in Ramsay and Almonte, and maintained a long friendship with another famous "Ramsay son", Tait McKenzie. Naismith saw his gift of basketball admitted as an official sport in the 1936 Berlin Olympics, which he felt was the highlight of his long career. He died in Lawrence, KS, from heart trouble on 29 Nov 1939.

      From the Souvenir Program of the North Lanark Highland Games, Almonte, ON, 20 Aug 2011«/i»

      (Munro Beacon - Vol. 33, No. 4 - Winter 2011 - Ed. J. Tuskin)
      **********

      Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

  • Sources 
    1. [S830] Munro Beacon, J. Tuskin Ed. Vol. 33, No. 4 (Winter 2011): Published by The Clan Munro Association of Canada. (Reliability: 3).