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Sunday, February 5, 2017

Undefeated: Jim Thorpe and the Carlisle Indian School Football Team, by Steve Sheinkin -- Day 17




Award-winning author Steve Sheinkin has written a number of remarkable accounts of remarkable people in U.S. history, meticulously researched and richly narrated. Undefeated: Jim Thorpe and the Carlisle Indian School Football Team is one of them. Named Wathohuck by his mother (translated from the Potawatomi as “Bright Path”), Jim spent much of his childhood outdoors on Oklahoma land granted to Indians amidst the rush of eastern settlers. At sixteen, Thorpe entered the Carlisle Indian School in Pennsylvania, one of the schools established around the turn of the twentieth century to immerse native children in white culture. Such schools were an often harsh and unforgiving setting where students were forbidden to speak their own languages. Sheinkin’s story includes “Pop” Warner, Thorpe’s legendary football coach at Carlisle and a true believer in his skill, smarts and drive as an athlete. Readers also learn about early football and about the bigotry that athletes faced on and off the field. At the heart of the book is the riveting story of the Carlisle Indian School Football Team, its unflinching use of strategy in the game, and its determination to win, defeating Harvard and Army in edge-of-the-seat encounters. Ages 12 to adult.


Related activities and interviews may be found at: TeachingBooks.net