Luther Gulick

Related Essays

  • Beginning Of Basketball ... teacher. He was asked to invent a game by Luther Gulick, who was head of the Physical Education Department at the school. Gulick...
  • The Origin Of Basketball And I ... It was winter and one of his superiors, Dr. Luther Gulick, asked of Dr. Naismith to come up with a game that could be played during t...
  • The Origin Of Basketball And I ... It was winter and one of his superiors, Dr. Luther Gulick, asked of Dr. Naismith to come up with a game that could be played during t...
  • Origin Of Basketball ... the invention of basketball came from Dr. Luther Halsey Gulick, Jr., the superintendent of physical education at the international YM...
  • The Foundations Of Henri Fayol’s Administrative ... Administration, edited by Gulick and Urwick (1937), enabled scholars to have access to a long out-of-print collection of papers by Luther...

Luther Gulick

"One of the most remarkable personalities to leave an imprint upon YMCA physical
education was Luther Gulick" (Johnson, 1979, 55). Gulick, whose parents were missionaries,
was born in Honolulu, Hawaii in 1865. For fifteen years he traveled extensively because of
his background as a child of missionaries. Finally, in 1880, he was able to slow his travels
and go to Oberlin College until 1884. While at Oberlin, he suffered from headaches caused by
poor eyesight.Also during his stay at Oberlin, he roomed with another prominent physical
educator, Thomas Wood who later made a name for himself at Stanford and Columbia and
encountered Dr. Delphine Hanna, who was a leading pioneer in women's physical education. In
the fall of 1885, Gulick entered a middle preparatory class, but also took some college
classes to further his education. Shortly after his stay at Oberlin, he went to Sargent
School of Physical Training in Cambridge, Massachusetts for a period of six months. In April
of 1886, he became the physical director of the YMCA in Jackson, Michigan, but later
resigned to enter the Medical School of New York University. Gulick managed to pursue his
medical training program and also perform his duties as an instructor at the YMCA in
Springfield, Massachusetts. In October 1887 Gulick was employed by the International
Committee on a part-time basis to serve as the international secretary for physical work. He
held this position for thirteen years. Finally in March of 1889, he completed his medical
program. In the same year, he was named the superintendent of the Springfield YMCA. In May
1891 a paper read before the secretariat at a convention in Kansas City, clearly stated the
role that physical education could play within the framework of accepted theological
procedure. Gulick said, "Our physical education should be all around; have...

View Full Essay

  • Submitted by: bignerds
  • Date Submitted: 06/28/2008 08:11 PM
  • Category: Biographies
  • Words: 620
  • Pages: 3
  • Views: 101
  • Popularity Rank: 2017

View Full Essay

Want More?

Thousands of students trust OPPapers.com for help with their writing. Shouldn't you?

Join Now