Lucile Godbold

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Lucile Ellerbe Godbold

Also Known As: "Miss Ludy"
Birthdate:
Death: April 05, 1981 (80)
Immediate Family:

Daughter of William Asa Godbold and Lucia Ellerbe
Sister of Private; Private; Private; Private; Private and 3 others
Half sister of Sallie Mallsia Game

Managed by: Private User
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Immediate Family

About Lucile Godbold

Born in Marion, South Carolina in 1900, Lucile Godbold was graduated from Winthrop College in 1922 with a degree in physical education. In 1922 she qualified for the United States Tract and Filed Team and competed in the first International Track and Field Meet for Women in Paris. She was chosen to carry the United States flag and lead the procession of athletes during the playing of the national anthem. Miss Godbold earned 13 of the United States team’s 31 points by winning the shot put event with a new world’s record, placing third in the javelin throw and fourth in both the 300-meter run and 1,000-meter run. Miss Godbold was appointed athletic director at Columbia College in 1922 where she taught physical education for 58 years. In 1961 she became the first woman inducted into the South Carolina Athletic Hall of Fame. In 1971 Columbia College’s new physical education center was named in her honor.

http://www.theofficialschalloffame.com/women.html



https://www.scencyclopedia.org/sce/entries/godbold-lucile-ellerbe/

Olympic athlete, educator. More commonly known as “Miss Ludy,” Lucile Godbold was born on May 31, 1900, in Marion County. She achieved prominence as one of America’s first female Olympic champions and as a pioneer in American women’s competitive athletics. Godbold’s family moved from Marion County to Estill in Hampton County. A standout athlete at Winthrop College, Godbold broke the United States record in the shot put, the discus throw, and the hop-step-jump (the triple jump) at the college’s annual track meet. Winthrop College raised money to send her to qualifying trials in Mamaroneck, New York, where Godbold earned a spot on the track and field team that represented the United States in the First International Track Meet for Women as part of the women’s Olympic Games in Paris in 1922. The 1922 women’s Olympics were the first of its kind; Olympic events for women were joined with the men’s games in 1924. In Paris, Godbold competed in six events and helped the American team place second in the meet. Godbold broke the world’s record in the eight pound shot put and secured the gold medal by putting twenty meters and twenty-two centimeters. She also won gold in the hop-step-jump event, placed second in the basketball throw, third in the javelin, and fourth in the three-hundred-meter dash and one-thousand-meter run. An international phenomenon, Godbold received great acclaim on her return to South Carolina. In September of that year, Godbold began her duties as the director of physical education at Columbia College, a private women’s college, and remained there for fifty-eight years.

Throughout her life, Godbold earned great recognition, not only for her accomplishments in the Olympic Games, but also for her contributions to Columbia College. Godbold is included in the 1928 edition of Who’s Who in American Sports, and in the first edition of Who’s Who in American Women, published in 1957. In 1961 Godbold was the first woman to be elected to the South Carolina Athletic Hall of Fame. In 1972 the town of Estill erected a historical marker in her honor on the fiftieth anniversary of the Paris games. In the same year, the physical education complex at Columbia College was named the Godbold Center in her honor. Despite her athletic accomplishments, Godbold identified herself first and foremost as a teacher, and is remembered for her humility and good humor. On her retirement in 1980, Columbia College awarded her the Columbia College Medallion, the institution’s highest honor. She died less than one year later, on April 5, 1981, and is buried in the Lawtonville Cemetery in Estill. Columbia College’s annual “Ludy Bowl,” a flag football game held every October among the students, continues to commemorate her, as does an endowed scholarship in her name.

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Lucile Godbold's Timeline

1900
May 31, 1900
1981
April 5, 1981
Age 80