The American athlete who was named Jacobus Franciscus “Jim” Thorpe by birth was born on May 28, 1888, and passed away on March 28, 1953.

He was recognized as one of the most adaptable athletes in contemporary sports, winning gold medals in the Olympics in the pentathlon and decathlon.

He also played professional baseball, basketball, and both collegiate and professional levels of American football. Before the games, it was discovered that he had received payment for playing two seasons of minor league baseball, and he lost his Olympic medals.

In Yale, Oklahoma, there is a historic home called the Jim Thorpe House.

Inside Jim Thorpe’s house: Where did Jim Thorpe live?

Jim Thorpe was known to have purchased a modest house in Yale, Oklahoma, in 1917, and he resided there with his first wife, Iva Miller, and children, among them Jim Jr., who passed away at the age of three until 1923.

The home he ever owned in Yala was the only home he purchased in his life. One block south of Highway 51, past Turner Used Cars and a row of mobile homes, it sits two bedrooms, a comfortable living room, a small dining room, one bathroom, and a cramped kitchen.

Inside are bits and pieces of Thorpe’s life. Two Olympic scrolls, one for the pentathlon, the other for the decathlon, hang near the fireplace. In one bedroom is an embroidered bedspread made in a French nunnery, a honeymoon gift from Thorpe to his first wife, Iva.

A tiny pair of moccasins that belonged to Jim Jr. (he died in infancy) is in a glass case next to the dining room. Photographs decorate the walls. The original cloth pattern for bonnets for Thorpe’s daughters lies next to an antique sewing machine.

The Oklahoma Historical Society purchased the home in 1968, and it is now included on the National Register of Historic Places. The Jim Thorpe Memorial Foundation cares for the Jim Thorpe House, which serves as a tiny museum dedicated to Thorpe and is filled with mementos about him.

It is severed as a tourist site and it is open from Friday to Sunday. Friday to Saturday is open from 10 am to 5 pm, and on Sunday it is open from 1 pm to 5 pm.

Source: nflfaqs.com

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Cecelia Chintoh is an account officer and a writer and editor @ Ghanafuo.com and nflfaqs.com. Cecelia loves to write for the joy in it and also to provide readers with the most accurate information. Cecelia is open to any corrections to articles. She can be reached on Facebook @ Cecelia Chintoh.