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Army Chaplain Credited With Inventing Basketball

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As "March Madness" makes its annual appearance on the American sports scene, fans who understand the history of basketball know Dr. James Naismith invented the game in 1891.

What many fans probably do not know about Naismith is that he served as a chaplain in the Army National Guard and as a volunteer chaplain in France during World War I.

Naismith hailed from Canada. He attended McGill University in Montreal, where he excelled at athletics. His sports resume at McGill included playing Canadian football, lacrosse, rugby and soccer. He also was an accomplished gymnast. He received a bachelor's degree in physical education from McGill in 1887 and remained there upon graduation, teaching physical education and serving as the university's director of athletics.

A man of diverse interests, while working at McGill, he enrolled at nearby Presbyterian College. He received a degree in theology in 1890.

After completing his studies at Presbyterian College, he came to the United States to teach physical education at the YMCA International Training School -- now Springfield College -- in Springfield, Massachusetts. It was there that he devised the rules for a new game, one that could be played indoors during winter: basketball.

An Immensely Popular Sport

Basketball proved to be immensely popular from the very start, and through the YMCA, it quickly spread throughout the nation. Today it is one of the world's most popular sports.

After Naismith earned a medical degree in 1898 from the Gross Medical School -- now the University of Colorado School of Medicine -- the University of Kansas hired him to be its first basketball coach. The Jayhawks' record during his nine-year coaching tenure was nothing spectacular -- 55 wins and 60 losses -- but he remained at Kansas for more than 40 years, serving in such diverse roles as physical education instructor, director of the university chapel, university physician and director of athletics.

His diverse interests came to the fore again in 1916, when he applied to be a chaplain in the Kansas Army National Guard. His desire to be a chaplain was much the same as his motivation to devise the rules for basketball: to help young people and guide them to their full potential.

Pancho Villa provided additional motivation.

Pursuing an Outlaw

Villa, the Mexican revolutionary, led his guerrilla army in a cross-border raid on Columbus, New Mexico, in March 1916. In response, the U.S. Army began patrolling the national border with Mexico, and a punitive expedition under Army Brig. Gen. John Pershing was sent into Mexico in pursuit of Villa.

The Kansas National Guard was tapped to send troops to the border. After quickly obtaining an endorsement as a Presbyterian minister, Naismith was commissioned as the chaplain of the 1st Kansas Infantry Regiment. His regiment mobilized at Fort Riley in late June, and a few weeks later the Kansans were at Eagle Pass, Texas, on the Rio Grande.

Naismith and his regiment spent about three months on border duty. During this time, he performed the traditional roles of a chaplain of a deployed unit: conducting services, counseling homesick soldiers, and advising his commander on the spiritual needs of the unit.

He made a concerted effort at convincing his soldiers to steer clear of the houses of prostitution that sprang up near their posts. With his expertise in athletics, he organized numerous boxing matches, basketball games and a baseball league to keep his soldiers occupied during their off-duty time.

The 1st Kansas returned home in October 1916. Naismith wanted to continue his military career as America entered World War I in April 1917. He considered applying for an active-duty commission as an Army chaplain, but there were two things working against him: he was 55 years old in 1917, and he was not an American citizen.

Another Route to Military Service

But Naismith found another route to military service. The Army was woefully short of chaplains as it mobilized for war. A number of civilian agencies, such as the American Red Cross and Salvation Army, took up the slack by arranging for volunteer civilian clergymen to provide religious support to soldiers, primarily at stateside posts and in hospitals.

In June 1917, Naismith went to work as a volunteer chaplain for the YMCA, another organization that assisted the Army with religious and morale support activities. He was one of a small group of lecturers that the YMCA employed to travel around the United States and conduct programs at training camps to strengthen the moral character of soldiers.

In September 1917, the YMCA sent Naismith to France, where he worked as one of the organization's "overseas secretaries" in the war zone. Based out of Paris, Naismith spent most of his time near the front lines, working to improve the social hygiene of the troops.

Depth and Breadth of Experience

"I feel I am fitted for this work," Naismith once said of his military service. Indeed he was -- with his background as a clergyman, medical doctor, athlete, educator, and National Guardsman, his mix of skills had a depth and breadth that few of his peers in France could match.

"It is a pretty big job," Naismith wrote in a letter to his wife shortly after his arrival in theater.

"Go over and make the camps clean places for the boys to fight. And also get the right spirit into the men,” he wrote. “That involves two things. Educate the men and eliminate the evils from the camps and vicinity. Pershing is very anxious to have this done. I go without instructions to find out the best thing to do and then get the machinery working.

“It is no child's play, especially when it is among the old-fashioned type of soldier and in France where ideals are so different,” he continued. “The responsibility is great but I am going into it determined. I do wish that you and the family would pray for me, for I have never felt so much in need of help as I do at this present minute."

Naismith spent 19 months in France, a longer period than most American soldiers who served overseas in World War I. After the armistice, he continued his service in Europe as the U.S. Army redeployed home.

On Thanksgiving 1918, he wrote a long letter home, in which he listed a number of things he was thankful for. One of them was "the knowledge that I have tried to help the people of the world to make it a little better, and that I have tried to love my neighbor as myself."

Back to the University of Kansas

Naismith returned to the United States in March 1919. He resumed his duties as athletic director of the University of Kansas, a position he held until his retirement in 1937. He died two years later.

He has been honored numerous times over the years for his contributions to American athletics, including being a member of the inaugural hall of fame class at the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield. However, he always considered his time in uniform and his work with the soldiers of the U.S. Army to be among his most significant accomplishments.
 

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