Cogent Arts & Humanities (Jan 2019)

Muscular Christian, military hero John Williams Overton in the Great War

  • Karl Miran

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/23311983.2019.1600208
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1

Abstract

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John Williams Overton, one of 8.5 million World War I dead, was widely seen as a hero when killed at the Second Battle of the Marne. Seizing the opportunities available to him in the military (as he had earlier done at his boarding school and university), his talent and engaging spirit allowed him to stand out among his peers. He benefitted greatly from American boarding schools’ adoption of athletics as a tool to develop leaders through the virtues of “Muscular Christianity”. A late-blooming athlete, he nonetheless came to prominence at The Hill School and at Yale, exhibiting characteristics of the modern superstar (think: Joe Namath “guaranteeing” victory in Super Bowl III, LeBron James tossing up chalk before a game). When his athletic celebrity allowed him a fast track to an officer’s position in the Marines he modeled the lessons of his coaches, and the image of his boyhood hero Stonewall Jackson to earn his men’s loyalty. Leading his men across no-man’s land he was struck by a piece of shrapnel and died. The value of re-telling Overton’s story is the light it sheds on our society’s notion of heroes and the ethos that supports sport as a character-building educational enterprise.

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