Career
An active lecturer, Doctor Todd was named the Seward Staley Honor Lecturer for the North American Society for Sport History in 2008. Doctor Todd also serves as co-editor of Iron Game History: The Journal of Physical Culture, a scholarly journal for people who want to write about, read about, or formally research the history of physical culture. In addition, she has written numerous articles on topics such as sport and exercise history, anabolic steroids, and strength training as well as two books: "Physical Culture and the Body Beautiful: Purposive Exercise in the Lives of American Women" (Mercer University Press, 1998), and "Lift Your Way to Youthful Fitness" (Little-Brown, 1985).
The Stark Center, which opened in a new facility in the fall of 2009, contains museum exhibits as well as a research library and the largest archive in the world devoted to the study of physical fitness, resistance training, and alternative medicine.
Doctor Todd’s interest in the study of sport and physical culture was galvanized by her participation and success in the sport of powerlifting. During her powerlifting career, many publications—including Sports Illustrated magazine – considered her to be the strongest woman in the world.
As a powerlifter, Doctor Todd set more than 60 national and world records, and was included in the Guinness Book of Records for over a decade. Doctor Todd was the first woman inducted into the International Powerlifting Hall of Fame.
She was inducted in the first class of the Women's Powerlifting Hall of Fame, and the 2009 class of the United States National Fitness Hall of Fame.