Career
With he scored a club record 351 tries and kicked 20 goals in exactly 500 appearances from 1943-1957. He scored 50 tries in his final season, 1956-1957, another club record. He retired after "s Rugby League Challenge Cup final defeat by Leeds in 1957, one of three Wembley appearances he made with the Cumbrian club during that decade.
Lewthwaite"s Testimonial match at took place in 1956.
He was inducted into the club"s Hall of Fame when it was launched in 2001, alongside 1950s team-mates Philosophy Jackson and Willie Horne. On the international front he travelled to Australasia with Great Britain in 1946 – the famous "Indomitables" tour, named after the vessel on which they sailed, HMS Indomitable.
He top-scored with 25 tries on that tour despite not making the Test team Jimmy Lewthwaite played Right-wing, id est (that is) number 2, in "s 0-10 defeat to Wigan in the 1951 Challenge Cup final during the 1950-1951 season at Wembley Stadium, London on Saturday 5 May 1951, played Right-wing in the 21-12 victory over Workington Town in the 1955 Challenge Cup final during the 1954-1955 season at Wembley Stadium, London on Saturday 30 April 1955, and played Right-wing in the 7-9 defeat by Leeds in the 1957 Challenge Cup final during the 1956-1957 season at Wembley Stadium, London on Saturday x x 1957.
He was a natural athlete and represented Cumberland at rugby union and association football as a schoolboy, as well as winning a medal in the All-England Schools Athletics competition at the age of 13.
He moved to Woodley, near Reading, shortly before turning 15 to work at an aircraft factory but later relocated to to take up an apprenticeship at the town"s shipyard. He continued to excel as a football player and had trials with Blackburn Rovers and Preston North End before switching to rugby league with in 1943, making his first-team début against Street Helens in April that year. He also managed to play golf around the district, after he slowed down from rugby.