Background
Curtiss, Julian Wheeler was born on August 29, 1858 in Fairfield, Connecticut, United States. Son of Henry Tomlinson and Mary Eliza (Henderson) Curtiss.
Curtiss, Julian Wheeler was born on August 29, 1858 in Fairfield, Connecticut, United States. Son of Henry Tomlinson and Mary Eliza (Henderson) Curtiss.
Born in Fairfield, Connecticut, on August 29, 1858, Julian West. Curtiss attended Hopkins Grammar School in New Haven, Connecticut and the Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute. He graduated from Yale University in 1879, where he had been active in various sports, crew especially.
Future President William Howard Taft was also at the university at this time) In 1880 Curtiss married Mary Louise Case and settled in Greenwich, Connecticut. They had four children. Curtiss joined the Attorney - General Spalding Company after college.
In 1885 he became secretary of the company, and in 1920 president
He retired from the presidency in 1933, but remained on the board, serving as its chair until 1938. On a trip to London in 1892 to buy leather to make footballs in the United States., he was introduced to golf.
He brought home with him $400 worth of equipment and started the first manufacture of golf equipment in the United States. Curtiss served as the club"s first President, from 1892-1896, and again from 1921-1934.
Curtiss was affiliated with the Amateur Athletic Union and became treasurer of the American Olympic Committee.
He was one of the figures, together with Walter Camp and others, responsible at the turn of the twentieth century with popularizing sports in the United States. and making it a central part of American culture. He designed the first basketball in association with James Naismith, the inventor of the game. From 1902 to 1911 he served as graduate coach of the Yale crew team, turning out five championship outfits, and from 1918 to 1940, he refereed many of the foremost crew races in the East.
Curtiss commissioned the architects Carrère and Hastings, who had also designed the original clubhouse for the Greenwich Country Club, to build him a house in Greenwich, Connecticut.
He was very active in Greenwich, serving as the first president of the Greenwich Young Men’s Christian Association. He also served on the Greenwich Board of Education from 1913 to 1937, chairing it from 1924 to 1937. He died at Greenwich Hospital on February 17, 1944.
Member of the United States Chamber Commerce, Cdnn. Chamber Commerce, Graduate). Association, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Scroll and Key.
Clubs: Yale (president 1904-1906), Special Carolina, Greenwich Country (president 1924-1933), Yale Golf.-Round Hill Golf.
Graduate coach of Yale crew, 1902-1911.
Married Mary Case, October 12, 1880. Children: Jean Beardslee (Mistress Lee Wallis Gibbons), Mary Louise (Mistress Herbert Hoyt Pease), Henry Tomlinson (deceased), Margaret Burr (deceased).