fbpx
Wikipedia

R. Tait McKenzie

Robert Tait McKenzie RCA (sometimes written MacKenzie) RCA (May 26, 1867 – April 28, 1938) was a Canadian[1] physician, educator, sculptor, athlete, soldier and Scouter. Born in Ramsay Township, Lanark County, Ontario, Canada, he attended McGill University in Montreal as an undergraduate and medical student, and was an instructor in its medical school beginning in 1894. In 1904, he moved to the United States to teach at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. In the 1930s, he returned to the county of his birth, retiring to the Mill of Kintail in Almonte.

R. Tait McKenzie
Robert Tait McKenzie, c. 1910s
Born
Robert Tait McKenzie

(1867-05-26)May 26, 1867
DiedApril 28, 1938(1938-04-28) (aged 70)
NationalityCanadian American
Known forSculptor
Notable workThe Ideal Scout
Scots American War Memorial
SpouseEthel O'Neil (m. 1907)

He pioneered physical fitness programs in Canada.[2] During World War I, his methods and inventions for restoring and rehabilitating wounded soldiers laid a foundation for modern physiotherapy practices.[3]

Biography edit

 
The Athlete c. 1903

McKenzie was born on May 26, 1867, in the township of Ramsay (now part of the Town of Mississippi Mills), in Ontario's Lanark County. A childhood friend was James Naismith, the inventor of basketball, with whom he attended McGill University. As a child, McKenzie did not regard himself as an athlete, saying,

"Looking back with an eye of memory I see a rather delicate child, sensitive at being called pale-faced, a roamer of the woods and fields with a mind filled with romance that Sir Walter Scott and Fenimore Cooper alone could instill, going unwillingly to school, distracted by thoughts of the Deerslayer..."[4]

 
R Tait McKenzie's signature on The Call

In preparation for McGill he attended Ottawa Collegiate Institute (currently known as Lisgar Collegiate Institute) in 1883 at nearby Ottawa, Ontario.[5]

McGill University edit

This attitude changed after he enrolled at McGill University in 1885.[6] A pre-med major, he developed a great appreciation for and attraction to athletics and physical training.[6] McKenzie became involved in acrobatics and gymnastics; set a 5-foot, 9-inch high jump record; ran hurdles; boxed; played football; and was on the tug-of-war team.[7] In 1889, he won the Wickstead gold medal, which made him an acknowledged gymnastic champion.[8] McKenzie found his athletic abilities focused on sports that did not solely require strength or stamina, but rather skill, coordination, and practice.[9] During his senior year at McGill, McKenzie was an intern at the University Hospital.[10] He graduated from McGill University in 1892 Medicinæ Doctorem et Chirurgiæ Magistrum, and then got an internship at Montreal General Hospital.[11]

After graduating, McKenzie gained experience as a physician and surgeon, developed his own medical practice and became an anatomy instructor at McGill.[12] He became convinced of the need for preventive medicine.[13] Training and conditioning of the body, he believed, would prevent disease, physical breakdown and accidents, so he developed a program of physical exercise.[13]

In 1894, he became the personal family physician of the Governor General of Canada, the Marquis of Aberdeen.[14] He spent 15 months in the Governor General's household, where he mingled with various political figures.[3]

During the 1890s, McKenzie asked McGill to develop a department and school of physical education, but the university declined, citing lack of money.[15] As a compromise, in 1898, McGill appointed him as Medical Director of Physical Training, the first such appointee at a Canadian university.[15] He wanted to customize the athletic programs for three categories of student: athletic, sedentary, or bookworm,[16] and the school allowed him to start physical examinations for incoming students.[15]

Amid his duties at McGill and his medical practice in Montreal, McKenzie sought escape in art. He first turned to watercolour sketching, and always kept a small notebook in his pocket in which he would scribble whenever something caught his eye.[17] His interest in sculpting was a result of his extensive knowledge of human anatomy, his desire to portraying athletics artistically, and the limitations of portraying musculature in two-dimensional art forms.[18]

McKenzie's first untrained sculptural effort was a series of masks known as Violent Effort, Breathlessness, Fatigue and Exhaustion.[18] To achieve these masks, he studied facial muscles under physical and emotional stress.[19] His research led to an article, "The Facial Expression of Violent Effort, Breathlessness and Fatigue," published around 1900 in the Journal of Anatomy and Physiology in London.[19]

His first sculptural piece in the round was The Sprinter. The design of the piece involved measurements of limbs and torsos of many athletes, including McGill students.[18] The Sprinter was second in a series of over 200 works that included athletic figures, military figures, busts, masks, friezes and medallions.[18] These works of art are displayed all over Canada, the United States, England and Scotland.[15] His sculpture earned him membership in the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts.[20]

University of Pennsylvania edit

In 1904, McKenzie took a position at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia,[15][21] which offered him a permanent faculty position and use of the university's a new gymnasium, football stadium, running track and other recently constructed facilities.[15] His position as Director of the Physical Education Department came with the opportunity to develop, test and implement his theories on health and athletics.[22]

 
Relief bust of J. William White (1919), Rittenhouse Square, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

While in Philadelphia, he also worked closely with Lord Robert Baden-Powell, founder of Scouting.[23]

In 1907, McKenzie met and married musician and poet Ethel O'Neil, a native of Hamilton, Ontario, while on a voyage to England.[24]

As a longtime supporter and spectator at the Olympic Games, McKenzie often exhibited works at the competition of fine arts.[25] To commemorate the Olympic Games scheduled for 1912 Stockholm in, the American Olympic Committee commissioned him to create a sports medallion.[26] The result was one of his most famous works, the Joy of Effort medallion. Within years, the YMCA started to use the motif in Asia.[27] Later, at the 1932 Summer Olympics, McKenzie would win a medal for a sculpture.[28]

In 1915, with the outbreak of the First World War, McKenzie made his way to England to enlist with the Canadian Forces. Eager to volunteer his services as a physician and surgeon, McKenzie chose instead to enlist with the Royal Army Medical Corps after encountering some red tape and delays in his paperwork.[29] Given the commission of Lieutenant (and later becoming Major),[30] they quickly assigned him to the physical training program for new soldiers.[25] His first task was to inspect and report on the condition of the training camps.[25] Once the organization of the training camps was completed, he spent six months working out of orthopedic care centers, with some of his work involving taking individuals disabled by war and designing specific prosthetic apparatus that would suit their needs.[31] He also spent a large portion of his time helping plastic surgeon Dr. William L. Clark rehabilitate those whose faces had been disfigured by war.[31]

After the war, McKenzie returned to his position at the University of Pennsylvania. In 1930, he left his post at the University as teaching there was no longer an enjoyable part of his life because of the bureaucracy that had become attached to his job.[21][32]

Almonte edit

In McKenzie's final years, he was an internationally recognized figure and comparatively well off, so that he had the ability to retire anywhere. In 1931, he received an invitation from the Mayor of Almonte to return to his hometown to participate in the celebration of Almonte's 50th Anniversary of Incorporation.[33] During the celebrations, the mayor offered McKenzie "The Freedom of Almonte" - a local award of recognition.[33] While in town, he decided to explore his old boyhood haunts and came across the old gristmill known as Baird's Mill. The mayor encouraged McKenzie and his wife to purchase the property.[33] The property had long since become abandoned; however, it was situated in a picturesque setting, making a perfect retirement home that would kindle McKenzie's artistic imagination.[34] After Ethel O'Neil McKenzie's death in 1954, the Mill of Kintail, as McKenzie and his wife Ethel renamed the property, passed eventually into management by the local natural resource management office, the Mississippi Valley Conservation Authority, who open the museum to the public from May to October.[35] During his retirement, McKenzie took advantage of the peaceful surroundings of Almonte. Being a man who could never sit still for very long, a typical summer's day would find him working in his studio, walking in the woods, swimming, canoeing, going into town or giving presentations to local groups.[36] His spirit refused to allow him to slow down, despite warnings from his physician about his deteriorating heart, and consequently, McKenzie collapsed suddenly and died on April 28, 1938.[23][37]

Legacy edit

R. Tait McKenzie's influence was so strong in the fields of physical education, medicine, the arts, and the military that hundreds of people expressed sadness and felt personal loss in his passing, many sending condolences to his widow, Ethel.[38]

His more than 200 works of art are seen around the world. A collection of his work can be seen at his former residence, the Mill of Kintail, also known as the R. Tait McKenzie Memorial Museum at the Mill of Kintail Conservation Area in Almonte. The Joseph B. Wolffe Collection of R. Tait McKenzie Sculpture of Athletes is housed on the campus of the University of Tennessee.

Near the end of his life, McKenzie said he wanted his heart to be buried in front of the Scottish-American War Memorial that he had created in Edinburgh, Scotland. When he died in Philadelphia, this request was denied by the "corporation of that city", but the organ was subsequently buried at the nearby St. Cuthbert churchyard.

An elementary school in Almonte was named after him in 1998.

Tait McKenzie Centre is a sports facility named after him at York University in Toronto, Canada.

Honors and awards edit

Fellow #2 in the National Academy of Kinesiology[39]

Selected works edit

 
Scots American War Memorial (1927), Edinburgh, Scotland

The Ideal Scout edit

 
The Ideal Scout (1937), Philadelphia

His most famous sculpture is The Ideal Scout (1937), also known as The Boy Scout. His original 1915 statuette is in the collection of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. The first full-size casting was placed in front of the Cradle of Liberty Council in Philadelphia in 1937, and stood there until 2013. Replicas can be found at Boy Scout offices across the United States, as well as at Gilwell Park in London, England.

Other Sculptures edit

References edit

  1. ^ Ray, Harold L. (1993). (PDF). Canadian Journal of History of Sport. 24–25: 84. doi:10.1123/cjhs.24.1.84. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 28 August 2014.
  2. ^ Joseph Hanaway and Richard L. Cruess, McGill Medicine – 1885 to 1936 (McGill-Queen’s University Press: Montreal, 1996), 601.
  3. ^ a b Jean S. McGill, The Joy of Effort: A Biography of R. Tait McKenzie (Clay Publishing Co.: Oshawa, 1980), 37.
  4. ^ Jean S. McGill, The Joy of Effort: A Biography of R. Tait McKenzie (Clay Publishing Co.: Oshawa, 1980), 3.
  5. ^ Frank Cosentino, Almonte's Brothers of the Wind: R. Tait McKenzie and James Naismith (General Store Publishing House: Burnstown, 1996) p22.
  6. ^ a b Jean S. McGill, The Joy of Effort: A Biography of R. Tait McKenzie (Clay Publishing Co.: Oshawa, 1980), 10-11.
  7. ^ Joseph Hanaway and Richard L. Cruess, McGill Medicine – 1885 to 1936 (McGill-Queen's University Press: Montreal, 1996), 233.
  8. ^ Frank Cosentino, Almonte's Brothers of the Wind: R. Tait McKenzie and James Naismith (General Store Publishing House: Burnstown, 1996), 48.
  9. ^ Jean S. McGill, The Joy of Effort: A Biography of R. Tait McKenzie (Clay Publishing Co.: Oshawa, 1980), 13.
  10. ^ Major James Farquharson Leys, "The Life of a Remarkable Man." The Canadian Army Journal (January 1955), 98.
  11. ^ Joseph Hanaway and Richard L. Cruess, McGill Medicine – 1885 to 1936 (McGill-Queen’s University Press: Montreal, 1996), 234.
  12. ^ O'Neil, Peat (19 June 1976). "R. T. McKenzie: a great man to remember in Canada's Olympic year". CMAJ. 114 (12): 1156–1157. PMC 1957148. PMID 776383. McKenzie began his academic work as demonstrator for McGill's anatomy department. (Demonstrator is the entry-level academic title at a Canadian University Faculty of Medicine.)
  13. ^ a b Jean S. McGill, The Joy of Effort: A Biography of R. Tait McKenzie (Clay Publishing Co.: Oshawa, 1980), 22.
  14. ^ Jean S. McGill, The Joy of Effort: A Biography of R. Tait McKenzie (Clay Publishing Co.: Oshawa, 1980), 28-30.
  15. ^ a b c d e f Joseph Hanaway and Richard L. Cruess, McGill Medicine – 1885 to 1936 (McGill-Queen’s University Press: Montreal, 1996), 55.
  16. ^ Jean S. McGill, The Joy of Effort: A Biography of R. Tait McKenzie (Clay Publishing Co.: Oshawa, 1980), 23.
  17. ^ Jean S. McGill, The Joy of Effort: A Biography of R. Tait McKenzie (Clay Publishing Co.: Oshawa, 1980), 26.
  18. ^ a b c d Joseph Hanaway and Richard L. Cruess, McGill Medicine – 1885 to 1936 (McGill-Queen’s University Press: Montreal, 1996), 57.
  19. ^ a b Jean S. McGill, The Joy of Effort: A Biography of R. Tait McKenzie (Clay Publishing Co.: Oshawa, 1980), 38.
  20. ^ . Royal Canadian Academy of Arts. Archived from the original on 26 May 2011. Retrieved 11 September 2013.
  21. ^ a b "R. Tait McKenzie Resigns". Associated Press in the Christian Science Monitor. 25 May 1931. Retrieved 23 November 2010. Dr. R. Tait McKenzie, eminent sculptor and director of the department of physical education at the University of Pennsylvania since 1904, has announced his resignation from the college faculty. The resignation, effective next month, was made, Dr. McKenzie said, so that he could devote all his time to sculpture, in which field he is internationally known. …
  22. ^ Joseph Hanaway and Richard L. Cruess, McGill Medicine – 1885 to 1936 (McGill-Queen’s University Press: Montreal, 1996), 56.
  23. ^ a b "Dr. R. Tait McKenzie, Sculptor, Teacher. Physical Education Director at Pennsylvania University Dies Suddenly at 70. Army Physician in War. Served British Forces, Later Designing Soldier. Memorials. Statues Widely Known Authority on Physical Culture Designed Noted Memorials". New York Times. 29 April 1938. Retrieved 23 November 2010. Dr. R. Tait McKenzie, sculptor, physician and J. William White research professor of physical education at the University of Pennsylvania, died of heart disease tonight at his home here. He was 70 years old.
  24. ^ Robert Tait McKenzie, 1867–1938 (http://www.scouters.us/RTaitMcKenzie.html).
  25. ^ a b c Major James Farquharson Leys, “The Life of a Remarkable Man,” The Canadian Army Journal (January 1955), 102.
  26. ^ Jean S. McGill, The Joy of Effort: A Biography of R. Tait McKenzie (Clay Publishing Co.: Oshawa, 1980), 90.
  27. ^ Stefan Huebner, Pan-Asian Sports and the Emergence of Modern Asia, 1913-1974. Singapore: NUS Press, 2016, 50-52.
  28. ^ "R. Tait McKenzie". Olympedia. Retrieved 22 July 2020.
  29. ^ Major James Farquharson Leys, “The Life of a Remarkable Man,” The Canadian Army Journal (January 1955), 102-103.
  30. ^ . Archived from the original on 4 June 2011. Retrieved 11 August 2006.
  31. ^ a b Frank Cosentino, Almonte’s Brothers of the Wind: R. Tait McKenzie and James Naismith (General Store Publishing House: Burnstown, 1996), 117.
  32. ^ Frank Cosentino, Almonte’s Brothers of the Wind: R. Tait McKenzie and James Naismith (General Store Publishing House: Burnstown, 1996), 147.
  33. ^ a b c Frank Cosentino, Almonte’s Brothers of the Wind: R. Tait McKenzie and James Naismith (General Store Publishing House: Burnstown, 1996), 148.
  34. ^ Jean S. McGill, The Joy of Effort: A Biography of R. Tait McKenzie (Clay Publishing Co.: Oshawa, 1980), 142.
  35. ^ . Archived from the original on 26 July 2011. Retrieved 16 April 2011.
  36. ^ Frank Cosentino, Almonte’s Brothers of the Wind: R. Tait McKenzie and James Naismith (General Store Publishing House: Burnstown, 1996), 159.
  37. ^ Frank Cosentino, Almonte’s Brothers of the Wind: R. Tait McKenzie and James Naismith (General Store Publishing House: Burnstown, 1996), 163.
  38. ^ Jean S. McGill, The Joy of Effort: A Biography of R. Tait McKenzie (Clay Publishing Co.: Oshawa, 1980), 197.
  39. ^ Cardinal, Bradley J. (2022). "The National Academy of Kinesiology: Its founding, focus, and future". Kinesiology Review. 11 (1): 6–25. doi:10.1123/kr.2021-0064.
  40. ^ Reverend George Whitefield from SIRIS.
  41. ^ Bust of General John Grubb Parke from SIRIS.
  42. ^ Bust of Governor Andrew G. Curtin from SIRIS.
  43. ^ World Wars Monument from SIRIS.
  44. ^ Highlander Monument from SIRIS.
  • The Games of the Xth Olympiad Los Angeles 1932 (PDF). Xth Olympiade Committee of the Games of Los Angeles, U.S.A. 1932. 1933. pp. 748–765. (PDF) from the original on 10 April 2008.
  • Wagner, Juergen. . Olympic Games Museum. Archived from the original on 1 May 2008.
  • Kramer, Bernhard (May 2004). "In Search of the Lost Champions of the Olympic Art Contests" (PDF). Journal of Olympic History. 12 (2): 29–34. (PDF) from the original on 10 April 2008.
  • Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. . Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 29 May 2016.

Further reading edit

  • Cosentino, Frank. Almonte's Brother's of the Wind: R. Tait McKenzie and James Naismith. General Store Publishing House: Burnstown, 1996.
  • Fraquharson Leys, James, Major. "The Life of a Remarkable Man." The Canadian Army Journal. January 1955.
  • Goode, James M. The Outdoor Sculpture of Washington D.C., Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington D.C. 1974
  • Hanaway, Joseph and Richard L. Cruess. McGill Medicine – 1885 to 1936. McGill-Queen's University Press: Montreal, 1996.
  • Hussey, Christopher, Tait McKenzie: A Sculptor of Youth, J.B.Lippencott Company, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1930
  • Kozar, Andrew J., R. Tait Mckenzie: The Sculptor of Athletes, University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville, Tennessee, 1975
  • Kvaran, Einar Einarsson, Annotated Inventory of Outdoor Sculpture in Washtenaw County, 1989
  • McGill, Jean S. The Joy of Effort: A Biography of R. Tait McKenzie. Clay Publishing Co.: Oshawa, 1980.
  • Opitz, Glenn B, Editor, Mantle Fielding’s Dictionary of American Painters, Sculptors & Engravers, Apollo Book, Poughkeepsie NY, 1986
  • Proske, Beatrice Gilman, Brookgreen Gardens Sculpture, Brookgreen Gardens, South Carolina, 1968
  • Rogers, Peter, Gilwell Park, The Scout Association, London, England, 1998.
  • Sculpting soldiers and Reclaiming the Maimed: R. Tait McKenzie's work in the First World War period Fred Mason, CBMH/BCHM (Canadian Bulletin of Medical History) Volume 27:22010, p. 363-383

External links edit

  • Mill of Kintail Museum
  • University of Pennsylvania, R. Tait McKenzie page
  • R. Tait McKenzie
  • Robert Tait McKenzie, 1867–1938 4 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  • R. Tait McKenzie Outreach Exhibit
  • Farabloc Awards

tait, mckenzie, robert, tait, mckenzie, sometimes, written, mackenzie, 1867, april, 1938, canadian, physician, educator, sculptor, athlete, soldier, scouter, born, ramsay, township, lanark, county, ontario, canada, attended, mcgill, university, montreal, under. Robert Tait McKenzie RCA sometimes written MacKenzie RCA May 26 1867 April 28 1938 was a Canadian 1 physician educator sculptor athlete soldier and Scouter Born in Ramsay Township Lanark County Ontario Canada he attended McGill University in Montreal as an undergraduate and medical student and was an instructor in its medical school beginning in 1894 In 1904 he moved to the United States to teach at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia Pennsylvania In the 1930s he returned to the county of his birth retiring to the Mill of Kintail in Almonte R Tait McKenzieRobert Tait McKenzie c 1910sBornRobert Tait McKenzie 1867 05 26 May 26 1867Ramsay Township Lanark County Ontario CanadaDiedApril 28 1938 1938 04 28 aged 70 Philadelphia Pennsylvania U S NationalityCanadian AmericanKnown forSculptorNotable workThe Ideal ScoutScots American War MemorialSpouseEthel O Neil m 1907 He pioneered physical fitness programs in Canada 2 During World War I his methods and inventions for restoring and rehabilitating wounded soldiers laid a foundation for modern physiotherapy practices 3 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 McGill University 1 2 University of Pennsylvania 1 3 Almonte 2 Legacy 3 Honors and awards 4 Selected works 4 1 The Ideal Scout 4 2 Other Sculptures 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksBiography edit nbsp The Athlete c 1903 McKenzie was born on May 26 1867 in the township of Ramsay now part of the Town of Mississippi Mills in Ontario s Lanark County A childhood friend was James Naismith the inventor of basketball with whom he attended McGill University As a child McKenzie did not regard himself as an athlete saying Looking back with an eye of memory I see a rather delicate child sensitive at being called pale faced a roamer of the woods and fields with a mind filled with romance that Sir Walter Scott and Fenimore Cooper alone could instill going unwillingly to school distracted by thoughts of the Deerslayer 4 nbsp R Tait McKenzie s signature on The Call In preparation for McGill he attended Ottawa Collegiate Institute currently known as Lisgar Collegiate Institute in 1883 at nearby Ottawa Ontario 5 McGill University edit This attitude changed after he enrolled at McGill University in 1885 6 A pre med major he developed a great appreciation for and attraction to athletics and physical training 6 McKenzie became involved in acrobatics and gymnastics set a 5 foot 9 inch high jump record ran hurdles boxed played football and was on the tug of war team 7 In 1889 he won the Wickstead gold medal which made him an acknowledged gymnastic champion 8 McKenzie found his athletic abilities focused on sports that did not solely require strength or stamina but rather skill coordination and practice 9 During his senior year at McGill McKenzie was an intern at the University Hospital 10 He graduated from McGill University in 1892 Medicinae Doctorem et Chirurgiae Magistrum and then got an internship at Montreal General Hospital 11 After graduating McKenzie gained experience as a physician and surgeon developed his own medical practice and became an anatomy instructor at McGill 12 He became convinced of the need for preventive medicine 13 Training and conditioning of the body he believed would prevent disease physical breakdown and accidents so he developed a program of physical exercise 13 In 1894 he became the personal family physician of the Governor General of Canada the Marquis of Aberdeen 14 He spent 15 months in the Governor General s household where he mingled with various political figures 3 During the 1890s McKenzie asked McGill to develop a department and school of physical education but the university declined citing lack of money 15 As a compromise in 1898 McGill appointed him as Medical Director of Physical Training the first such appointee at a Canadian university 15 He wanted to customize the athletic programs for three categories of student athletic sedentary or bookworm 16 and the school allowed him to start physical examinations for incoming students 15 Amid his duties at McGill and his medical practice in Montreal McKenzie sought escape in art He first turned to watercolour sketching and always kept a small notebook in his pocket in which he would scribble whenever something caught his eye 17 His interest in sculpting was a result of his extensive knowledge of human anatomy his desire to portraying athletics artistically and the limitations of portraying musculature in two dimensional art forms 18 McKenzie s first untrained sculptural effort was a series of masks known as Violent Effort Breathlessness Fatigue and Exhaustion 18 To achieve these masks he studied facial muscles under physical and emotional stress 19 His research led to an article The Facial Expression of Violent Effort Breathlessness and Fatigue published around 1900 in the Journal of Anatomy and Physiology in London 19 His first sculptural piece in the round was The Sprinter The design of the piece involved measurements of limbs and torsos of many athletes including McGill students 18 The Sprinter was second in a series of over 200 works that included athletic figures military figures busts masks friezes and medallions 18 These works of art are displayed all over Canada the United States England and Scotland 15 His sculpture earned him membership in the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts 20 University of Pennsylvania edit In 1904 McKenzie took a position at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia 15 21 which offered him a permanent faculty position and use of the university s a new gymnasium football stadium running track and other recently constructed facilities 15 His position as Director of the Physical Education Department came with the opportunity to develop test and implement his theories on health and athletics 22 nbsp Relief bust of J William White 1919 Rittenhouse Square Philadelphia Pennsylvania While in Philadelphia he also worked closely with Lord Robert Baden Powell founder of Scouting 23 In 1907 McKenzie met and married musician and poet Ethel O Neil a native of Hamilton Ontario while on a voyage to England 24 As a longtime supporter and spectator at the Olympic Games McKenzie often exhibited works at the competition of fine arts 25 To commemorate the Olympic Games scheduled for 1912 Stockholm in the American Olympic Committee commissioned him to create a sports medallion 26 The result was one of his most famous works the Joy of Effort medallion Within years the YMCA started to use the motif in Asia 27 Later at the 1932 Summer Olympics McKenzie would win a medal for a sculpture 28 In 1915 with the outbreak of the First World War McKenzie made his way to England to enlist with the Canadian Forces Eager to volunteer his services as a physician and surgeon McKenzie chose instead to enlist with the Royal Army Medical Corps after encountering some red tape and delays in his paperwork 29 Given the commission of Lieutenant and later becoming Major 30 they quickly assigned him to the physical training program for new soldiers 25 His first task was to inspect and report on the condition of the training camps 25 Once the organization of the training camps was completed he spent six months working out of orthopedic care centers with some of his work involving taking individuals disabled by war and designing specific prosthetic apparatus that would suit their needs 31 He also spent a large portion of his time helping plastic surgeon Dr William L Clark rehabilitate those whose faces had been disfigured by war 31 After the war McKenzie returned to his position at the University of Pennsylvania In 1930 he left his post at the University as teaching there was no longer an enjoyable part of his life because of the bureaucracy that had become attached to his job 21 32 Almonte edit In McKenzie s final years he was an internationally recognized figure and comparatively well off so that he had the ability to retire anywhere In 1931 he received an invitation from the Mayor of Almonte to return to his hometown to participate in the celebration of Almonte s 50th Anniversary of Incorporation 33 During the celebrations the mayor offered McKenzie The Freedom of Almonte a local award of recognition 33 While in town he decided to explore his old boyhood haunts and came across the old gristmill known as Baird s Mill The mayor encouraged McKenzie and his wife to purchase the property 33 The property had long since become abandoned however it was situated in a picturesque setting making a perfect retirement home that would kindle McKenzie s artistic imagination 34 After Ethel O Neil McKenzie s death in 1954 the Mill of Kintail as McKenzie and his wife Ethel renamed the property passed eventually into management by the local natural resource management office the Mississippi Valley Conservation Authority who open the museum to the public from May to October 35 During his retirement McKenzie took advantage of the peaceful surroundings of Almonte Being a man who could never sit still for very long a typical summer s day would find him working in his studio walking in the woods swimming canoeing going into town or giving presentations to local groups 36 His spirit refused to allow him to slow down despite warnings from his physician about his deteriorating heart and consequently McKenzie collapsed suddenly and died on April 28 1938 23 37 Legacy editMedal record Art competitions Representing nbsp Canada Olympic Games nbsp 1932 Los Angeles Medals and reliefs R Tait McKenzie s influence was so strong in the fields of physical education medicine the arts and the military that hundreds of people expressed sadness and felt personal loss in his passing many sending condolences to his widow Ethel 38 His more than 200 works of art are seen around the world A collection of his work can be seen at his former residence the Mill of Kintail also known as the R Tait McKenzie Memorial Museum at the Mill of Kintail Conservation Area in Almonte The Joseph B Wolffe Collection of R Tait McKenzie Sculpture of Athletes is housed on the campus of the University of Tennessee Near the end of his life McKenzie said he wanted his heart to be buried in front of the Scottish American War Memorial that he had created in Edinburgh Scotland When he died in Philadelphia this request was denied by the corporation of that city but the organ was subsequently buried at the nearby St Cuthbert churchyard An elementary school in Almonte was named after him in 1998 Tait McKenzie Centre is a sports facility named after him at York University in Toronto Canada Honors and awards editFellow 2 in the National Academy of Kinesiology 39 Selected works edit nbsp Scots American War Memorial 1927 Edinburgh Scotland Benjamin Franklin in 1723 1910 1914 University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania Duplicates are at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill Philadelphia Free Library Philadelphia Pennsylvania and Brookgreen Gardens South Carolina J William White Memorial Drinking Fountain 1919 1921 Rittenhouse Square Philadelphia Pennsylvania The Reverend George Whitefield 1914 1919 University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania 40 The Homecoming 1922 Cambridge War Memorial Hills Road Cambridge England The Victor 1925 War Memorial Woodbury New Jersey Edgar Fahs Smith 1925 26 University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Scots American War Memorial 1927 Princes Street Gardens Edinburgh Scotland General James Wolfe 1927 Greenwich Park London England Bust of General John Grubb Parke 1930 Vicksburg National Military Park Vicksburg Mississippi 41 Bust of Governor Andrew G Curtin 1930 Vicksburg National Military Park Vicksburg Mississippi 42 World Wars Monument 1932 Girard College Philadelphia Pennsylvania 43 Monument to Jane A Delano and the Nurses Who Died in Service in World War I 1933 Red Cross Headquarters Washington D C The Fields Medal 1933 awarded at the International Congress of Mathematicians Three bronzes at Mercersburg Academy 1935 depicting the school s first headmaster William Mann Irvine Rhodes scholar Robert Michelet and Olympian Bill Carr Rejoice Young Man in Thy Youth 1936 13th issue of the Society of Medalists Highlander Monument 1936 Darien Georgia 44 The Ideal Scout edit nbsp The Ideal Scout 1937 Philadelphia Main article The Ideal Scout His most famous sculpture is The Ideal Scout 1937 also known as The Boy Scout His original 1915 statuette is in the collection of the Philadelphia Museum of Art The first full size casting was placed in front of the Cradle of Liberty Council in Philadelphia in 1937 and stood there until 2013 Replicas can be found at Boy Scout offices across the United States as well as at Gilwell Park in London England Other Sculptures edit nbsp Benjamin Franklin in 1723 1910 1914 University of Pennsylvania nbsp The Homecoming Cambridge War Memorial 1922 England nbsp The Victor 1924 Woodbury New Jersey nbsp Edgar Fahs Smith 1925 26 University of Pennsylvania nbsp General James Wolfe 1927 Greenwich Park London England nbsp Jane Delano Monument 1933 Washington DCReferences edit Ray Harold L 1993 Book Reviews The Sport Sculpture of R Tait McKenzie PDF Canadian Journal of History of Sport 24 25 84 doi 10 1123 cjhs 24 1 84 Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 28 August 2014 Joseph Hanaway and Richard L Cruess McGill Medicine 1885 to 1936 McGill Queen s University Press Montreal 1996 601 a b Jean S McGill The Joy of Effort A Biography of R Tait McKenzie Clay Publishing Co Oshawa 1980 37 Jean S McGill The Joy of Effort A Biography of R Tait McKenzie Clay Publishing Co Oshawa 1980 3 Frank Cosentino Almonte s Brothers of the Wind R Tait McKenzie and James Naismith General Store Publishing House Burnstown 1996 p22 a b Jean S McGill The Joy of Effort A Biography of R Tait McKenzie Clay Publishing Co Oshawa 1980 10 11 Joseph Hanaway and Richard L Cruess McGill Medicine 1885 to 1936 McGill Queen s University Press Montreal 1996 233 Frank Cosentino Almonte s Brothers of the Wind R Tait McKenzie and James Naismith General Store Publishing House Burnstown 1996 48 Jean S McGill The Joy of Effort A Biography of R Tait McKenzie Clay Publishing Co Oshawa 1980 13 Major James Farquharson Leys The Life of a Remarkable Man The Canadian Army Journal January 1955 98 Joseph Hanaway and Richard L Cruess McGill Medicine 1885 to 1936 McGill Queen s University Press Montreal 1996 234 O Neil Peat 19 June 1976 R T McKenzie a great man to remember in Canada s Olympic year CMAJ 114 12 1156 1157 PMC 1957148 PMID 776383 McKenzie began his academic work as demonstrator for McGill s anatomy department Demonstrator is the entry level academic title at a Canadian University Faculty of Medicine a b Jean S McGill The Joy of Effort A Biography of R Tait McKenzie Clay Publishing Co Oshawa 1980 22 Jean S McGill The Joy of Effort A Biography of R Tait McKenzie Clay Publishing Co Oshawa 1980 28 30 a b c d e f Joseph Hanaway and Richard L Cruess McGill Medicine 1885 to 1936 McGill Queen s University Press Montreal 1996 55 Jean S McGill The Joy of Effort A Biography of R Tait McKenzie Clay Publishing Co Oshawa 1980 23 Jean S McGill The Joy of Effort A Biography of R Tait McKenzie Clay Publishing Co Oshawa 1980 26 a b c d Joseph Hanaway and Richard L Cruess McGill Medicine 1885 to 1936 McGill Queen s University Press Montreal 1996 57 a b Jean S McGill The Joy of Effort A Biography of R Tait McKenzie Clay Publishing Co Oshawa 1980 38 Members since 1880 Royal Canadian Academy of Arts Archived from the original on 26 May 2011 Retrieved 11 September 2013 a b R Tait McKenzie Resigns Associated Press in the Christian Science Monitor 25 May 1931 Retrieved 23 November 2010 Dr R Tait McKenzie eminent sculptor and director of the department of physical education at the University of Pennsylvania since 1904 has announced his resignation from the college faculty The resignation effective next month was made Dr McKenzie said so that he could devote all his time to sculpture in which field he is internationally known Joseph Hanaway and Richard L Cruess McGill Medicine 1885 to 1936 McGill Queen s University Press Montreal 1996 56 a b Dr R Tait McKenzie Sculptor Teacher Physical Education Director at Pennsylvania University Dies Suddenly at 70 Army Physician in War Served British Forces Later Designing Soldier Memorials Statues Widely Known Authority on Physical Culture Designed Noted Memorials New York Times 29 April 1938 Retrieved 23 November 2010 Dr R Tait McKenzie sculptor physician and J William White research professor of physical education at the University of Pennsylvania died of heart disease tonight at his home here He was 70 years old Robert Tait McKenzie 1867 1938 http www scouters us RTaitMcKenzie html a b c Major James Farquharson Leys The Life of a Remarkable Man The Canadian Army Journal January 1955 102 Jean S McGill The Joy of Effort A Biography of R Tait McKenzie Clay Publishing Co Oshawa 1980 90 Stefan Huebner Pan Asian Sports and the Emergence of Modern Asia 1913 1974 Singapore NUS Press 2016 50 52 R Tait McKenzie Olympedia Retrieved 22 July 2020 Major James Farquharson Leys The Life of a Remarkable Man The Canadian Army Journal January 1955 102 103 Biography Archived from the original on 4 June 2011 Retrieved 11 August 2006 a b Frank Cosentino Almonte s Brothers of the Wind R Tait McKenzie and James Naismith General Store Publishing House Burnstown 1996 117 Frank Cosentino Almonte s Brothers of the Wind R Tait McKenzie and James Naismith General Store Publishing House Burnstown 1996 147 a b c Frank Cosentino Almonte s Brothers of the Wind R Tait McKenzie and James Naismith General Store Publishing House Burnstown 1996 148 Jean S McGill The Joy of Effort A Biography of R Tait McKenzie Clay Publishing Co Oshawa 1980 142 Dr Robert Tait McKenzie Archived from the original on 26 July 2011 Retrieved 16 April 2011 Frank Cosentino Almonte s Brothers of the Wind R Tait McKenzie and James Naismith General Store Publishing House Burnstown 1996 159 Frank Cosentino Almonte s Brothers of the Wind R Tait McKenzie and James Naismith General Store Publishing House Burnstown 1996 163 Jean S McGill The Joy of Effort A Biography of R Tait McKenzie Clay Publishing Co Oshawa 1980 197 Cardinal Bradley J 2022 The National Academy of Kinesiology Its founding focus and future Kinesiology Review 11 1 6 25 doi 10 1123 kr 2021 0064 Reverend George Whitefield from SIRIS Bust of General John Grubb Parke from SIRIS Bust of Governor Andrew G Curtin from SIRIS World Wars Monument from SIRIS Highlander Monument from SIRIS The Games of the Xth Olympiad Los Angeles 1932 PDF Xth Olympiade Committee of the Games of Los Angeles U S A 1932 1933 pp 748 765 Archived PDF from the original on 10 April 2008 Wagner Juergen Olympic Art Competition 1932 Olympic Games Museum Archived from the original on 1 May 2008 Kramer Bernhard May 2004 In Search of the Lost Champions of the Olympic Art Contests PDF Journal of Olympic History 12 2 29 34 Archived PDF from the original on 10 April 2008 Evans Hilary Gjerde Arild Heijmans Jeroen Mallon Bill et al Tait McKenzie Olympics at Sports Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on 17 April 2020 Retrieved 29 May 2016 Further reading edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Robert Tait McKenzie Cosentino Frank Almonte s Brother s of the Wind R Tait McKenzie and James Naismith General Store Publishing House Burnstown 1996 Fraquharson Leys James Major The Life of a Remarkable Man The Canadian Army Journal January 1955 Goode James M The Outdoor Sculpture of Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Press Washington D C 1974 Hanaway Joseph and Richard L Cruess McGill Medicine 1885 to 1936 McGill Queen s University Press Montreal 1996 Hussey Christopher Tait McKenzie A Sculptor of Youth J B Lippencott Company Philadelphia Pennsylvania 1930 Kozar Andrew J R Tait Mckenzie The Sculptor of Athletes University of Tennessee Press Knoxville Tennessee 1975 Kvaran Einar Einarsson Annotated Inventory of Outdoor Sculpture in Washtenaw County 1989 McGill Jean S The Joy of Effort A Biography of R Tait McKenzie Clay Publishing Co Oshawa 1980 Opitz Glenn B Editor Mantle Fielding s Dictionary of American Painters Sculptors amp Engravers Apollo Book Poughkeepsie NY 1986 Proske Beatrice Gilman Brookgreen Gardens Sculpture Brookgreen Gardens South Carolina 1968 Rogers Peter Gilwell Park The Scout Association London England 1998 Sculpting soldiers and Reclaiming the Maimed R Tait McKenzie s work in the First World War period Fred Mason CBMH BCHM Canadian Bulletin of Medical History Volume 27 22010 p 363 383External links editMill of Kintail Museum University of Pennsylvania R Tait McKenzie page R Tait McKenzie Robert Tait McKenzie 1867 1938 Archived 4 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine R Tait McKenzie Outreach Exhibit Farabloc Awards Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title R Tait McKenzie amp oldid 1219361767, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.