Grits Gresham

Grits Gresham
Born Claude Hamilton Gresham Jr.
(1922-06-21)June 21, 1922
Spartanburg County, South Carolina, United States
Died February 18, 2008(2008-02-18) (aged 85)
Natchitoches, Louisiana
Occupation Sportsman, journalist, host of ABC's The American Sportsman from 1966 to 1979
Spouse(s) Mary Eleanor Gresham (married 1944-2001, her death)
Children Three, including Tom Gresham
Notes
The sportsman Gresham was described by a Baton Rouge editor as "crusty-hard on the outside and tender on the inside."

Claude Hamilton Gresham Jr. (June 21, 1922 February 18, 2008), better known as Grits Gresham, was an internationally known American sportsman, author, photographer and television personality who hosted ABC's The American Sportsman series from 1966 to 1979. Gresham, who resided on the historic Cane River Lake in Natchitoches, the oldest city in Louisiana, traveled throughout the globe, particularly South America and Africa, to engage in hunting, fishing and shooting with various American celebrities. He was a champion of the environment and conservation, the subject of his graduate school thesis.[1]

Early years, education, military

Gresham was born in Spartanburg County, South Carolina, to Claude Gresham Sr. and the former Belle Hill. He inherited his nickname from his father, a semi-professional baseball player known as "Grit". Gresham grew up in rural South Carolina. As a small boy, he was so interested in hunting that he slept with his air rifle beside his bed. He took his first shot of the day out of his bedroom window. "Two things were going to happen every day when I was growing up. The sun was going to rise, and I was going to shoot something," Gresham said in a 1996 interview.[2]

He attended on a baseball scholarship the Blue Ridge School for Boys, a private male boarding school named for the Blue Ridge Mountains and located in Hendersonville, North Carolina. This school closed its doors in 1968. He also studied at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Vanderbilt University in Nashville, and Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, but he procured his Bachelor of Science and Master of Science degrees, with specialty in forestry and wildlife management, from Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, where he was thereafter an inductee into the LSU Hall of Distinction.[3]

Before Gresham began his long career in outdoor journalism, he signed a baseball contract with the Chicago Cubs organization and was on the roster of the Cubs' Shelby, North Carolina farm team but never played.[4][5] His son, Tom Gresham, learned of the baseball offer from the Cubs several years after his father's death while looking through old family records. "He went to work to take care of his young family ... I wonder how much it hurt him to make that decision. So much that he never, ever told us he was signed by the Cubs."[6]

During World War II, Gresham served in the United States Army Air Corps, the precursor to the United States Air Force. He considered his military service as important as his success in journalism.[7]

In 1944, Gresham married the former Mary Eleanor Ryan (July 4, 1925 March 5, 2001). She was a Roman Catholic, and he was a Baptist; they wed in a Methodist Church in Nashville, Tennessee while he was in between military assignments. In their first thirteen years of marriage, they had a different address each Christmas. Mary became an excellent cook by necessity and assisted her husband on his assignments with the use of her memory, note-taking, and photographic skills.[6]

The Greshams had three children, including Thomas Hamilton "Tom" Gresham, host of weekly radio program Gun Talk. There are three Gresham grandchildren, Delta Music Experience chief executive officer Amanda Gresham, Gun Talk principal Ryan Gresham, and landscape professional Meredith Gresham.

Outdoors journalist and commentator

Gresham worked for the United States Fish and Wildlife Service and thereafter edited the Louisiana Conservationist magazine. He was the former outdoors editor of The Shreveport Times too.[8]

Gresham succeeded former Governor Joe Foss of South Dakota as the host of The American Sportsman. He was thereafter joined by Curt Gowdy as co-host. Gresham further hosted Shooting Sports America, sponsored by Chevy Trucks on the ESPN network. For twenty-six years, he was the shooting editor of Sports Afield magazine. He was also published in Sports Illustrated and Gentleman's Quarterly. He appeared in television commercials for Miller Lite Beer.[2]

Entertainers such as Bing Crosby, Burt Reynolds, Jonathan Winters, Phil Harris, Rip Torn and Andy Griffith joined Gresham on hunting and fishing trips as did sports figures such as Olympic decathlon gold medalist Bruce Jenner (now Caitlyn Jenner),[lower-alpha 1] Pro Football Hall of Fame defensive tackle Buck Buchanan, and Bert Jones, the 1976 National Football League Most Valuable Player.[3]

The interview with Reagan

In an interview with U.S. President Ronald Reagan, Gresham reported that Reagan, as a fledgling radio announcer, had once used a Colt pistol to save a nurse in Des Moines, Iowa from a mugging on a street. After Gresham's story broke, the nurse came forward and confirmed the story but had no recollection that the young man who had saved her so many years before had turned out to have become the popular actor and President of the United States.[7]

Robert Barham and Bert Jones recall Gresham

Robert J. Barham, the Secretary of the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries and a former Republican member of the Louisiana State Senate, was among Greshan's longtime admirers. Gresham spent a lot of time with Barham's late father, Erle McKoin "Ninety" Barham (1916–1976) of Morehouse Parish, who was also an environmentalist. Barham recalled a "picture of my dad in one of his books -- The Complete Wildfowler. As a child, I got to meet him and be around him. He was just so easy to be around. Grits was nothing like the television celebrities of today. People were drawn to him. He made them feel at ease ... he made me feel at ease, and I was just a child. ... There will never be another like him," Barham told the The Shreveport Times.[3]

Fishing and the wetlands

Gresham was among the first to sound the alarm about the loss of wetlands in Louisiana. He worked with Ray Scott, the founder of the Bass Anglers Sportsman Society, to halt the cheating that had previously haunted tournament bass fishing. Gresham's Kiss the Land Goodbye was one of the early works about vanishing wetlands.[3]

Gresham's The Complete Book of Bass Fishing is, according to Ray Scott, "the best book ever written on bass fishing." Gresham wrote a column for Scott's Bassmaster magazine pro bono.[3]

Death and legacy

Gresham died at his home on Cane River Lake in Natchitoches, a small city in north central Louisiana, of complications from Alzheimer's disease -- pneumonia and infection. He had spent most of his last year in a nursing home in Natchitoches. In addition to his children, he was survived by three sisters, Rosa Schemmel of Wichita, Kansas, and Edith Kelley and Ruth Bedingfield of Ware Shoals in northwestern South Carolina. Services were held on February 22, 2008 in the chapel of Blanchard-St. Denis Funeral Home in Natchitoches, with the Roman Catholic minister Louis E. Sklar, III, officiating. Among Gresham's pallbearers was State Representative Rick Nowlin of Natchitoches. Burial was in Memory Lawn Cemetery on Louisiana Highway 6 near Natchitoches.[10]

Gresham received an honorary doctorate of humane letters from Northwestern State University in Natchitoches. On February 9, 2006, he received the only Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Shooting Sports Foundation, which established, with the Professional Outdoor Media Association, an ongoing "Grits Gresham Shooting Sports Communicator" award. The recipient of the award receives a bronze replica of Gresham's trademark "cowboy" hat.[11] He was among the most known spokesmen for the National Shooting Sports Federation.[1]

Gary Garth, the outdoor editor of The Courier-Journal in Louisville, Kentucky, relates that he became "addicted" to duck hunting as a child, based on the encouragement of Grits Gresham columns. "Through my work I've had the opportunity to meet, hunt, and fish with a few of the giants in my business. But I never met Grits. It's just as well. Some pedestals should remain untouched," Garth said in his tribute to the legendary outdoorsman.[12]

Joe Macaluso, outdoor editor of the Baton Rouge Morning Advocate recalled a fishing trip with Gresham on Toledo Bend Reservoir at the Texas-Louisiana boundary. Macaluso described Gresham as "the most famous of all Louisiana outdoors writers and media members... He was like a loaf of good French bread, crusty-hard on the outside and tender on the inside. When I told him that, he laughed [and said] 'Don’t tell anyone else'..."[8]

The Gresham Collection is located at the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame Foundation in Natchitoches.[3]

Books

Notes

  1. Jenner changed her name due to gender transition in 2015.[9]

References

  1. 1 2 "Outdoorsman Grits Gresham Dies at 85". National Shooting Sports Foundation. Archived from the original on March 2, 2008.
  2. 1 2 "Grits Gresham". The Times. London. February 23, 2008. Archived from the original on May 23, 2010.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Timothy, Philip (February 19, 2008). "Outdoor legend Grits Gresham dies". The Shreveport Times. Archived from the original on March 15, 2008.
  4. Hood, Bob (February 20, 2008). "Outdoors personality Grits Gresham dies". Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Archived from the original on March 12, 2008. Retrieved August 6, 2017.
  5. "Claude Gresham". baseball-reference. Retrieved August 6, 2017.
  6. 1 2 Tompkins, Bob (April 10, 2015). "Iconic outdoorsman Gresham's other life revealed". The Town Talk. Archived from the original on August 6, 2017. Retrieved May 24, 2015.
  7. 1 2 3 Metheny, Lisa (February 2008). "Outdoorsman Grits Gresham Dies at 85". WomenHunters.com. Archived from the original on March 3, 2008.
  8. 1 2 Macaluso, Joe (February 21, 2008). "Remembering Grits". The Advocate. p. 10C. Archived from the original on March 5, 2008.
  9. Leibovitz, Annie (June 1, 2015). "Introducing Caitlyn Jenner". Vanity Fair. Retrieved June 1, 2015.
  10. Grits Gresham at Find a Grave
  11. "Grits Gresham receivers Lifetime Achievement Award". SHOT Show Blast. National Shooting Sports Foundation. March 22, 2006. Archived from the original on August 27, 2007. Retrieved August 6, 2017.
  12. "Grits Gresham". Gary Garth's Field Notes. Louisville, KY: The Courier-Journal. February 19, 2008. Archived from the original on July 24, 2012.
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