Ed Temple
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Ed Temple (September 20, 1927 – September 22, 2016) was an American track and field coach who spent his entire collegiate coaching career at Tennessee State University (TSU) in Nashville, Tennessee. He's best known for building the TSU Tigerbelles into one of the most dominant women's track and field programs in Olympic history. During his forty-four years coaching the team, Temple developed more than forty athletes who competed for the United States at the Olympic Games, and they won twenty-three Olympic medals combined.[1] He also served as head coach of the U.S. women's Olympic track and field team at the 1960 Rome, 1964 Tokyo, and 1968 Mexico City Games. His decades of work in Nashville established him as one of the most important figures in American track and field and a defining force in the city's sporting culture.
Nashville was Temple's lifelong home. Born in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, he came to Tennessee State University as a student-athlete and never left. He devoted more than four decades to building a program that would bring international recognition to the university and the city alike. TSU President Glover reflected on Temple's impact after his death: "Coach Ed Temple helped to put TSU on the international stage."[2] His influence went far beyond wins and losses. Temple mentored his athletes, demanded discipline, and pushed hard for their academic success, operating on the belief that excellence in the classroom and excellence on the track weren't separate things.
Early Life and Education
Edward Stanley Temple was born on September 20, 1927, in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. He came to Tennessee State University on a track scholarship, where he competed as a student-athlete before moving into coaching. At TSU, Temple built his entire professional identity within the university's academic and athletic community. He earned his undergraduate degree from TSU and went on to complete graduate-level work, grounding his coaching in a formal understanding of physical education and human performance.
His experience as a student-athlete at a historically Black university shaped everything about his approach as a coach. He'd lived through it firsthand: competing in mid-twentieth-century America where Black athletes faced routine exclusion from facilities, honors, and opportunities available to their white peers. That understanding informed how he built his program. He required the Tigerbelles to maintain strong grades, and he oversaw their development as students with the same intensity he brought to track training. In effect, he ran a work-study program within TSU's athletic structure, making sure his recruits had both the support and the high expectations they needed to graduate. His autobiography, Only the Pure in Heart Survive, co-written with B'Lou Carter and published in 1980 by Broadman Press in Nashville, laid out this philosophy in his own words and became essential reading for coaches and educators thinking about the connection between athletics and character development.[3]
The TSU Tigerbelles
Temple's most enduring achievement was the TSU Tigerbelles women's track and field program. That institution built his national and international reputation. He took over in 1950 and coached continuously until 1994, a span of forty-four years. During that time, the Tigerbelles dominated American women's track and field. More than forty Olympians came through his program, and they won twenty-three Olympic medals together, a record no other collegiate women's track program in the United States has matched.[4]
Wilma Rudolph stands as his most celebrated athlete. She'd overcome childhood polio and the medical prediction that she'd never walk properly, becoming one of the greatest sprinters in American history. Under Temple's coaching, Rudolph won three gold medals at the 1960 Rome Olympics: the 100 meters, the 200 meters, and the 4×100-meter relay. She was the first American woman to win three golds at a single Olympic Games. The relay team that ran with her in Rome was made up entirely of Tigerbelles. Her achievements brought enormous international attention to the program and to Tennessee State University at a crucial moment in the civil rights movement. Black women winning at the highest level of international competition meant something that reached far beyond sport.
Temple coached other notable athletes too. Wyomia Tyus won the 100-meter gold at both the 1964 Tokyo and 1968 Mexico City Olympics, becoming the first sprinter in history, male or female, to win back-to-back 100-meter titles. Edith McGuire claimed gold in the 200 meters at the 1964 Tokyo Games. Madeline Manning won the 800 meters at the 1968 Mexico City Games, one of the rare middle-distance titles his program produced alongside its dominant sprint results. Willye White competed in five consecutive Olympic Games from 1956 to 1972 and won two silver medals, a longevity record for American women's track that held for decades. The depth and consistency of talent Temple developed over four decades reflected both his recruiting ability and his skill at turning promising young athletes into world-class competitors.
Temple's coaching methods centered on discipline and structure. He demanded punctuality, academic responsibility, and professional conduct from his athletes. He believed these qualities mattered not just for athletic success but for life after the track. He ran the Tigerbelles program with limited resources compared to many predominantly white universities, which made his Olympic record all the more remarkable as proof of what focused coaching and institutional commitment could achieve. During segregation, his athletes faced barriers at some Amateur Athletic Union facilities, a reality Temple navigated by seeking competitions, invitations, and international tours where his athletes could compete and be judged on merit alone.
Olympic Coaching Career
Temple's reputation for developing elite women's sprinters led to his selection as head coach of the United States women's Olympic track and field team three times. He coached the U.S. women's team at the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome, the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, and the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City. Across these three Games, American women's track and field achieved some of its finest results, with his own Tigerbelles accounting for a substantial share of the medals.
Rome in 1960 was defining. Rudolph won three golds, and the 4×100-meter relay team of Tigerbelles claimed gold in a world-record run. American women's sprinting announced itself as a global force. The 1964 Tokyo Games brought continued success: Tyus and McGuire each won golds in their sprint events. By 1968 in Mexico City, Temple's program had set a standard of sustained excellence that no other national program could match in women's sprinting, with Tyus defending her 100-meter title and Manning winning the 800.
Named U.S. Olympic head coach three times was itself remarkable. It reflected the confidence the American athletic establishment placed in Temple's methods and judgment at a moment when that establishment wasn't always quick to extend such trust to Black coaches. He became one of the most decorated Olympic coaches in American track and field history.
Legacy and Honors
Temple received numerous honors during his lifetime for his contributions to track and field and to Tennessee State University. The U.S. Track and Field Hall of Fame inducted him in 1989, one of the sport's highest honors, and the United States Olympic Committee recognized his contributions to American Olympic athletics.[5] Honorary degrees and civic awards came throughout his career, and Tennessee State University honored him repeatedly over the decades.
Ed Temple Boulevard, the street adjacent to the TSU campus in Nashville, bears his name. This civic acknowledgment reflects his decades of service to the university and the city.[6] The boulevard runs through the north Nashville neighborhood where TSU sits, and the naming shows recognition that extends beyond campus into the surrounding community Temple served for more than six decades.
Tennessee State University's annual indoor track and field invitational also carries his name. The Edward S. Temple Invite, held each January at TSU, draws collegiate programs from across the region and serves as an ongoing tribute to Temple's legacy in the sport he devoted his life to.[7] The meet has grown into a significant event on the regional collegiate track calendar, with athletes regularly posting personal-best performances across multiple events.[8] Programs from institutions across the Southeast participate, including teams from Cumberland University.[9]
He died on September 22, 2016. Two days after his eighty-ninth birthday, Temple passed away in Nashville. Tennessee State University established a memorial page acknowledging his foundational role in the university's identity and its place in American athletic history.[10] Former athletes, fellow coaches, and sports historians mourned his passing, recognizing in his career a rare mix of coaching ability, moral seriousness, and historical consequence. The Tigerbelles program he built remains a landmark in American women's athletics, and his name endures in Nashville's streets, its university, and its sporting culture.
Connection to Nashville
Temple's relationship with Nashville centered on Tennessee State University, a historically Black university founded in 1912 on the city's north side. TSU's campus now has Ed Temple Boulevard running through it, reflecting the depth of acknowledgment for his contributions from both the institution and the city. He lived and worked in Nashville for more than six decades, and his career at TSU became inseparable from the university's public identity. Nashville has a distinctive tradition of African American educational and cultural achievement because of its concentration of historically Black colleges and universities: TSU, Fisk University, Meharry Medical College, and American Baptist College. Temple's career at TSU placed him at the center of that tradition.
The Tigerbelles' success also connected to Nashville's broader civil rights history. During the 1950s and 1960s, Nashville was a focal point of the civil rights movement, with student sit-ins, boycotts, and legal challenges reshaping public life. Temple's program was producing Black women world champions and Olympic gold medalists during precisely this period. That visible demonstration of excellence carried meaning beyond the athletic record. His athletes trained and competed during years when their home city was engaged in a fundamental struggle over racial equality, and many faced segregated facilities, restricted travel, and exclusion from some domestic competitions even as they won medals for the United States on the world stage. That historical context is part of what makes Temple's legacy in Nashville both athletic and civic. ```
- ↑ "Remembering Ed Temple", Tennessee State University, 2016.
- ↑ "Remembering Ed Temple", Tennessee State University, 2016.
- ↑ Temple, Ed, with B'Lou Carter. Only the Pure in Heart Survive. Broadman Press, Nashville, 1980.
- ↑ "Remembering Ed Temple", Tennessee State University, 2016.
- ↑ "Remembering Ed Temple", Tennessee State University, 2016.
- ↑ "Leads Being Pursued in Sunday Night's Fatal Shooting at Buchanan Street and Ed Temple Boulevard Intersection", Nashville.gov, 2023.
- ↑ "Track Set To Host Edward S. Temple Invite Saturday Morning", TSU Tigers, January 2, 2026.
- ↑ "Track and Field With Six PRs At The Ed Temple Invitational", TSU Tigers, January 4, 2026.
- ↑ "Cumberland Track & Field Opens Indoor Season at Ed Temple Classic", Go Cumberland Athletics, January 3, 2026.
- ↑ "Remembering Ed Temple", Tennessee State University, 2016.