|
Joseph Jacob Foss was born on April 17, 1915, in Sioux
Falls, S.D., to a farm family near South Dakota’s largest city. Farm life
was hard in the ’20s and ’30s and it was there young Foss learned the
value of hard work and developed his skills as an outdoorsman. At age
16, Foss, already entranced with aviation pioneer Charles Lindbergh, fell
in love with airplanes after he and his father took a ride with a famed
South Dakota aviator, Clyde Ice.
Two years later, Foss’s father died and the young man
was stretched thin, trying to farm, hold down odd jobs and go to college.
Economics won out, and the next year he dropped out of school. He farmed
and did odd jobs until his younger brother was able to take over the farm.
He went back to school – Sioux Falls College and the University of South
Dakota – and managed to eke out enough extra cash to take flying lessons.
He joined the National Guard to hone his aviation skills and joined the
Marines his senior year.
At age 26, he earned his wings, but was deemed too old
to be a fighter pilot. But he was determined, eventually working his way
into a carrier group. His first combat assignment was Guadalcanal. His
aerial marksmanship with the "Cactus Air Force" during that long and bloody
combat for Henderson Field earned him international fame.
Foss’s war was over for a while after he shot down his
26th enemy plane. He returned to the home front to promote the war effort.
After being presented the Medal of Honor, Foss returned to the
Pacific in 1944 to work in search and destroy missions. Malaria forced
him to leave the Pacific in late 1944 and in 1945, he left the military.
Foss worked at odd jobs, started an aviation business,
and bought a car dealership with a friend. He helped develop the South
Dakota Air National Guard and also ran for State Legislature and won.
He was a member of the South Dakota House from 1949-1950 and again in
1953-1954. His next move was to run for governor of South Dakota. In 1955,
he became Governor, the highlight of his administration being the creation
of a state agency to promote business growth and economic development.
After serving as governor, Foss spent a short time working
for Raven Industries before becoming the first Commissioner of the upstart
American Football League. He helped build the league to respectability,
leaving in 1966, just a few months before the historic agreement that
led to the merger of AFL and NFL and the creation of the Super Bowl.
His next adventure, as host for the ABC network television
program "The American Sportsman," took him all over the world for hunting
and fishing excursions. Three years later, he started his own weekly syndicated
series: "The Outdoorsman: Joe Foss."
In 1972, he began a six-year stint as Director of Public
Affairs for KLM Royal Dutch Airlines. From 1988 to 1990, Foss was in the
spotlight again as president of the National Rifle Association (NRA).
Today, Foss travels around the country and the world,
talking about leadership, patriotism and his enduring faith in God. He
supports many charities and organizations. He and his wife, Donna, live
in Arizona.
Top of Page
|