Miss America 1969 went on to career as a PE teacher and coach

Retired PE teacher and coach Judith Ford Nash of Illinois enjoyed fame as Miss America 1969. Photo credit: Dispatch Argus.

Many fine classroom teachers have earned fame in areas outside of education. One of these is Judith Ford Nash, a physical education teacher and coach who was crowned Miss America in 1969.

Judith was born on December 26, 1949, in Iowa City, Iowa, although she was raised in Belvidere, Illinois. As a student at Belvedere High School, young Judith already demonstrated talent in gymnastics and athletics. In 1965, at the age of 15, she became a member of the US trampoline team and traveled to Vienna, Austria, to take part in an international exhibition. She was also a member of her school’s cheerleading squad.

While still a teenager, Judith won her first pageant title: Miss Illinois County Fair. During those years, she was also named Miss Illinois Teenager. In 1968, she garnered the title of Miss Boone County. That same year, she went on to capture the title of Miss Illinois. At the time, she was working as a lifeguard at the city public pool and also as a swimming instructor. In 1969, Judith represented Illinois as a contestant in the Miss American Pageant. By then, she had earned a reputation as a world-class trampolinist, and she used her skills on the trampoline for her performance in the talent portion of the competition. She is the only Miss America contestant ever to compete using the trampoline.

After completing her freshman year of college at the University of Louisiana, Lafayette, Judith completed the requirements for her Bachelor’s degree in Physical Education at the University of Illinois, Ubana-Champaign. Later she earned a Master’s degree from the Western Illinois University.

After college, Judith spent eight years as a member of the President’s Council on Physical Fitness and Sports, having been appointed by Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford. In 1990 she moved to Geneseo, Illinois, where she taught elementary school physical education. She also coached high school girls’ golf and middle school basketball and track for nearly 20 years. During that time, Judith remembers, her students relished having a celebrity as a teacher and coach. “My golfers liked to tell their opponents, ‘You may have beaten us, but our coach was Miss America,'” she says, laughing.

You can read more about this amazing educator and athlete at Northwest Quarterly.