Paul Anderson was born October 17, 1932, in Toccoa, Georgia. Many
accounts of Paul Anderson erroneously claim that he began lifting weights
at Furman University which he attended for a year. According to Paul's
brother in law, Mr. Julius M. Johnson, Mr. Anderson began weightlifting in
his house where they had a 25 pound set of dumbbells and some
old Strength and Healthmagazines while he was at Toccoa High School, not
at Furman. He really began his weight training in the Johnson backyard
where he developed his own training methods and techniques. By the time
he reached Furman, he had already added over 100 pounds to his
bodyweight and was making lifts that were close to the existing American
records.
The reason he started to lift weights was very simple. When Paul started
High School he wanted to play football, but was not large enough. So, Mr.
Johnson gave him the dumbells and the magazines. He snatched them up
right away and soon was scouring the junk yards looking for heavier
weights to lift. In High School, he became first-team blocking back on the
football team. He entered Furman University on a football scholarship.
When he visited their gym, he saw and they saw how strong he already was.
It was there that the idea of becoming a "strongman" entered his mind. It
was at Furman that he began to try the Olympic lifts.
Anderson on top of the medal
platform at Melbourne with
Humberto Selvetti from Argentina
(Silver) and Alberto Pigaiano from
Italy(Bronze)
PAUL ANDERSON
Olympian, Strongman and Philanthropist
He left Furman after that one year and lived with his parents in Elizabethtown,
Tennessee. He met Bob Peeples, a great lifter in his own right, and a devotee of
the squat. So, in his early years, he trained mainly on the squat. This was a wise
choice, for it gave him the basic strength to demolish all the official Olympic
lifting records and many unofficial power records as well. Peeples recognized
Paul's potential greatness and began to promote him and introduced him around
weightlifting circles.
The rest is history. He squatted 900 while still an amateur and later did a
legendary 1200 pounds for two reps as a pro. In all fairness, it must be said that
there is some question if the 1200 went past parallel. But the 900, done without
wraps or squat suits of any kind, was all the way down. Mr. Anderson's most
impressive feat was the jerk press. Using a drive of the legs and then pressing
the weight out, Paul made an incredible 565! To this day, this lift has never
been duplicated. In 1955, he traveled as a Goodwill Ambassador from the
United States to the Soviet Union. While there, his lifting surpassed many
world records. Later that year, he won the World Championships. In his prime,
he probably had the heaviest hip and thigh structure of any lifter in history. I am
told that when he trained down to 330 pounds for the 1956 Olympics and
actually had cuts in his thighs. He brought home the gold medal from the 1956
Olympics in Melbourne, Australia. To date, he was the last American to win a
gold medal in the Super Heavyweight Division. On June 12,1957, he lifted a
total of 6,270 pounds in a backlift, which was listed in the Guiness Book of
World Records as the greatest weight lifted by a human being. A great granite
marker commemorating this great feat lies in front of his old house in Toccoa.
He overhead pressed 400 pounds. He bench pressed 627 pounds. These were all
done before there were world records. That's why we hardly ever hear of them,
until now.
Anderson training with his 900
pound squat bar made of cart
wheels
Towards the end of his life, Paul used to laugh about all the "legends" being
told about him. One that he particularly enjoyed was a story that he had been
seen pushing a bulldozer up the side of a mountain! There were so many things
written about him, many of them based on little fact, that he came in the end to
ignore them. Paul passed away in 1994 after a life-long bout with kidney
disease.
These are a few of his accomplishments in his life
1955 World Champion Weightlifting
1956 Melbourne Olympics Gold Medallist in the 110+kg Class
2 Arm Press: 167.5 kg. (368.5 pounds)
2 Arm Snatch: 145 kg. (319 pounds)
2 Arm Clean and Jerk: 187.5 kg. (412.5 pounds)
Olympic total: 500 kg. (1100 pounds)
Best Olympic press: 575 pounds
1957 backlift of 6270 pounds
He was twice U.S. National Champion
He set 18 American Records
He set 8 World Records
He retired unbeaten and undefeated as an amateur
At the 1956 Melbourne Olympics, Paul
won a Gold medal despite an inner ear
infection which affected his balance
Paul Anderson was a devoted Christian who dedicated
his life to helping troubled children and motivational speaking.
Paul Anderson married Glenda Garland in 1959. They have
one daughter named Paula who lives in the family house now.
His Greatest Accomplishment and His LegacyThe Andersons established the Paul Anderson Youth Home in 1961. The Youth
Home is a Christian rehabilitation facility for young people between the ages of
sixteen and twenty-one who otherwise might be confined to penal institutions.
Paul Anderson became a professional to raise funds through demonstrations
and speaking engagements to support the Youth Home.
Since its establishment in 1961, over two thousand young men benefited from
the Home and the unselfish devotion of Georgia's beloved Paul Anderson
before his death August 15, 1994.