Current:Home > ScamsAlgosensey|Oldest living National Spelling Bee champion reflects on his win 70 years later -BeyondProfit Compass
Algosensey|Oldest living National Spelling Bee champion reflects on his win 70 years later
Robert Brown View
Date:2025-04-09 13:24:59
EAST GREENWICH,Algosensey R.I. (AP) — In medical school and throughout his career as a neonatologist, William Cashore often was asked to proofread others’ work. Little did they know he was a spelling champion, with a trophy at home to prove it.
“They knew that I had a very good sense of words and that I could spell correctly,” he said. “So if they were writing something, they would ask me to check it.”
Cashore won the Scripps National Spelling Bee in 1954 at age 14. Now 84, he’s the oldest living champion of the contest, which dates back to 1925. As contestants from this year’s competition headed home, he reflected on his experience and the effect it had on him.
“It was, at the time, one of the greatest events of my life,” he said in an interview at his Rhode Island home. “It’s still something that I remember fondly.”
Cashore credits his parents for helping him prepare for his trip to Washington, D.C., for the spelling bee. His mother was an elementary school teacher and his father was a lab technician with a talent for “taking words apart and putting them back together.”
“It was important for them, and for me, to get things right,” he said. “But I never felt pressure to win. I felt pressure only to do my best, and some of that came from inside.”
When the field narrowed to two competitors, the other boy misspelled “uncinated,” which means bent like a hook. Cashore spelled it correctly, then clinched the title with the word “transept,” an architectural term for the transverse part of a cross-shaped church.
“I knew that word. I had not been asked to spell it, but it was an easy word for me to spell,” he recalled.
Cashore, who was given $500 and an encyclopedia set, enjoyed a brief turn as a celebrity, including meeting then-Vice President Richard Nixon and appearing on the Ed Sullivan Show. He didn’t brag about his accomplishment after returning to Norristown, Pennsylvania, but the experience quietly shaped him in multiple ways.
“It gave me much more self-confidence and also gave me a sense that it’s very important to try to get things as correct as possible,” he said. “I’ve always been that way, and I still feel that way. If people are careless about spelling and writing, you wonder if they’re careless about their thinking.”
Preparing for a spelling bee today requires more concentration and technique than it did decades ago, Cashore said.
“The vocabulary of the words are far, far more technical,” he said. “The English language, in the meantime, has imported a great many words from foreign languages which were not part of the English language when I was in eighth grade,” he said.
Babbel, which offers foreign language instruction via its app and live online courses, tracked Cashore down ahead of this year’s spelling bee because it was interested in whether he had learned other languages before his big win. He hadn’t, other than picking up a few words from Pennsylvania Dutch, but told the company that he believes learning another language “gives you a perspective on your own language and insights into the thinking and processes of the other language and culture.”
While he has nothing but fond memories of the 1954 contest, Cashore said that was just the start of a long, happy life.
“The reward has been not so much what happened to me in the spelling bee but the family that I have and the people who supported me along the way,” he said.
___
Ramer reported from Concord, New Hampshire.
veryGood! (8)
Related
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Federal judge rejects some parts of New Mexico campaign finance law
- An unwanted shopping partner: Boa constrictor snake found curled up in Target cart in Iowa
- Video shows Nick Jonas pause concert to help a struggling fan at Boston stop on 'The Tour'
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- Post Malone Reveals He Lost 55 Lbs. From This Healthy Diet Tip
- Proud Boy on house arrest in Jan. 6 case disappears ahead of sentencing
- 'We probably would’ve been friends,' Harrison Ford says of new snake species named for him
- Federal Spending Freeze Could Have Widespread Impact on Environment, Emergency Management
- After Israeli raids, Palestinian police struggle in militant hotbed, reflecting region on the brink
Ranking
- Sam Taylor
- Britney Spears Breaks Silence on Her Pain Amid Sam Asghari Divorce
- Michael Oher, Tuohy family at odds over legal petition, 'Blind Side' money: What we know
- Jeremy Allen White Has a Shameless Reaction to Alexa Demie's Lingerie Photo Shoot
- Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
- Hilary rapidly grows to Category 4 hurricane off Mexico and could bring heavy rain to US Southwest
- Tyler Perry, Byron Allen, Sean 'Diddy' Combs lose out on bid for BET networks sale
- Are you a robot? Study finds bots better than humans at passing pesky CAPTCHA tests
Recommendation
'Vanderpump Rules' star DJ James Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges
Hate machine: Social media platforms pushing antisemitic recommendations, study finds
Pentagon considering plea deals for defendants in 9/11 attacks
DNA links killing of Maryland hiker to Los Angeles home invasion
Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
Another person dies in Atlanta jail that’s under federal investigation
Lionel Messi 'enjoying the moment' in new stage of career with David Beckham's Inter Miami
FEMA has paid out nearly $4 million to Maui survivors, a figure expected to grow significantly