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Joseph Dube
Joseph Dube
from Wikipedia

Joseph Douglas Dube (February 15, 1944 – September 8, 2025) was an American weightlifter, world champion, Olympic Games medalist and strongman competitor. He won a bronze medal at the 1968 Summer Olympics,[3] and set two world records in the clean and press the same year.[4] As of 2025, he is still the last senior male American weightlifter to win the world title in weightlifting, which he achieved in 1969.[5]

Key Information

Biography

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Dube was born on February 15, 1944.[2] He took up weightlifting in 1958, together with his elder brother Virgil. He learned the technique by reading weightlifting magazines and talking to Paul Anderson and his coach Dick Smith. He stopped competing from 1972 to 1979 due to an injury to the left elbow. He won the America's Cup in Honolulu in 1980, and retired in January 1982. In 1996 he had a total hip replacement.[1]

Between 1962 and 1996, Dube worked for an insurance company based in Jacksonville, Florida.[1]

Dube died on September 8, 2025, at the age of 81.[6]

Legacy

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Dube was a guest of President Richard Nixon at the White House.[7] He also appeared on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson.[1] He is mentioned briefly in the novel The Book of Air and Shadows, whose fictional protagonist is said to have competed in the 1968 Olympics.

Dube was an accomplished visual artist and has work on display with the Art of the Olympians.[8] He is a member of the U.S. Weightlifting Hall of Fame.[1]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Joseph Dube was an American weightlifter known for his international success in the heavyweight and super heavyweight divisions, including a bronze medal at the 1968 Summer Olympics and a gold medal at the 1969 World Weightlifting Championships. He was the last U.S. male athlete to win world championship gold in the total lift and represented the United States at seven world championships while setting multiple world and American records. Born February 15, 1944, in Altha, Florida, Dube began competitive weightlifting as a teenager and quickly rose to prominence, becoming the first teenager to Olympic press 400 pounds and the first American to achieve a 1,300-pound total in the three-lift format. He also secured a heavyweight gold medal at the 1967 Pan American Games and earned recognition for his strong performances on the global stage during the late 1960s. Dube's Olympic bronze in Mexico City contributed to the United States' long medal streak in weightlifting, and his achievements made him one of the most accomplished American lifters of his era. Dube passed away on September 8, 2025, at the age of 81 in Sanderson, Florida. In addition to his athletic career, he was known for his artistic talents, with some works displayed through the Art of the Olympians, and maintained a lifelong enthusiasm for family, sports, and personal pursuits.

Early life

Birth and early training

Joseph Douglas Dube was born on February 15, 1944, in Altha, Florida, to Joseph A. Dube and Hardie Pumphrey Dube. His family relocated to Jacksonville, Florida, when he was two years old, where he spent the rest of his youth. Dube attended Terry Parker High School in Jacksonville. During his high school years, he stood at 5'7" and weighed 135 pounds, but his father's purchase of exercise equipment for him and his brother sparked a deep interest in fitness and strength training. Initially frustrated with the demands of lifting and his early progress, Dube demonstrated strong determination to excel, committing to consistent training that led to a notable physical transformation. This early dedication laid the foundation for his later pursuits in weightlifting.

Weightlifting career

Rise through competitions

Dube's competitive career gained momentum in the early 1960s following his first competition in 1960, as he secured multiple state and regional victories while competing primarily in lighter classes. In March 1961, he won the Florida state teenage championships at a bodyweight of 198 pounds, setting two junior records in the process, and went on to claim the Florida state title multiple times. By 1964, still in his teens, Dube achieved a historic milestone as the first teenager on record to clean and press more than 400 pounds. He continued to progress by setting junior and senior world records in the press and other lifts during his early career, demonstrating rapid improvement in the heavyweight division as he transitioned categories. In 1967, Dube reached a major international breakthrough by winning the gold medal in the heavyweight category at the Pan American Games in Winnipeg with an event-record total of 1,163 pounds. Later that year, he placed second at the World Weightlifting Championships in the heavyweight class, matching the winning total but losing the gold medal on a tiebreaker due to his greater bodyweight. These successes established him as a leading figure in American weightlifting heading into the late 1960s.

Peak international years

Dube's peak international years occurred in 1968 and 1969, when he achieved his most significant results on the global stage in the super-heavyweight division. At the 1968 U.S. Olympic Trials, he set a record in the two-arm press with 462.5 pounds. At the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City, Dube won the bronze medal in the heavyweight category with a total of 1,223 pounds (555.0 kg). Despite tying Belgium's Serge Reding in the total lift, Dube received bronze due to his heavier bodyweight in the tiebreaker rule. He had suffered a bout of illness during preparations that caused his bodyweight to drop from 334 pounds to 315 pounds, presenting a significant challenge to his performance. The following year, Dube claimed the pinnacle of his career at the 1969 World Weightlifting Championships in Warsaw, Poland, where he won the gold medal and world title in the super-heavyweight class with a total of 1,273 pounds (577.5 kg), achieved through lifts of 446 pounds (202.5 kg) in the press, 358.5 pounds (162.5 kg) in the snatch, and 468.5 pounds (212.5 kg) in the clean-and-jerk. He outperformed Soviet competitors and others, including silver medalist Serge Reding and Stanislav Batishchev, both of whom totaled 570.0 kg. This victory marked Dube as the last U.S. male weightlifter to win a senior world title in the total as of 2025.

Achievements and records

Media appearances

Later life

Retirement and professional work

Dube suffered an elbow injury during an attempt at a national-record snatch at the 1972 U.S. Olympic Trials, which forced him to miss the 1972 Olympics. This left elbow injury marked the beginning of a prolonged hiatus from competitive weightlifting, and he later experienced knee troubles in the ensuing years. After a seven-year layoff, Dube returned to competition in 1979 and achieved success by winning the America's Cup in Honolulu in 1980. He retired from competition in January 1982 following his final meet in Newnan, Georgia. In his professional career outside of weightlifting, Dube worked as a records supervisor at Independent Life, an insurance company based in Jacksonville, Florida, where he had been employed since 1962 and was responsible for managing company records. He retired from this position in 1996. After retiring from competition, Dube remained involved in the sport by serving as an official at various weightlifting events, including the United States Weightlifting Championships held in Jacksonville on May 3–4, 1986.

Honors and community involvement

Joseph Dube was inducted into the Jacksonville Sports Hall of Fame in 1991 in recognition of his contributions to weightlifting and sports in the region. In the summer of 2024, the Florida Times-Union ranked him No. 22 in its "Jax Greatest 100" series, which honors the top athletes in Jacksonville-area sports history. Dube was also a skilled artist, with some of his pieces displayed through Art of the Olympians.

Personal life

Death

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