AUBURN, Ala. – Whether she was winning waterskiing competitions, earning Auburn University degrees or being inducted into the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame, Dr. Leah Rawls Atkins was accustomed to being first.
The first woman Alabama Sports Hall of Fame inductee and the first person to earn a doctorate in history from Auburn, Atkins passed away Friday, Oct. 4, at the age of 89.
"I traveled far on my improbable journey," Atkins told graduates at Auburn’s spring commencement in 2017. "To complete it, I had to work harder, use my time more efficiently, push myself constantly, learn to function with less sleep, go over notes and materials many times.”
The Leah Rawls Atkins Award, presented annually for excellence in academics and athletics to a student-athlete who models leadership, integrity and courage, is the highest honor an Auburn female student-athlete can receive.
“Having the award named for her was one of her most special things,” said her son, Jack, the youngest of four children of Leah and George Atkins, a former Auburn assistant football coach under Shug Jordan. “It was a big part of our family, and we got to share it every year. It’s an incredible legacy for her, a defining thing.
“It was front and center in our family’s life just about every year. She always felt like she was part of the athletic department. She loved Auburn more passionately than most could understand.”
A 1976 Alabama Sports Hall of Fame inductee, Atkins was Alabama’s first waterskiing world champion, winning in 1953 as an 18-year-old in Toronto, Canada, the first of numerous records and championships, both nationally and internationally.
“She was extremely competitive, extremely strong-minded,” Jack Atkins said. “She was like a 5-foot-2 bulldozer. She wasn’t intimidated by much and she was an extremely hard worker. She wasn’t scared of work. She always felt like she had to do a little bit more than everybody else.
“A lot of people tell me how brilliant she was, and she was smart, no doubt. But I think she outworked them, too. It’s a heck of a legacy of doing the work and preparation. Strive for excellence and be persistent. That’s how she lived her life.”