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THE GALES FOUNDATION
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ABOUT

COACH, MENTOR, LEGEND, & FATHER

Remembering The Man With A Purpose Driven Life

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THE GALES FOUNDATION

John Gales Sr. (credit: Fort Worth ISD)

CBS TEXAS

Gales' list of accomplishments as a basketball player, coach and teacher is lengthy.But those who knew him well say he will likely most be remembered for "the values of hard work, integrity and goodness of spirit that he instilled in his students and the community."Gales, a Fort Worth native, went to James E. Guinn Middle School and I.M. Terrell High School, according to a news release announcing his passing.

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He played basketball at Wichita State and returned to Fort Worth in 1962 as an educator and coach. He and Alice Gales had four sons: John Jr., Jeff, James and Jerrold. Jerrold Gales died in November 2020. The other three men still live in the Fort Worth area.

"We never had to look outside of our house for a hero," Jeff Gales said. "He was our hero. That in and of itself is something to be grateful for."

Alice Gales met her husband of 62 years at a Valentine's Day party when she was 16 and John Gales was a freshman in college.

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He and his brother were star basketball players at Terrell High School, and John Gales went on to play at Wichita State. He returned to Fort Worth after college to work at Guinn Middle School for six years.

In 1968, Gales became the basketball coach at Trimble Technical High School, where he would teach and coach for the next 30 years. The title made him the first Black coach for an integrated basketball team in Fort Worth schools. He retired in 1998.

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Gales was a scorekeeper and book keeper for high school basketball teams for some time before officially retiring. In 2009, the gym floor at Trimble Tech was named after him.

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