Born in Minneapolis, Minnesota, Mikulak graduated from Edison High School in 1930, where he was named to All-City teams in football, baseball, and basketball as a senior.[1]
Mikulak earned the nickname "Iron Mike" because he wore an aluminum chest protector to protect a protruding sternum.[4]
NFL career
Mikulak signed with the Chicago Cardinals in 1934. He played three seasons in the NFL, quickly earning a reputation as a bruising fullback,[5] and was named to the All-Pro team in his second season.[6] Following the 1936 season, Mikulak retired from professional football and returned to the University of Oregon to become the backfield coach on his old team, and to complete his degree.[7]
At the time of the end of the war, Mikulak was chief security officer for Southern France, headquartered in Marsailles.[1] He returned to the United States in 1946 and was placed in command of a military police battalion at Fort Sheridan in Illinois.[1] He was accepted into the newly created United States Air Force in 1947 and was assigned as a security officer in Omaha, Indianapolis, and Detroit.[1]
Mikulak returned to the United States in 1955 and served as a wing commander in Denver, New York, and Atlanta.[1] He retired in 1963 after a military career of 27 years with the rank of colonel.[1]
Following his Army career, Mikulak received a Master's degree in educational administration from the University of Iowa in 1964,[1] later working as director of several of that university's graduate programs until his retirement in 1978.[4]
Personal and legacy
Mikulak was married with two children.[9] He was also a father to six step-children.[1]
Mikulak died in Woodland, California after a lengthy battle with leukemia on June 4, 1999.[1] He was 86 years old at the time of his death.