William Julius (“Judy”) Johnson was born on this date in 1899. He was an African American Negro League baseball player.
Born in Snow Hill, MD. Judy Johnson was the son of William Henry and Annie Lee Johnson. His father was a sailor, a licensed boxing coach, and the athletic director of the Negro Settlement House in Wilmington. William Johnson wanted Judy to be a boxer, and Judy learned to box from his older sister, Emma, but Johnson, who was 5′ 11″ (1.80 m) and 150 lb (68 kg), was far better suited for a career in baseball.
learn moreJames Banning was born on this date in 1899. He was an African American aviator.
He was born in Oklahoma, the son of Riley and Cora Banning. The family moved to Ames, Iowa, in 1919, where he studied electrical engineering at Iowa State College for a little more than a year. Dreaming from boyhood of being a pilot, James Herman Banning was repeatedly turned away from flight schools because he was Black. He eventually learned to fly from an army aviator at Raymond Fisher’s Flying Field in Des Moines He became the first Black aviator to obtain a license from the U.S. Dept. of Commerce.
learn more*Effa Manley was born on this date in 1900. An African American business entrepreneur, Manley was the only female owner in the history of Negro Leagues.
Manley was from Philadelphia, and rarely discussed her heritage, and most people assumed she was a light-skinned Black. Young Effa was raised in a household with a Black stepfather and Black half-siblings. After graduation from high school in Philadelphia, she moved to New York to work in the millinery business. She met Abe Manley, a man 24 years older than her, at the 1932 World Series at Yankee Stadium.
learn more*Maceo “Breed” Breedlove was born on this date in 1900. He was an African American Negro League baseball player.
Breedlove grew up in Fayetteville, AL and played baseball with his four older brothers. His father was a coal-miner, and moved the gamily to Edgewater, AL for work. Breedlove started playing organized baseball on a local team made up of the children of miners. His early success came as a pitcher; he was blessed with a great arm. But because of his hitting he had to be in the lineup everyday so he became an outfielder.
learn more*On this date in 1900 the Waseca, Minnesota amateur baseball team won the Minnesota title with a 9-2 win over Saint Paul. Sponsored by Waseca’s EACO Mill, this was the first non-professional integrated baseball team in Minnesota and perhaps America.
learn more*The birth of Frank Duncan in 1901 is celebrated on this date. He was an African American baseball player and manager in the Negro Leagues.
Duncan was born and raised in Kansas City. He played on semi-pro teams in St. Joseph, Missouri, and Chicago before he was traded to the Monarchs in 1921. One of the top catchers in the Negro Baseball Leagues, Frank Duncan spent most of his playing career with the Kansas City Monarchs. He was their first-string catcher during the Monarchs’ glory years of the 1920s, when the team won three consecutive league championships.
learn more*George Suttles was born on this date in 1901. He was an African American baseball player in the Negro Leagues.
From Brockton, Louisiana, the Mule’s thirty-year career in Negro baseball began in 1918, two years before Rube Foster’s Negro National League’s inaugural season, and continued until after Jackie Robinson had his rookie season with the Dodgers under his belt. He grew up in the Birmingham, Alabama area and first attracted the attention of the hometown Black Barons. He signed his first professional contract with that club in 1923.
learn moreNorman (“Turkey”) Stearnes was born on this date in Nashville, TN, in 1901. He was an African American baseball player in the Negro Leagues.
A fleet-footed power hitter with an unusual batting style, Stearnes demonstrated his hitting prowess early
learn more*Jack Leslie was born on this date in 1901. He was a Black English professional soccer footballer. John Francis Leslie was born in Canning Town, London, to a Jamaican father, also called John Francis Leslie, a gas fitter laborer in London, and a white-English mother, Annie Leslie, a seamstress. He played for the local […]
learn more*The Leland Giants baseball team is celebrated on this date in 1901. They were a Negro League baseball team that competed independently during the first decade of the 20th century. Originally the Chicago Union Giants, they were a merger of the Chicago Unions and the Chicago Columbia Giants. In 1905, the team had a record of 43 […]
learn more*The birth of Jack Trice in 1902 is celebrated on this date. He was an African American football Student/Athlete.
learn moreOn this date in 1902, Ted Radcliffe, an African American baseball player in the Negro Leagues, was born.
learn moreOn this date in 1903, James “Cool Papa” Bell was born in Starksville, Mississippi. He was an African American baseball player, considered by many as the fastest player in the sport.
learn more*Cornelius Coffey was born on this date in 1903. He was an African American aviator and engineer; and was the first black person to hold both a pilot’s and mechanic’s license in America.
learn moreWilliam Hubbard was born on this date in 1903. He was an African American track and field athlete.
William DeHart Hubbard grew up in the Walnut Hills section of Cincinnati, OH, and was known to be the fastest kid in school. He was not only athletic but also intelligent, with a four-year scholastic average of 90. Hubbard was part of the Golden Age of Sports and when people started using the word “Superstar.” He was the national long-jump champion of the 1920s who was also experienced in the sprints and triple jump.
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