Alice Coachman
On this date, we remember the birth of Alice Coachman in 1923. She was a Black athlete.
From Albany, Georgia, the fifth of Fred and Evelyn Coachman's ten children, Coachman grew up in the Jim Crow South. Barred from public sports facilities because of her race, Coachman used whatever materials she could piece together to practice jumping. Coachman received encouragement from her fifth-grade teacher, Cora Bailey, at Monroe Street Elementary School and her aunt, Carrie Spry, who defended her niece's interest in sports despite parental reservations. Coping with a society that discouraged women from participating in sports, Coachman struggled to develop as an athlete.
In 1938, when Coachman enrolled in Madison High School, she immediately joined the track team. The Madison boys' track coach, Harry E. Lash, recognized and nurtured her talent. She quickly attracted the attention of the Tuskegee Institute, where she enrolled in the high school program in 1939. Even before classes started, she competed in and won her first Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) national championship in the high jump.
That day, she broke the AAU high school and college women's high jump records while barefoot. She won the AAU outdoor high jump championship for the next nine years and three indoor high jump championships. Coachman also excelled in sprints and basketball, competing at Tuskegee from 1940 to 1946. She also won national track and field championships in the 50 and 100-meter dashes, the 4 X 100-meter relay, and the running high jump. As a guard, she led the Tuskegee basketball team to three consecutive conference championships.
At Albany State College in Georgia, Coachman continued high jumping in a personal style that combined straight jumping and the Western roll technique. At the 1948 Olympics in London, her teammate Audrey Patterson earned a bronze medal in the 200-meter sprint to become the first Black woman to win a medal. Coached by Cleveland Abbott, Coachman leaped 5 feet 6 1/8 inches (1.68 m) on her first try in the high jump finals. Her nearest rival, Britain's Dorothy Tyler, matched Coachman's jump, but only on her second try, making Coachman the only American woman to win a gold medal in that year's Games.
She won 25 AAU indoor and outdoor titles before retiring in 1948. Coachman began teaching physical education after earning her home economics degree with a minor in science. Alice Coachman, the first Black woman to win an Olympic Gold Medal, died in Alabama on July 14, 2014.
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