Basketball, Books, and Brotherhood: Dewitt Clinton High School as Scholastic Model of Postwar Racial Progression and African American Leadership

Arthur Banton
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Abstract

In 1950, the City College of New York (CCNY) became the first racially-integrated team to win the national championship of college basketball. Three of the players on that team attended DeWitt Clinton High School in the Bronx, New York. At the time Clinton high school was one of the most academically-rigorous public schools in the city and the United States. During this postwar period Clinton annually sent nearly a third of its graduates to college, this at a time when the national average of high school completion stood at twenty percent. The unofficial school motto etched in yearbooks and the student paper was “college or bust.” Needless to say, DeWitt Clinton strongly encouraged its student body to attend college and for those who did not, they were pushed to excel beyond the limits of their chosen professions. This intellectually competitive academic environment was integrated and more than twenty-percent black. Like their contemporaries, black students were encouraged to pursue opportunities that seemed unthinkable in an era of racial stratification. As a result, Clinton produced a number of black students armed with the skills to navigate the terrain of prejudice and circumvent a number of social barriers. DeWitt Clinton high school was a model for interracial brotherhood while also fostering black leadership. Like Jackie Robinson, whom integrated Major League Baseball in 1947 with the Brooklyn Dodgers, the three black athletes who competed on the CCNY team were prepared for the transition of competing on a racially integrated college team, can be partially attributed to their secondary schooling at DeWitt Clinton. This article examines the racial climate of DeWitt Clinton during the postwar years when the three young men were in attendance and how it fostered a culture of Basketball, Books, and Brotherhood.
篮球、书籍和兄弟会:德威特·克林顿高中作为战后种族进步和非裔美国人领导的学术模式
1950年,纽约城市学院(CCNY)成为第一支赢得全国大学篮球冠军的种族融合队。该队的三名球员就读于纽约布朗克斯的德威特克林顿高中。当时,克林顿高中是全市乃至全美学术最严谨的公立学校之一。在战后的这段时间里,克林顿每年都有近三分之一的毕业生进入大学,而当时全国平均高中毕业率只有20%。校训刻在年鉴和学生论文上的非正式校训是“要么上大学,要么破产”。不用说,德威特克林顿强烈鼓励学生上大学,而对于那些没有上大学的学生,他们被要求超越自己所选择的专业的限制。这个智力竞争激烈的学术环境是融合的,黑人超过20%。像他们的同龄人一样,黑人学生被鼓励去追求在种族分层时代似乎不可想象的机会。因此,克林顿培养出了一批黑人学生,他们掌握了在偏见的地形上穿行并绕过许多社会障碍的技能。德威特·克林顿高中是种族间兄弟情谊的典范,同时也培养了黑人的领导能力。就像杰基·罗宾逊(Jackie Robinson)在1947年将美国职业棒球大联盟(Major League Baseball)与布鲁克林道奇队(Brooklyn Dodgers)合并一样,参加CCNY队比赛的三名黑人运动员也为在种族融合的大学队中比赛做好了准备,这在一定程度上要归功于他们在德维特·克林顿中学(DeWitt Clinton)的中学教育。这篇文章考察了战后德威特·克林顿学校的种族氛围,当时这三个年轻人都在学校读书,以及这种氛围是如何培养出一种篮球、书籍和兄弟会的文化的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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