Ted Strong Jr.
The Untold Story of an Original Harlem Globetrotter and Negro Leagues All-Star
By (author) Sherman L. Jenkins
Publication date:
29 September 2016Length of book:
204 pagesPublisher
Rowman & Littlefield PublishersDimensions:
238x158mm6x9"
ISBN-13: 9781442267275
Ted Strong Jr. (1917-1978) was a two-sport athlete, a major star of the Negro Leagues and one of the original Harlem Globetrotters. His prominence in the Negro Leagues led Branch Rickey and other white baseball league owners to consider Strong as one of several possible players to integrate major league baseball, and he was a key force on the basketball court when the Globetrotters defeated the then-invincible Minneapolis Lakers in 1948. Despite his athletic dominance in the 1930s and 40s, Strong Jr. has largely been forgotten in American sports history.
In Ted Strong Jr.: The Untold Story of an Original Harlem Globetrotter and Negro Leagues All-Star, Sherman L. Jenkins finally shares the fascinating story of this star athlete. Born Theodore Relighn Strong Jr. in South Bend, Indiana, Strong Jr., the eldest of fourteen children, was fortunate to have a positive influence in his father—a baseball player himself. Strong Jr. went on to play in seven Negro League Baseball East-West All-Star games, receiving the most votes in all of Black baseball history in 1939, and was a key member of the 1940 Harlem Globetrotter basketball team that won the World Professional Basketball Championship. Jenkins details all of this and more, including Strong Jr.’s frustrations with integration efforts promised by white baseball team owners and the eventual decline of the Negro Leagues after the entrance of Jackie Robinson into Major League Baseball.
Through hours of interviews with Strong Jr.’s father and with friends and teammates of his brother Othello, along with extensive research of newspaper archives, this book provides rich insights into an unsung hero in the American sports landscape. For baseball and basketball fans of all ages, Ted Strong Jr.’s biography displays for the first time the determination and guts of a man who was idealized by many African Americans in the early twentieth century.
In Ted Strong Jr.: The Untold Story of an Original Harlem Globetrotter and Negro Leagues All-Star, Sherman L. Jenkins finally shares the fascinating story of this star athlete. Born Theodore Relighn Strong Jr. in South Bend, Indiana, Strong Jr., the eldest of fourteen children, was fortunate to have a positive influence in his father—a baseball player himself. Strong Jr. went on to play in seven Negro League Baseball East-West All-Star games, receiving the most votes in all of Black baseball history in 1939, and was a key member of the 1940 Harlem Globetrotter basketball team that won the World Professional Basketball Championship. Jenkins details all of this and more, including Strong Jr.’s frustrations with integration efforts promised by white baseball team owners and the eventual decline of the Negro Leagues after the entrance of Jackie Robinson into Major League Baseball.
Through hours of interviews with Strong Jr.’s father and with friends and teammates of his brother Othello, along with extensive research of newspaper archives, this book provides rich insights into an unsung hero in the American sports landscape. For baseball and basketball fans of all ages, Ted Strong Jr.’s biography displays for the first time the determination and guts of a man who was idealized by many African Americans in the early twentieth century.
Ted Strong Jr. was one of the first two-sport professional athletes in the U.S. (baseball and basketball), but his career in baseball was overshadowed by Satchel Paige and Jackie Robinson. A big, athletic kid, Strong, who learned sports from his father, a Negro League ballplayer and manager, played baseball for the famed Kansas City Monarchs while simultaneously playing basketball for Abe Saperstein’s Harlem Globetrotters. Jenkins, a journalist and member of the Society for American Baseball Research, Negro Leagues Research Committee, sorts facts from myth about this talented athlete, who competed and excelled in the 1930s and 1940s; five years older than Robinson, he never got a shot at the big leagues. The text draws heavily on excerpts from African American newspapers, including the Chicago Defender, to document Strong’s career, the changing climate of baseball, and the growing popularity of the Globetrotters’ franchise in the 1940s. A significant sidebar in the early history of African American athletes.