American Decades
Baseball: The Ngro Leagues
Jim Crow.
Throughout the early decades of the twentieth century, all sports—boxing, tennis, golf, basketball, football, racing, the Olympics—strongly discouraged or, more often, prohibited African Americans from engaging in athletic activities with whites, though there were notable exceptions. Boxing's Joe Gans was light-weight champion between 1901 and 1908; Jack Johnson defeated Tommy Burns in 1908 for the heavyweight crown (and defended against Jim Jeffries in 1910, causing race riots in many cities); and Tiger Flowers held the middleweight title in 1926. But throughout the 1920s Jack Dempsey was reluctant to face such black boxers as John Lester Johnson or Harry Wills, the "New Orleans Brown Panther." In the nineteenth century nearly all jockeys had been black (Isaac Murphy won the Kentucky Derby three times), but at the turn of the twentieth century white jockeys formed an "anticolored union" that prohibited blacks from...
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1920's Sports
- Overview
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Topics in the News
- Baseball: Advancements and Legends
- Baseball: The Black Sox Scandal
- Baseball: The Ngro Leagues
- Basketball
- Boxing
- Football: College
- Football: Professional
- Golf
- Olympics: The Seventh Olympic Games
- Olympics: The Eighth Olympic Games
- Olympics: The Ninth Olympic Games
- Tennis
- Yachting and Polo: Gentlemen's Sports
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Headline Makers
- Cobb, Tyrus "Ty" Raymond 1886-1961
- Dempsey, William "Jack" Harrison 1895-1983
- Gehrig, Heinrich Ludwig "Lou" 1903-1941
- Grange, Harold "Red" 1903-1991
- Jones, Robert "Bobby" Tyre, Jr. 1902-1971
- Man O' War 1917-1947
- Rockne, Knute 1888-1931
- Ruth, George Herman "Babe" 1894-1948
- Tilden, William Tatem, II 1893-1953
- Wills, Helen Newington 1905-
- People in the News
- Awards
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Sports, 1920–1929
