Imperfect Storm Ends in a Rainbow
In 1958 Elmer's was the only high school in his county that had been integrated. Basketball was the big sport. People in the little town filled the gym every Tuesday and Friday. They roared when the home team scored and they booed when the visiting team fouled one of their players. But before and after every game the town was rife with racial tension.
Some
folks were neutral about integration, figuring its time had come.
Others were adamantly opposed. Hard to say, even in retrospect, if
anyone, black or white, was in favor of it. If someone thought it was a
good idea, no one said anything. But at every basketball game, people
got along, whatever their color. Points mattered and wins mattered. And
in 1958 this small school had a very good team. Some might say the team
was good in part because of integration.
In
fact, the school had its first team ever with a realistic hope of going
to the state tournament. And when the team did, there was even more
hoopla among the people of the town.
To
this day many people believe that if their star player had not torn his
knee in the first game, the team might have gone deep in the
tournament.
The
local newspaper said the team was good enough to win it, which helped,
of course, to sell a lot of papers. Even though the team didn’t win the
championship, the effort brought the
town together. The racial talk largely subsided and hasn’t risen since
except out of the mouths of a few who are upset about other things as
well.
Change of any kind bothers people, some more than others.
But at every reunion of the class of 1958, that team dominates the conversation. And no one knows that better than Elmer.
It
doesn't matter now that racial strife in 1958 kept Elmer and his
classmates from taking a senior trip. They’re over that and the ones who
are still alive simply enjoy getting together at the Elk’s Club Lodge
and reminiscing about the good times while feasting on fine food. They
talk about their lives, the classmates who have died and, of course,
their team.
It
doesn't matter either that every teacher they had back then passed away
long ago, teachers they remember fondly and teachers they remember not
so fondly. They know those teachers made a difference in their lives and
they appreciate them now far more than they did back then.
It
doesn't even matter that the building where they went to school no
longer stands or that their school system long ago was absorbed by a
larger system. But everyone in their town and surrounding towns
remembers the name of their school because of its being the first to be
integrated and because of its basketball team in 1958.
Because of that team, Elmer and his classmates, black and white, never lack for conversation at a reunion.
Just
ask the black guy, the tallest one in the room, what might have
happened if he had not hurt his knee in that game. Elmer will be happy
to tell you he and all his classmates think their team would have won
that championship, the only team in the tournament that year with a
black kid playing, grabbing rebounds and just before he hurt his knee
executing a monster dunk not often seen back then.
Elmer
doesn’t have problems with his knee now. A surgeon in another town
operated on him in 1958 and the town held three barbecues that summer to
pay for the operation.
Elmer
received a scholarship to a good university and starred on the team for
three years. Then he went to dental school. And just a few years back
he retired from his dental practice in his home town. He had more white
patients than black because more white folks live there.
Now
just about everybody in town gets along despite the big change in 1958.
Sometimes people are better off in the long run whether they like
change when it happens or not.
Elmer
will be the first to tell you he’s not the only one who benefited from
integration. His town, his school, his team and his patients for 40
years benefited as well. They were all part of an imperfect storm that
ended in a rainbow.
Donal Mahoney
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