In 1976, when the founders of the Black Athletes Corridor of Fame put collectively that 12 months’s class of inductees, they determined to honor Ora Washington, the preeminent Black feminine athlete of the early-Twentieth century.
Washington
Long before Serena Williams, there was Ora Washington. Few remember her.
Because the thriller of Washington’s whereabouts continued, Mays remained upbeat. “Fame has lastly discovered its manner into Miss Washington’s life,” he mentioned. “Hopefully it is going to be higher late than by no means.”
However for Washington herself it was too late. She had died in Philadelphia 5 years earlier.
Washington dominated Black ladies’s tennis within the Nineteen Twenties and Thirties, successful the singles title of the all-Black American Tennis Affiliation yearly however one from 1929 to 1937, and taking 12 straight doubles titles from 1925 to 1936. She received her ultimate ATA championship in her late forties, when she and companion George Stewart defeated Walter Johnson and rising teenage star Althea Gibson for the 1947 blended doubles crown.
She additionally towered over Black ladies’s basketball, enjoying 12 seasons for the Philadelphia Tribunes, a barnstorming crew that sparked pleasure in every single place they went. An advert for a 1932 recreation dubbed Washington and teammate Inez Patterson “two of the best woman gamers on this planet” and promised they might “make you overlook the Despair.” In 1938, when the crew traveled to Greensboro, N.C., to tackle Bennett Faculty, the native paper lauded them as “the quickest ladies’ crew on this planet,” paced by “the indomitable, internationally famed and stellar performer, Ora Washington.”
Washington blazed her personal path. Born on the shut of the nineteenth century in rural Caroline County, Va., she migrated to Philadelphia as a young person and took a job as a housekeeper. She didn’t decide up a tennis racket till her twenties, however she took to the sport instantly, successful her first ATA crown in 1929, across the time of her thirtieth birthday. (Her actual start date is unknown.) By 1931, the Chicago Defender noticed, “her superiority is so evident that her rivals are regularly overwhelmed earlier than the primary ball crosses the online.” Her achievements had been broadly coated within the Black press, making her the nation’s first Black feminine athletic star.
However as quickly as she stopped enjoying, she slipped into obscurity.
Regardless of her achievements, Washington had by no means been acknowledged by White America. She logged her victories on the top of segregation, when most Black athletes had been barred from the nation’s dominant sporting establishments. In 1976, when her absence from the Corridor of Fame ceremony sparked momentary curiosity in her profession, a couple of folks recalled that she had at all times needed to check her abilities in opposition to the period’s prime White feminine participant, the legendary Helen Wills Moody. A New York Occasions reporter phoned Moody to ask about Washington. Moody had by no means heard of her.
Retirement obscured Washington’s accomplishments amongst Black followers as properly. She left competitors in 1948, simply as Black athletes resembling Gibson and Jackie Robinson had been lastly stepping onto an built-in stage. All eyes turned to them. Stars of the segregated period pale.
Within the Seventies and Eighties, rising curiosity in Black historical past sparked new analysis into segregated sports activities, typically via oral historical past interviews. However Washington’s early dying meant nobody may observe her down and interview her. Nor had been historians more likely to encounter anybody who knew her properly, partially as a result of she made no effort to maneuver into the elite social circles that ran Black tennis, or to imagine the trimmings of standard female respectability that mattered a lot to that formidable group. She labored as a housekeeper all her life, even on the top of her success. And he or she was homosexual.
Shortly after her retirement, Philadelphia Tribune reporter Randy Dixon lamented, within the coded language of the time, that “the land at massive has by no means bowed at Ora’s shrine of accomplishment within the correct tempo,” primarily as a result of “she dedicated the unpardonable sin of being a plain individual with no aptitude no matter for what of us like to name society.”
As with so many Black feminine stars, Washington’s refusal to adapt to expectations got here from the boldness and willpower that had been her best strengths. A touch of this inside hearth emerged after she retired from singles play in 1937. Her successor as champion, Flora Lomax, was dubbed “the glamour woman of tennis.” Sportswriters enthused over Lomax’s trademark white pleated shorts, love of dancing and penchant for hobnobbing with stars resembling Joe Louis.
Washington was having none of it. In 1939, she emerged from retirement, entered a match in Buffalo and defeated Lomax. She made no secret of her motive. “Sure folks mentioned sure issues final 12 months,” she advised a reporter. “They mentioned Ora was not so good any extra. I had not deliberate to enter singles this 12 months, however I simply needed to go as much as Buffalo to show any individual was mistaken.”
Washington has just lately begun to realize extra discover, partially due to the achievements of successors resembling Serena Williams, A’ja Wilson and fellow Philadelphian Daybreak Staley have elevated curiosity within the historical past of Black feminine athletes. She was inducted into the Naismith Basketball Corridor of Fame in 2018 (though the Corridor initially bought her title mistaken). The New York Occasions printed a belated obituary in February. And the BBC has simply produced an eight-part podcast on her life, narrated by retired WNBA star Renee Montgomery.
However there’s an extended option to go.
Within the wake of Serena Williams’s first-round U.S. Open victory in August, an ardent fan tweeted out a historic lineup of Black feminine tennis gamers.
- Lucy.
- Althea.
- Zina.
- Chanda.
- Venus.
- Serena.
- Sloane.
- Madison.
- Naomi.
- Coco.
The checklist embodies Black feminine excellence. Lucy Stowe turned the ATA’s first feminine champion in 1917. Althea Gibson built-in American ladies’s tennis, then received back-to-back titles at Wimbledon and the U.S. Open in 1957 and 1958. Zina Garrison and Chanda Rubin helped pave the way in which for the transformative period of Venus and Serena Williams, who then impressed the youthful stars Sloane Stephens, Madison Keys, Naomi Osaka and Coco Gauff.
Pamela Grundy is co-author, with Susan Shackelford, of “Shattering the Glass: The Exceptional Historical past of Ladies’s Basketball,” and writer of “Ora Washington: The First Black Feminine Athletic Star,” in David Wiggins’s “Out of the Shadows: A Biographical Historical past of African American Athletes.”