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When I was a kid, my Dad and I were at my grandfather's home (his father) watching the Harlem Globetrotters play on TV. I asked how the Globetrotters would fare against an NBA team. My father assured me it would not be a competitive game. I replied that the Globetrotters could do the same things to an NBA team as they did to the Washington Generals. My Dad gave me a long look and replied, "If anyone playing for the Globetrotters could make it in the NBA, then he would be playing in the NBA." I tried to come up with a counterargument but came up empty and conceded my father was correct.Missed it by a day…
Meadowlark Lemon was born in Wilmington on April 25, 1932. Meadow Lemon III was his given name passed down from his grandfather through his father according to his own biographical entry at MeadowlarkLemon.org. He graduated from Williston High School (also known as Williston Industrial School) in 1952. Super athlete and pioneer in desegregation and women’s rights Althea Gibson was a 1949 graduate of the same school. Joseph McNeil, one of the Greensboro Sit-In’s original four was also a graduate of Williston. It was, of course, given the times, an African American only institution. Williston would come into the national mindset in 1968 when its closing as part of the municipal desegregation plan led to intense dissatisfaction in Wilmington from its alumni, students, and the African American community. An offshoot of the protests was the globally known case of The Wilmington Ten.
Meadow Lemon officially took the name of Meadowlark after joining the Harlem Globetrotters in 1955. Before that he had briefly attended Florida A&M and served two years in the U.S. Army. There is no mention that I can find of Meadow Lemon having played basketball at Williston High despite there being records accessible for the years that he attended school neither is there any mention of that elsewhere. Some newspaper coverage of African American High School sports existed in those times. A ‘Charlotte Observer’ blurb reported that he had played at Williston High but offers no attribution. ‘The News and Observer’ reported that he was a star in basketball and baseball at Williston — again with no attribution. During his high school years in Wilmington he may have played under the name James Lemmons as the excerpt from a ‘Winston Salem Sentinel’ article on the African American High School state championship tournament of 1952 (March 21) bears a foreshadowing of sorts.
Of course Meadowlark Lemon went on to become one of the most famous people in the world, visiting countless countries, playing over 16,000 games, and combining the all-time greatest hook shot with magical ball-handling skills and worldclass entertainer chops. It ought to be mentioned that he played many of his thousands of games alongside Greensboro’s Ed “Curly” Neal. Topping off his athletic, entertainment, and philanthropical careers, he also became an ordained minister in his later years. He is an inductee in the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame.
The Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame :: Meadowlark Lemon
We lived at 89th and Riverside…..I often ran up to and around Grant’s Tomb……this was the mid-‘90’s and both Riverside Park and Grant’s Tomb were in excellent shape.
#OTD IN 1897, Ulysses S. Grant’s tomb on #RiversideDriveNYC was dedicated. It would have been his 75th birthday. He died in 1885. His celebrated burial in this location was controversial as many believed either a military park or Washington D.C. to be more appropriate. Grant himself had nixed those ideas however with his romantic insistence that Julia, his wife, be buried beside him.
Grant (and Julia) also preferred that New York City be their final resting place. They actually lived at No. 3 East Sixty-sixth street beginning in 1881. (Read here: http://daytoninmanhattan.blogspot.com/.../the-lost-u-s... ) As many know, the Grants were ruined financially in 1884, the victims of a Ponzi Scheme. The General died of throat cancer just over a year later.
As per their wishes the mausoleum is the final resting place of he and Julia. A design by John Hemingway Duncan was chosen in a competition. Duncan based it on the Temple at Halicarnassus (Persia), one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World (see below, bottom right-facing, for a sketch of that now long-gone structure). While the dedication #OTD IN 1897 was a huge event the fund-raising efforts were not always smooth and brought forward both regional and class-based enmities.
In fact, the monument has seen rough times during its 127 year ‘life.’ Having fallen into disrepair, The Works Project Administration (WPA) of Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal restored and improved the monument between 1935 and 1939 — there are busts of five of Grant's generals...William T. Sherman, Phillip H. Sheridan, George H. Thomas, James B. McPherson, and Edward Ord installed by the Federal Artists Project and many infrastructural additions both cosmetic and fundamental were added.
Despite the monument’s placement in the care of the National Parks Service in 1958, in the 1970s graffiti as well as squatting along the exterior of the structure made it unsightly and even dangerous. Overall New York City itself was in similarly dire straits - #RiversideParkNYC was a rough and mainly off limits area. It wasn’t until the 1990s that the monument, and the area was reclaimed. Today I walk with Prince and Maxie in this area daily (even nightly), and literally circling “Grant’s Tomb” is part of our regimen. I admire the structure for its solid but fluid lines. It has a timeless quality and diagonally across from the towering #RiversideChurch we find ourselves sandwiched by two of the more impressive edifices, though I fear, less recognized, in the city. The dogs only see the squirrels and rats in truth but I do try my best to look up.
The structure itself does remind me, as a born and bred southerner who was treated to the barrage of Lost Cause propaganda from my earliest memory, that the country has an incredibly divisive history and that I am living through a time of deep division as well. When I do raise up my eyes I see on the tomb inscribed Grant’s epitaph: “Let us have peace.” I have to add though...not at the cost of permitting fascism, racism, and regression winning to win the day.
About a month ago the dogs and I were passing by and a couple were lingering in front of the tomb. I caught their conversation on the wind and it was one of curiosity about the edifice. I interjected what I knew of the place and its history, mainly what I wrote above but also some things about the "Rolling Bench" that wraps around it ( See here: Mosaic Rolling Bench at General Grant National Memorial — CITYarts ). The couple lived in the southern part of the island and said they did not get "up here" often. They looked at me as curiously as they did the tomb -- I know that my accent threw them off...probably as much as hearing it speaking respectfully about the Union general that laid low The South. The Dunns have been in #WestHarlem now over 4 years and of course we'll never be 'from' there. That said, roots tend to reach down all on their own.
Amen.
The photographs below: Top left-facing is a photograph of the dedication ceremony. Top right-facing, a shot from 1917. Bottom left-facing is a snap by me from Sakura Park. Bottom right-facing is a sketch of The Persian Temple of Halicarnassus.
I guess I remember two families in CH that had separate from the house dug in "bunkers"-nuclear war shelters . Our neighbors had central room in the basement-no windows-cement block walls-full of water and beenie weinies etc
The phrase Mutually Assured Destruction was coined in 1962 though I don’t recall hearing it until quite a few years later. That doesn’t mean that the concept wasn’t well lodged in my young brain from early youth. An episode of “The Twilight Zone” sticks in my memory though I couldn’t have seen it at first airing in 1959 — “Time Enough At Last” —showed bookworm Henry Bemis, played by Burgess Meredith (who I’d come to know soon enough as ‘The Penguin’ to the much more hopeful TV Batman that I so loved), in a post-apocalyptic world where he was finally left alone to read to his heart’s content (no spoiler).
I don’t remember any “Duck and Cover” drills at #Bonlee Elementary School either but I was very aware in my imagination that nuclear targets lay most immediately to my east — I knew my cardinal directions very early — the beach was east and the mountains were west — Raleigh and Fort Bragg being most prominent. Later I would identify the Research Triangle Park, also east, as a major attraction for Soviet bombs and missiles.
Maybe I was a particularly unrealistic kid - but I thought about MAD and even imagined thwarting the whole thing and surviving an atomic showdown. Maybe that’s what everybody imagined? In fact around this time I put together a ‘Fall-Out’ Shelter in the basement of the house in #Bonlee. I got the idea from a 4-H show on WUNC-TV (Channel 4 we called it). It never dawned on me that a shelter was a patently foolish enterprise - unless, and then in only a mildly sensible way - you were going to be The Attacker and would take to the bunkers before you launched. Yep, all those
Just another piece of the Shadow of Mutually Assured Destruction that Cold War kids lived beneath I guess. We, at least were lucky to be in the country and not a Russian Target — we thought.
Now in an urban setting like New York City ponder for a moment the thinking, if you can call it that, that windowless, damp tenement basements might be represented as places of refuge or that being locked in such a space with your neighbors, the surviving ones, after all around you lay in electricity-less, poisoned rubble. Lordy.
I reckon it made me feel better about my chances in a post apocalypse world that one corner of our reasonably dry basement in Bonlee spirted a two-week supply of canned peaches, Nabs, and unspoilable Vienna Sausages. After all, my part of the world in those days had to be pretty low priority in Russian estimates, right…though as the cartoon feature below suggests, rural America was hardly safe from dastardly Commie designs.
Cold War History: “Did You Know?” Syndicated Feature published #OTD (April 30) 1964.
Also read, “Fallout Shelters: Why Some New Yorkers Never Planned To Evacuate After A Nuclear Disaster,” Fallout Shelters: Why some New Yorkers never planned to evacuate after a nuclear disaster | 6sqft
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While not an opinion my parents or grandparents expressed, at the time I remember a lot of talk that if this had happened earlier and more often, then the country would have been better off. I was surprised at who I heard it from and made a mental note of those expressing that opinion. I have come to believe that the National Guard soldier were not universally evil. But there was a subset among them who had no business being handed live ammunition. Once the firing starts, it become infectious. When I was in the Army, I was relieved when I found out the highly controlled conditions under which live rounds were issued. Live rounds should have never been issued. That live rounds were issued was a symptom of a problem far worse than demonstrating students. Not trying to excuse the inexcusible, but if the ROTC building had not been burned down two days earlier, I don't think shots would have been fired on May 4th.
#OTD in 1970: Allison Krause, William Schroeder, Sandy Scheuer and Jeffrey Miller.
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