The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Congress urged to honor pioneering Black cyclist

- By Michael Kranish | Washington Post

It was 1901 when cyclist Marshall “Major” Taylor arrived on Capitol Hill from a triumphant tour of Europe, hailed in a local newspaper as the “Champion of the World.” Here was the first Black American global sports superstar, who had been forced by racism to compete mostly in other countries. Now he raced on a track near the Capitol in front of 5,000 people and not only won, as usual, but garnered his latest national title.

Yet several days later, as Taylor sought to check into a New York hotel, he was refused because of the color of his skin. Many white cyclists didn’t want to race against him, and promoters would play the racist “Dixie” instead of the usual “Star-spangled Banner” when he was victorious.

He continued to accumulate honors abroad, but over the years his name faded even though his exploits had paved the way for Black sports heroes such as boxing’s Jack Johnson and baseball’s Jackie Robinson.

I know this story well because it became an obsession that I turned into a book, “The World’s Fastest Man: The Extraordin­ary Life of Cyclist Major Taylor, America’s First Black Sports Hero.” In recent years, I have seen a surge of interest of cycling clubs named for him and in bike trails built in his name. Still, Taylor’s legacy remains too little-known.

Now, however, that may change, and it is because his story is returning to Capitol Hill.

A measure introduced on Dec. 7 would award Taylor a congressio­nal gold medal, the highest civilian honor bestowed by lawmakers in the Capitol. Only 184 individual­s and groups have received it since the first one was given by the Continenta­l Congress in 1776 to George Washington.

If passed, the congressio­nal award would be added to a legion of honors that Taylor received in his lifetime, from the “big gold medal” he recalled being pinned on his chest when he won his first race as an 11-year-old, to the 1899 world championsh­ip he was awarded in Montreal nine years later.

At that event, the promoters did play “The Star-spangled Banner,” prompting Taylor to say, “My national anthem took on a new meaning for me from that moment. I never felt so proud to be an American before, and indeed, I even felt more American at that moment than I ever felt in America.”

More than a century after Taylor won the world championsh­ip, the effort to award him the congressio­nal gold medal is, in effect, an attempt to rectify the way he was so wronged — and, by extension, teach a wider lesson about the nation’s history of racial injustice. Taylor was not only one of the greatest athletes in U.S. history, he also hoped that his success would disprove the racist theories that Blacks were inferior.

He was among the first to use sports celebrity for a social cause, writing that he hoped others who faced racism would be inspired by his story to compete in all walks of life.

“I pray they will carry on in spite of that dreadful monster prejudice, and with patience, courage, fortitude and perseveran­ce, achieve success for themselves,” he wrote in his autobiogra­phy, published in 1928.

Taylor first met that monster, he wrote, when he was a child growing up in Indianapol­is. Seeking to improve his cycling skills, he went to the local YMCA but was refused entry because of the color of his skin.

Moving to the more-welcoming city of Worcester, Mass., he found an open door at the local YMCA. With a rigorous training and diet plan that was far ahead of its time, he became — it is no exaggerati­on to say — one of the fittest people in the world.

In 1896, at age 18, Taylor arrived at New York’s Madison Square Garden to participat­e in a hellish six-day race against the world’s greatest racers. It was six months after the Supreme Court ruled in Plessy v. Ferguson in the infamous “separate but equal” case, which ruled it was legal to force a Black person into a rail car separate from whites, effectivel­y institutio­nalizing

Jim Crow racism.

At first, promoters refused to let Taylor race against whites, but he prevailed by convincing them that his presence would draw more spectators. To prove just how wrong the promoters had been, he beat the world’s greatest sprinter in a preliminar­y match, then managed to complete six straight days of racing in a competitio­n that saw many others drop out.

A legend had been born: Taylor was one of the most chronicled Blacks of his day, with his exploits featured in publicatio­ns around the world.

Arriving in France five years later, he was on the cover of leading magazines. His wife, Daisy, made the cover of the Colored American, a monthly magazine focused on Black culture. He raced throughout Europe and made two triumphant tours of Australia, lodging at the finest hotels and hailed as a hero. He earned more than $10,000 a year, more than even some of the greatest stars of boxing and baseball, during

this brief time when cycling was America’s most popular sport.

Taylor was deeply religious, an accomplish­ed musician, a poet and a meticulous keeper of his own story. He pasted hundreds of clippings into his scrapbooks, including those that told how he had nearly been killed by a competitor on a Massachuse­tts racetrack in front of 25,000 people. He was repeatedly threatened with death.

The more victories Taylor earned, the more some whites sought to ban him by invoking Jim Crow restrictio­ns. In 1897, convinced by promoters that he would be barred from competing, he let his manager apply a skin-lightening lotion to his body, a painful bleaching process that lasted for days. The manager had “tried in various ways to make me white” and “I thought I was going to die,” Taylor said. He halted the procedure and used the prejudice against him as motivation, embracing his growing identity as a Black leader.

“My color is my fortune,” Taylor

declared. “Were I white, I might not amount to a row of shucks in this business.”

Taylor thought it was vital that the public did not forget his story, so he wrote his autobiogra­phy, “The Fastest Bicycle Rider in the World.” But he became mired in debt during the Great Depression and moved into a YMCA in the Bronzevill­e section of Chicago, known as the city’s “Black Metropolis,” where he died in 1932.

He was buried in a pauper’s grave, the death little-noted except by a local Black-oriented newspaper. He was reburied with a proper headstone and tribute 16 years later, and was named to the Bicycling Hall of Fame in 1989.

I first learned of Major Taylor more than 25 years ago. In 2001, while working on a story about him, I traveled to Pittsburgh to interview his 96-yearold daughter, Sydney, named for the Australian city in which she was born while Taylor competed. She preserved his scrapbooks, letters and other memorabili­a, now stored at the Indiana State Museum, and descendant­s and supporters have continued to promote his legacy.

The effort to honor him in Congress grew from a series of coincidenc­es that threaded history.

A group of Chicago cyclists who were members of the local Major Taylor club were joined around 2017 by Jonathan L. Jackson, son of the Rev. Jesse Jackson and godson of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. Club members told Jackson about Taylor and sent him the cyclist’s autobiogra­phy. The more he learned about Taylor, the more he realized that the cyclist was not only a sports champion, but one of the nation’s most important, if little-known, civil rights champions.

After Jackson was elected to Congress last year — a Democrat representi­ng the Chicago district where Taylor last lived — he worked with his cycling friends and members of the Taylor family to propose that Taylor receive the congressio­nal gold medal.

Jackson said he did so as he watched some politician­s engage in what he called efforts to “erase” Black history by restrictin­g access to certain books and lessons, an effort that has divided people across the country. But Jackson stressed that just as Taylor benefited from white supporters who rejected racism, the passage of the congressio­nal honor can symbolize how people can work together.

“It’s something that both sides of the aisle can agree on,” Jackson said. “We’re not responsibl­e for what happened in history, but we can right a wrong with a gold medal . ... It’s a story of redemption and reconcilia­tion. There are lessons from that to learn today.”

So far, Jackson said, he has found that few members of Congress are familiar with Taylor’s story, but he has garnered support whenever he is able to talk to members one-on-one. “I don’t have to convince, I just have to explain it,” he said.

As part of that effort, Jackson held a recent news conference at the YMCA where Taylor last lived. Nearby is a bicycle trail named in Taylor’s honor. A quote from the cyclist flows across a converted railroad trestle: “I was a pioneer, and therefore had to blaze my own trail.”

Now that trail is leading once again to Capitol Hill, where Taylor awaits the kind of honor so often denied him by the country he loved.

 ?? NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY ?? Marshall “Major” Taylor was one of the world’s greatest cyclists in the late 1800s, but his legacy of overcoming racism is little-known. U.S. Rep. Jonathan L. Jackson is now pushing for his colleagues to award him a congressio­nal gold medal.
NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY Marshall “Major” Taylor was one of the world’s greatest cyclists in the late 1800s, but his legacy of overcoming racism is little-known. U.S. Rep. Jonathan L. Jackson is now pushing for his colleagues to award him a congressio­nal gold medal.
 ?? NATIONAL LIBRARY OF FRANCE ?? Taylor (left) competes against Léon Hourlier at the Vélodrome Buffalo racetrack in Paris in 1909.
NATIONAL LIBRARY OF FRANCE Taylor (left) competes against Léon Hourlier at the Vélodrome Buffalo racetrack in Paris in 1909.

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