Harlem Community Board Backs New York Rens Tribute At Former Casino Site


The City of New York Manhattan Community Board 10 In Central Harlem Unanimously Passed A Resolution Supporting Sidewalk Commemoration Plans To Honor The Legendary New York Rens Basketball Team

The Renaissance Casino, formerly on the corner of West 138th Street and Adam Clayton Powell Boulevard in Harlem and the home court of the New York Rens, where the Black Fives Foundation and partners plan to commemorate the legendary basketball team. (Photo: New York Times)

“We are very pleased with the unanimous support of Community Board 10 for this project to honor the legendary New York Rens, and we look forward to working closely with the community, our partners, and all the city agencies that will be involved to make this important historical commemoration come to life,” said Black Fives Foundation founder Claude Johnson. “It’s especially important considering what happened to the original site, which was a cherished cultural shrine,” Johnson added.

Supporting partners involved to date include SLAM, PUMA, and the New York Knicks.

Renaissance Ballroom: The Aristocrat of Harlem
An event program cover from the Renaissance Ballroom, ca. 1930s, affectionately known as the “Aristocrat of Harlem.” (Black Fives Archives)
100th anniversary of New York Rens
The New York Rens basketball team, winners of the 1939 World Professional Basketball Tournament, circa 1939. Left to right: William “Wee Willie” Smith, Charles “Tarzan” Cooper, John Isaacs, William “Pop” Gates, Clarence “Puggy” Bell, Eiyre Saitch, Zachariah “Zack” Clayton, Clarence “Fats” Jenkins. (Black Fives Archives)

“As someone who devoted himself to breaking down barriers through basketball, Uncle Zach would be deeply moved to see Harlem’s community leaders unanimously embrace this recognition of the New York Rens’ legacy,” added Lauren D. Myers, the grand-niece of Zach Clayton, who won the 1939 Pro Basketball World’s Championship title with that team. “Their commitment to excellence and unity on the court helped prove that basketball could bring people together, and this commemoration ensures their pioneering spirit will continue to inspire future generations in Harlem and beyond.”

Please see the full resolution, below:

 Resolution To Support the Renaissance Casino Sidewalk Commemoration 

 WHEREAS The Black Fives Foundation is seeking consideration for usage of sidewalk fronting the former Renaissance Casino Site at West 138th Street and Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Blvd to honor and commemorate the pioneering New York RENs Historic African American Basketball Team; and 

WHEREAS The mission of the Black Fives Foundation is to inspire excellence in youth by preserving, teaching, and honoring the pre-NBA history of African Americans in basketball by advocating tirelessly for their proper recognition; and 

WHEREAS The Black Five Foundation is committed to the basketball community and Harlem-at-large, to the pioneers and to their descendants to preserve this history; and 

WHEREAS The Black Five Foundation met with the Department of Transportation and discussed the city’s need to (1) protect itself against the potential future neglect or abandonment of the project, (2) future maintenance, (3) place funds in escrow, and (4) have the design conform with the urban context of the existing sidewalk and area; and 

WHEREAS The Black Five Foundation is open to other venues of physical commemoration alternatives; and 

WHEREAS 2023 marks the 100th anniversary of the founding of the New York Rens in 1923, and their first season during 1923-1924; and 

WHEREAS The New York Rens as well as other teams, players, and pioneers from the Black Fives Era are featured in detail in the book, The Black Fives: The Epic Story of Basketball’s Forgotten Era (Abrams, 2022); and 

WHEREAS The New York Rens were the first Black-owned, all-Black, fully professional basketball team in history, formed in Harlem in October 1923. That year, basketball manager Robert “Bob” Douglas made a deal with Harlem real estate developer William Roach, the owner of the Renaissance Casino, a newly opened ballroom; and 

WHEREAS Mr. Douglas previously owned and managed an African American basketball team called the Spartan Braves, which was a leading contender for the Black national championship title. His basketball club had no home court. The Renaissance Ballroom, with its perfect location in the center of Harlem, its spacious floor, and its balcony seating that looked down from above, would be the ideal venue; and 

WHEREAS By 1924-1925 the “Rens” had won the first of many Colored Basketball World Championships and thereafter proceeded to dominate not just Black basketball, but all of basketball for the next 25 years. During that period, the Rens routinely beat championship-caliber White basketball teams such as the Original Celtics, the Philadelphia SPHAS, the Oshkosh All Stars, and the Indianapolis Kautskys. The irony is that the leagues in which these teams played did not allow African American players or teams to join; and 

WHEREAS In 1939, the New York Rens won the inaugural World Championship of Professional Basketball, an invitation-only tourney with a field made up of America’s twelve best pro hoops teams. The title game saw the Rens defeating the Oshkosh All Stars. Oshkosh had been the champion of the National Basketball League, a Whites-only league; and 

WHEREAS The Black Five Foundation presented before the Parks and Recreation Committee on October 9th, 2024 where the Committee voted unanimously; On November 6, 2024, Manhattan Community Board 10 voted with 36 Yes, 0 No, 0_Abstentions, 0 Recusals; and 

THEREFORE NOW be it resolved that Manhattan Community Board 10 supports the recommendation to honor and commemorate the pioneering New York Rens, a Historic African American Basketball Team through the installation of a sidewalk commemoration fronting the former Renaissance Casino Site at West 138th Street and Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Blvd. 

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Please consider donating to the Black Fives Foundation, a 501(c)3 public charity whose mission is to inspire excellence in youth by preserving, teaching, and honoring the pre-NBA history of African Americans in basketball. Thank you.

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