The Smart Set Athletic Club used the old 14th Regiment Armory in Brooklyn, now breathtakingly renovated, as its home court for basketball during the 1910s.
Brooklyn’s Magnificently Renovated 14th Regiment Armory Was Home Court To Early Black Basketball Team
The very first indoor tennis match involving African Americans took place at a tennis-basketball doubleheader in Harlem in 1914.
In 1904, Edwin B. Henderson attended Harvard University’s Summer School of Arts and Sciences to learn the game of basketball. The rest is history.
The roots of the black basketball trace back to the Hemenway Gymnasium on the campus of Harvard University.
I was at the NBA Finals game last night. The Celtics won.
On May 30, 1906, the Inter-Scholastic Athletic Association of Middle Atlantic States (I.S.A.A.) took root with its first event, a track meet, at Howard University.
This survey rocks conventional wisdom about who counts in American history: Who are the most famous Americans in history, excluding presidents and first ladies?
Here’s a shout out to the courageous men of Company E, 372nd Colored Infantry Regiment, 93rd Division.
Wilmeth Sidat-Singh, a former star athlete at Syracuse, spectacular pro hoops player with the New York Rens and Washington Bears, and former Tuskegee Airman, died in a plane crash while on an Army training mission in 1941.
Does the old Renaissance Ballroom sign matter?






