written by Bill Francis
With the National Basketball Association playoffs in full swing, the baseball and basketball seasons intersect.
Individually, Cumberland Posey may have blended the two sports as well as anyone ever has.
In 2006, Posey, the longtime owner of the juggernaut Homestead Grays, was one of 17 candidates from the Negro Leagues and the era preceding them in black baseball who were selected by a special committee for induction into the Baseball Hall of Fame.
But last month, on April 4, it was announced that Posey was part of a 10-member group, which also includes legends as Allen Iverson, Shaquille O’Neal, Sheryl Swoopes and Tom Izzo, that had been elected to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. The Class of 2016 will be enshrined during a Sept. 9 cere
mony in Springfield, Mass.
STARTING IN STEELTOWN
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Cumberland Willis Posey Jr. was born on June 20, 1890 in Homestead, Pa., a steel town in Western Pennsylvania, six miles from Pittsburgh. A star multisport athlete in high school, he excelled in basketball, football, baseball and track,
During the 1910s, the light-skinned Posey attended Penn State, the University of Pittsburgh and Duquesne University (the first reported black athlete at the college), spending time as a varsity athlete in both basketball and baseball.
It was also during this period that the 5-foot-9 Posey would gain the reputation as one of the greatest basketball players of his era. Called a wizard on the court, Posey played guard and coached a number of club teams, including the all-black Monticello-Delaneys and the Loendi Big Five, soon to be recognized as one of the best squads in the country thanks to five Colored Basketball World’s Championship teams.
"When basketball history is written, Posey and the Loendi club, which succeeded the Monticello-Delaneys, will have a very important place.”
Fay Young, "Chicago Defender" columnist
In 1922, the Chicago Defender, one of the leading black newspapers of the day, wrote that Posey was a “basketball magnate and leader of one of the best organizations in the country (white or black).”
Two decades later, Chicago Defender columnist Fay Young wrote, “When basketball history is written, Posey and the Loendi club, which succeeded the Monticello-Delaneys, will have a very important place.”
In the midst of his hardwood success, Posey, a standout figure in sandlot circles, joined the Homestead Grays baseball team as an outfielder in 1911, a squad made up of local steel workers. Eventually, the team’s success during weekends-only play made then an in-demand attraction and led to a full semipro schedule of travel throughout the area. In rather quick succession, his natural acumen for such things led Posey to become the Grays’ captain, manager, secretary and owner in a matter of only a few years.
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BASEBALL LEGACY
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While a solid ballplayer, Posey would become best known as the father of the powerhouse Grays.
In 1927, the New York Age, a leading black newspaper, stamped Posey as the greatest black athlete ever.
“When he walks to the coach’s box at first base the fans cheer him. When he protests a decision they jeer him. But there is nothing evil, nothing lasting in their venom of the moment. He’s their friend and if they want to cuss him, that’s their prerogative. Cum Posey belongs to the sports world: He is in it and of it and it is proud of him.
“So, if you are still asking me whom I consider the greatest athlete, the one who has meant the most to ‘the game,’ the answer is ‘Cum Posey.’”
GROWING THE GRAYS
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While Posey fought joining a loop for many years, preferring the lucrative nature of an independent squad, the Grays eventually became a member of the Negro National League in 1934. While his playing career had ended in 1929, and he had relinquished his managerial reigns to Vic Harris in 1935 to concentrate on the team’s business matters. This big team from a small town developed into a dynasty by winning nine consecutive NNL pennants from 1937-45.
“For Negro ballplayers, that was the epitome of their achievements – playing for the Homestead Grays,” said former Grays team member Harold Tinker. “We didn’t have any prospects in the major leagues; ‘white baseball’ wasn’t open to us.”
“We do our chores in the major league manner, and we are certain that our greats. . .are as good, if not better, than those so-called major leaguers.”
Cumberland Posey
Among the future Hall of Famers developed by Posey’s key eye for talent with the talent-rich Grays were Smokey Joe Williams, Josh Gibson, Buck Leonard, Oscar Charleston, Jud Wilson and Ray Brown.
While breaking down big league baseball’s racial barriers would ultimately prove ruinous to the fortunes of the Negro Leagues, Posey often spoke of the hypocrisy involved.
“We do our chores in the major league manner,” Posey said late in life, “and we are certain that our greats – Willie Wells, Ray Dandridge, Larry Doby, Monte Irvin, Roy Campanella, Buck O’Neil, Willard Brown, Sammy Hughes, and all of our Grays – are as good, if not better, than those so-called major leaguers.”
A LIFE OF HONOR
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Posey passed away at age 55 on March 28, 1946, a year before Jackie Robinson broke the modern big league color barrier with the Brooklyn Dodgers.
“Although he was a great basketball player – in fact, the greatest, according to such a capable judge as the immortal Fat Jenkins – Cum Posey’s life was dedicated to the team he made, the Homestead Grays. Some may charge that his tactics were crude and his aims selfish. Some may say he crushed the weak as well as the strong on his way to the top of the ladder.
“But no matter what his critics say, they cannot deny that he was the smartest man in Negro baseball and certainly the most successful.”
Bill Francis is a Library Associate at the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum
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