Christian found a fantastic subject for his essay and did an outstanding job of researching and capturing a small portion of John McLendon Jr.’s life. We cannot thank the Jim Murray Memorial Foundation enough for its terrific support of so many students.— Scott Reinardy, Ph.D.
Malcolm Applegate Professor in News Management and Editing
University of Kansas
Associate Dean, Graduate Studies
School of Journalism and Mass Communications
CHRISTIAN HARDY
Naismith and McClendon, Breaking Down Barriers in Kansas
Athletics Director Phog Allen could not allow John McLendon Jr. to swim in the Robinson Gymnasium pool. He believed blacks swimming with whites was too dangerous.
When McLendon took his first swim during his senior year in 1936, University of Kansas officials drained the pool. He wasn’t deterred. He planned to swim often, warning pool keepers of more work and high water bills to come.
McLendon saw signs posted on the KU campus: “Don’t swim with the n–.” He immediately ripped them down.
But a swimming class was required for McLendon to earn his physical education degree. Before 1933, when a swimming credit was a requirement for all students, African Americans were given their grade without entering the pool. The rule waived the credit to maintain segregation.
As KU’s first black physical education major, McLendon wouldn’t accept the free pass. He drove 40 miles west from Kansas City, Kansas, to Lawrence to earn his degree and become a basketball coach. He wasn’t going to cut corners. His father had ingrained a simple message prior to delivering him to James Naismith in 1933.
“Go up there and do what everybody else does, and try to do it in a way that won’t have you getting hurt,” McLendon remembers his father telling him, according to biographer Milton Katz. “If you happen to get hurt, let me know. I’ll be up there with my .44.”
From lessons he learned from watching a single blacktop game with Naismith, McLendon reinvented basketball. He became a Hall of Fame coach, and the father of the fast break and full-court press.
By the time McLendon arrived on campus, basketball’s 72-year-old inventor was a professor emeritus. Nonetheless, Naismith’s intolerance of racism made it easy to advocate for McLendon.
“He deplored any form of discrimination, segregation or prejudice and helped me to surmount glaring institutional discriminatory practices,” McLendon wrote of Naismith in the New York Times in 1996. “Many of my doubts about being at Kansas were quickly dispelled by Dr. Naismith.”
Allen would allow access.
Secretly, McLendon gathered the 60-some African-American KU students and told them to avoid the pool for the next two weeks.
The two weeks passed without incident, opening the pool to blacks at designated times. To ensure their safety, Naismith assigned football players to keep watch.
McLendon played basketball at Kansas City Kansas Junior College before coming to Kansas, but he was still filled with doubt and fear when he arrived at KU. Nevertheless, his father assured him that he was entitled to a place at the University – he was a taxpayer, after all – and Naismith, assigned to be his adviser, would care for him.
In an interview, Katz explained how the senior McLendon “assigned” Naismith to be his son’s adviser.
“McLendon wasn’t that well educated, but he was very intelligent, so I think he knew what kind of person Dr. Naismith was,” Katz said. “… I think he knew a little bit about his background. And McLendon grew up in a very religious household. So his dad probably thought, ‘Well, if anyone’s going to take care of my son it’s going to be this man.'”
“Dads are generally right.”
“It’s a weird combination,” Katz said. “But a beautiful one, to say the least.”
What started as a friendship between McLendon and Naismith became a basketball mentorship. Segregation barred McLendon from playing basketball at Kansas — although he did try out for the team — so he was intent on coaching it.
For Naismith, 40 years had passed since he invented the game. His relevance and voice in the basketball community had waned. Still, Naismith carried the same ideals about the sport he created – it was supposed to develop character and improve lives.
McLendon was more than enthralled. He thought the frenzied style could be harnessed into what eventually became the fast break and the full-court press.
Naismith helped McLendon earn his first job coaching at Lawrence Senior High School after he graduated in 1936. Naismith’s parting advice: “Whatever you do in physical education, stick with this game.”
In 1979, McLendon was inducted as a contributor into the Basketball Hall of Fame, named after his friend and mentor. In 2016, McLendon was inducted into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame for a second time, but as a coach. He was the first college coach to win three consecutive national championships (Tennessee State, 1957-59); the first black coach to integrate a professional team (American Basketball League, 1961); and the first black coach in the American Basketball Association (1969).
“Everything I ever did when I was coaching I can trace back to something I learned from him,” McLendon told the Topeka Capital-Journal in the late 1970s. “He did so many things for me. He helped me fortify my feelings on a lot of things. Sometimes that’s all you need.”
Naismith died in 1939 and was buried in Lawrence Memorial Park. McLendon died in 1999 at the age of 84. In 1994, a nine-foot tall statue was erected in the park in memorium to Naismith. In front the statue are eight benches, all of them etched and laid out into a semi-circle. Four are biographical to Naismith, one about his values, another lists KU coaches. Two are dedicated to individuals.