Jay-Z’s Link To Brooklyn’s Century-Old Black Basketball History

On September 29, 2011, in Business, Community, Culture, History, NBA, by Claude Johnson

Jay-Z’s co-ownership of the Brooklyn Nets reminds us of the Smart Set Athletic Club — America’s first all-black basketball team — whose players lived a short stroll away from the Marcy Housing Projects in Bedford-Stuyvesant where he grew up.

Did you hear that Jay-Z has gone public this week in announcing his preference for the name of the new N.B.A. franchise in Brooklyn, formerly known as the New Jersey Nets? He likes the name “Brooklyn Nets.” His announcement came at a media event staged at the Barclay Center, which will be the team’s new home. Jay-Z, a co-owner of the team, is originally from Brooklyn and also announced that he would like to stage some concerts at the opening of the arena.


Video clip of Jay-Z speaking at the Barclay Center in Brooklyn.

I’m not sure how settled they are on the team name. But in case Jay-Z and the other owners change their minds about it, here is a suggestion.

How about a name that honors the historically important role that Brooklyn’s black basketball pioneers played in the development of the game among African Americans at the turn of the last century?

In 1907, Brooklyn’s own Smart Set Athletic Club formed the very first all-black basketball team. It was known simply as “the Smart Set,” but eventually earned a more ominous nickname: “The Grave Diggers.”

The Smart Set was one of the founding teams of the very first all-black independent basketball association, the Olympian Athletic League, formed in 1908. The team won the first two league titles as well as the consensus “Colored Basketball World’s Championship” twice.

George Lattimore

George Lattimore.

Smart Set team operations were handled on a voluntary basis by its members, led by George Lattimore, who was an officer in the New York Branch of the N.A.A.C.P. and was employed by the Pinkerton Detective Agency.

“Lattimore and his Smart Set fellows led the fight to get colored athletes recognized by the A.A.U.,” wrote Baltimore Afro-American sports reporter Leon Hardwick in a 1937 interview of Lattimore. “Prior to that time, colored star athletes in track and field, as well as basketball, were almost unheard of,” Lattimore explained. “When we first applied for membership, we were flatly refused.”

Lattimore would later manage the seminal group of musicians known as the Southern Syncopated Orchestra, an African American ensemble led by legendary composer and conductor Will Marion Cook, and which also included legendary cornet player Sidney Bechet, perhaps the most important of early jazz soloists. When he brought the group to London in 1920 for performances at Royal Albert Hall and Buckingham Palace, it was the first time a black orchestra had been booked for shows in Europe. Bechet later maintained that this tour was the highlight of his life. Lattimore subsequently managed that orchestra’s famous and pioneering spin-off group, the Jazz Kings, and would remain in Europe for almost 17 years, maintaining offices in London and Paris, where he booked tours for African American talent and became an “international impresario.”

Tracing the ancestral lineage of Jay-Z’s musical art and his global appeal back to its seminal jazz origins and the groundbreaking work of Smart Set pioneer George Lattimore is obvious.

Just as obvious is the tracing of the ancestral lineage of the success of the N.B.A. and its players back to the pioneering Smart Set Athletic Club and its basketball team, the Grave Diggers.

At the Barclay Center media event, Jay-Z stood at the podium saying, “Without Brooklyn, I wouldn’t be standing here right now.” That is noble and magnanimous, no doubt. But it is only partially true — Jay-Z could have said more accurately that without Brooklyn’s all-black Smart Set Athletic Club and its basketball team, he wouldn’t be standing there.

“Those who are today applauding the success of our athletes must not forget those who struggled heroically to make the way smoother,” wrote Amsterdam News sports columnist Romeo Dougherty of Lattimore way back in 1935.

Smart Set Athletic Club, 1909

The Smart Set Athletic Club basketball team, 1909. Hudson 'Huddy' Oliver seated, far right.

There is another not-so-obvious reason why Jay-Z could really appreciate the Smart Set Athletic Club. Its members were from his ‘hood. “The real ‘hood, not the rap ‘hood,” as he would say — namely, the Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn. Their homes were within a short stroll of the Marcy Housing Projects where Jay-Z grew up. At the time, the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood was predominantly white.

The Smart Set organization catered to Brooklyn’s affluent black social elite — they were of old money, with ancestry whose United States citizenship predated the Civil War. This was also true of the players on its basketball team, which featured Lena Horne’s father, Edwin “Teddy” Horne, as one of its stars.  Another star was Hudson “Huddy” Oliver, who would go on to win four Colored World Basketball Championships, was the best African-American player before 1910, and should be considered for enshrinement in the Basketball Hall of Fame — he became a prominent surgeon in Harlem after attending Howard University’s Medical School.

Smart Set Athletic Club basketball team of Brooklyn

The Smart Set Athletic Club 'Grave Diggers,' 1912. Edwin 'Teddy' Horne, father of Lena Horne, standing far left.

Back then, only the most affluent of New York City’s blacks lived in Brooklyn. “As soon as negro men amass a comfortable fortune they move from this city across the East River,” reported the New York Times in 1895. “It will be news to many white persons to learn that many negro men own and occupy brownstone dwellings in fashionable neighborhoods, employ white servants, and ride in their own carriages behind horses driven by liveried coachmen.” This was not unlike the style of Jay-Z, who arrived at the Barclay Center press conference in a black Maybach. “Some not only own the houses they live in, but also houses tenanted by rich white families, and there are negro men in New York whose wealth is well along toward the million-dollar mark,” the Times continued.

The name of the Smart Set Athletic Club resonated throughout New York City and beyond for decades, and they pioneered several basketball innovations:

Smart Set Athletic Club game jersey

Smart Set Athletic Club game jersey.

OK, the name “Grave Diggers” might not go over very well. But, I would like to suggest that the new owners of the Brooklyn Nets — Jay-Z included — consider keeping the name of the Smart Set Athletic Club in mind, perhaps for a special commemorative “throwback” jersey night when Nets players could wear the Smart Set’s retro uniforms during a game. Maybe during Black History Month, or maybe beyond.

The team name and logos are available and in use — they’ve been licensed by Nike in the past, for a collection of retro footwear and apparel.

And, of course, Major League Baseball does this all the time, with the Negro Leagues — for example, the Pittsburgh Pirates sometimes wear the old Homestead Grays uniform. So this kind of a move wouldn’t be unusual.

It’s just a suggestion.

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This article contains portions of original never-before-published research that was conducted by Claude Johnson and will be included in his forthcoming book, An Introduction To The Black Fives Era: African American Basketball, 1904-1950.

15 Responses to “Jay-Z’s Link To Brooklyn’s Century-Old Black Basketball History”

  1. Mark Moore says:

    Claude great post!

    As usual you effortlessly connect the history of blackfives to the reality of today….and the part about the “Brooklyn Nets” wearing Smart Set throwback jerseys is an idea long overdue.

    As pioneers, the Smart Set obliterated several barriers including hosting interracial athletic competitions at a time when post-slavery race relations were at there worst. The legacy this club and its members left is so massive that it will take several books just to cover its first 15 years. Luckily, you will be including the Smart Set in your upcoming book, and so will I in my forthcoming book.

    Thanks for reminding everyone about the team’s importance.

    Mark Moore

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  2. Arif Khatib says:

    Claude, you continue to amaze me and I’m sure others with your ability to discover and share our history. You’re the greatest!

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  3. Claude! This article is bananas. The Gravediggers? That was also the name of Rza’s 2nd group after he established Wu-tang. Crazy! The Brooklyn Gravediggers w. point guard Deron Williams dishing, hahahahha. will post this article on http://www.facebook.com/doinitinthepark now. Good lookin’ for sharing the knowledge :)

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  4. Rob Ruck says:

    Claude,

    Nothing but net on this post. But it begs the question, when are you going to finish your book on the early history of the black game? Seize the time, Rob

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    • Claude says:

      Rob,

      That’s what I am doing right now, day and night! Someone told me to do it right, rather than rush and deliver something less than what I wanted. On the other hand, now is the time, you are correct.

      Congrats on your new book, and I’m sorry I couldn’t make it to its unveiling at the Pitt Student Union the other day!

      And thanks for your encouragement!

      Until soon,
      Claude

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  5. Eric Jackson says:

    Love the article but some of the information about early jazz is incorrect. Sidney Bechet was a clarinetist when he traveled to London with Will Marion Cook. He found and bought a soprano saxophone in a pawn shop there making him one of the first saxophonist in jazz. Will Marion Cook’s band may have been one of the first black jazz bands to play in Europe but Frank Johnson took an ensemble to play there 70 years earlier. Author Eileen Southern says that Johnson was the first to take an ensemble abroad to perform in Europe, black or white! That was in 1837. Elizabeth Taylor Greenfield, known as the Black Swan, is said to have performed for the Queen in London in 1853 although I don’t know where that performance took place.

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    • Claude says:

      Excellent info, Eric.

      My point about the Southern Syncopated Orchestra was to say that they were the first black jazz orchestra, even though I didn’t specifically their jazz music because it was in the context of describing Bechet, one of the most important of early jazz soloists. Bechet was indeed a legendary cornet player (according to jazz historian John Chilton), however I understand your point that he wasn’t necessarily playing the cornet during his visit to Europe with Cook.

      Thanks for your clarification! :-)

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  6. carl campbell says:

    claude –i knew of the smart set /black fives web site–just to let let jay-z my grandfather was a coachman in washington,dc i might not be a icon as jay-z but i am am black and proud..i playrd against some brooklyn!s best basketball players/ran track against some best trackman from brooklyn also –carl campbell

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    • Claude says:

      Thank you Carl! I had a great meeting with Carl Green the other day, thanks to author Mark Johnson. There is so much history to tell … all of this is just the tip of the iceberg! :-)

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  7. carl campbell says:

    claude just to let you jay-z has a great band –i wish him well—i wonder what will happen when his wonderful has the baby–singer runner basketball player or statesman—women or man for all seasons—i remain as always your brother..cc

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  8. Jaz says:

    Thanks for that article! It was extremely interesting; I shared it with a few friends. I agree, if Jay-Z wants to take it back to representing Brooklyn, he can make a monumental move by making history present. I actually like Smart-Set better, got a bit more “swag” to it. The article was well written; great history, way to make a point. Thanks again.

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  9. jim maloney says:

    As in all things professional sports …money talks….Barclays just paid 400 million for naming rights…that smart set jersey on your website is the same color that the Barclays logo is written on….there is a synergy there, a marketing angle there, and a way to touch history all in one. I thought that was true the moment I saw the jersey. Proud Brooklynite…soon to be Brooklyn Nets fan….and if you cant jump you better be able to go left!!

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    • Claude says:

      Jim, way to go with connecting the dots! I had no clue about the Barclay logo. Good call. It should be noted that our company, Black Fives, Inc., owns the trademark rights to the Smart Set Athletic Club name and logo, which puts us into what some consider to be a tricky position. On the one hand, for us it’s always been the case that the history is the driving force behind what we do — it is compelling and inspiring — while the merchandise has always been a tool to help make that history more relevant with fans. I hope that these two forces always help build on each other, but the day it ever becomes only about the business side of it will be the day our original mission gets lost, so it is always going to be about the meaningfulness of the history first.

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  10. Charles Shabazz says:

    Claude,
    Excellent post! However, I differ with your suggestion. I believe that they should continue with the Brooklyn Nets, but I do believe that both the Nets and the Knicks should give honorable recognition to Smart Set and the Rens, respectively, by hanging banners from the ceilings of Barclay Center and MSG and have the those teams wear the throwback uniforms of those teams.

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