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The Smart Set Athletic Club®

(aka The Grave Diggers )
Brooklyn, New York City

 
Smart Set logo

The Smart Set Athletic Club of Brooklyn was founded in 1905 and is credited with assembling the first formally organized and independent all-black basketball team, which debuted in 1907. Later that year the team helped found the Olympian Athletic League, along with the St. Christopher Club, the Alpha Physical Culture Club, and the Marathon Athletic Club of Manhattan.

Smart Set members came from a tight knit clique of well-educated, affluent, "old-money" African Americans who resided in what was then the predominantly white Stuyvesant Heights section of Brooklyn. Brooklyn’s prominent blacks worshiped at St. Augustine’s Protestant Episcopal Church, a large Negro congregation whose windows overlooked Fort Green Park.

According to census records, the only other Negro residents on the blocks where most Smart Set members lived were servants.  Nevertheless, the Smart Set Athletic Club was a powerful uniting force in the overall African American community of greater New York City.

Alpha photo collage

These players weren't just prima donnas - their complete dominance of other black basketball teams earned them the nickname "The Grave Diggers." The Smart Set Athletic Club won the Olympian Athletic League championship title during its only two seasons, and they also won the first two Colored Basketball World Championships, for 1907-08 and 1908-09.

The Smart Set featured a talented lineup included Hudson "Huddy" Oliver, who later played for the championship Washington 12th Streeters and then became a prominent surgeon, Charles Scottron, a grandson of famous Negro inventor Samuel Scottron who later played for the New York All Stars, Ferdinand Accooe, who also later played for the All Stars, and Edwin "Teddy" Horne, later the father of world famous entertainer Lena Horne.

The Smart Set basketball team played its home games at the Fourteenth Regiment Armory in Brooklyn.  This venue was so large that the club could stage other sports, including track and field and tennis teams, at the same time in events that were billed as "athletic carnivals." And by featuring popular music played by the Excelsior Brass Band or the J. Nimrod Jones Orchestra, these carnivals were huge social affairs that became larger-than-life. “Never in the history of Brooklyn,” the New York Age exclaimed, “has such a galaxy of colored persons assembled under one roof.”

Smart Set events were open to all and attended by everyone. "The successful manner in which the program was conducted, the interest shown by the onlookers, as well as the high character of the events argue well for big meets between colored athletic clubs in and about Greater New York in the future," the Age continued.  "There is no doubt that the public will loyally support athletics when conducted under the proper auspices."

Sports promoter J. Hoffman Woods was the club’s president and general manager, and 17-year-old George W. Lattimore was his assistant manager. The group’s mentor was the famous black inventor and businessman Samuel Scottron, the patriarch of one of the first colored families in Brooklyn.  The Scottrons didn’t wait for events to happen – they created them.  “The Negro has advanced rapidly and seemingly beyond all comparison,” Scottron once explained, “but it remains for him to show that he is contributing to the force that moves things!”

Like many Black Fives Era men's basketball teams, the Smart Set Athletic Club had a sister team called the Spartan Girls. The Spartan Girls were one of America's first all-black women's basketball teams.

The Smart Set Athletic Club is a great example of how a small group of people can come together as pioneers to create a new reality in the face of adversity and obstacles, despite having no mentors, no roadmap, and no guidelines other than their unyielding passion and commitment to a definite major purpose -- to create camaraderie and inspire new standards of social achievement through exercise and sports. They also had a definite plan to go with their purpose, which allowed their sizeable financial success that in turn enabled the Smart Set Athletic Club to make a significant difference in their community.