[James Coller]

All or None Comment Count

Seth May 25th, 2021 at 12:35 PM

In 1946, Penn State was scheduled to play the University of Miami, which like most Southern teams of the time still refused to play integrated Northern teams unless they sat their Black players. At the time Penn State had two, and of them only Wally Triplett was a regular. By a team vote, PSU canceled the 1946 Miami game, an act that Triplett credits for the origins of its great 1947 campaign, when Penn State swept its regular season opponents and earned an invite to the Cotton Bowl.

The Cotton was one of four bowl games in existence, and one of three, the Rose excepted, with standing rules against Black players participating. Responding to rumors that administrators were talking to SMU about sitting Triplett, PSU captain Steve Suhey told the press “We play all or none, there will be no meetings.” Triplett played, and scored the game-tying touchdown. Though the school’s claim that this event and the “We Are…” cheer are connected is completely apocryphal, the moment is a special point of pride for the Nittany Lions.

Michigan could have had that moment a dozen years earlier, when Georgia Tech came to Ann Arbor in 1934, and over vocal opposition from campus protestors and the greater Michigan community, Fielding Yost agreed to sit star end Willis Ward. The details of this event have been covered many times, first as dug up by Dr. John Behee in his first book Hail to the Victors! Black Athletes at the University of Michigan (1974), then in the Black and Blue documentary based on his findings, and most recently and thoroughly by the President’s Advisory Committee Report on the Fielding H. Yost Name on the Yost Ice Arena Historical Analysis.

Yesterday this committee tasked with looking at whether Michigan should rename its buildings issued its unanimous recommendation to President Schlissel that Fielding Yost’s name should be removed from Yost Ice Arena. The report is 36 pages, and informs the committee’s six-page unanimous recommendation.

As someone who talks Yost history often, most recently in an interview on the history of the Big House that aired on student television, I hope to provide some context on the committee’s findings. I will refrain from adding my opinion on the building’s name until the end because next to the facts and the opinions of those more directly affected I don’t believe my feelings, colored as they are by my history of covering Yost, should carry much weight.

Committee, Report and Conclusions

The committee begins their recommendation letter with an unattributed message from a Michigan alum asking that the name be reconsidered because “In naming the Field House after Yost, the University chose to place one man's contributions to football and to athletics above the profoundly deep and negative impact he had on people of color,” and continued to do so over several opportunities to rename it.

The committee responds to this in the summary of its conclusion:

While we acknowledge that Yost had both successes and failures in his career, our historical analysis suggests to us that the benching of Ward was not an aberration but rather epitomized a long series of actions that worked against the integration of sports on campus.

The committee also lays out what it believes should be the standard for “honorific” naming of buildings, which is:

The names on our buildings constitute a “moral map” of our institution and should enshrine the values that we uphold.

By this standard they make a convincing case that Yost’s actions in the Willis Ward affair did not represent core values of the University of Michigan as they were formally stated in Yost’s time, or as they are instituted in practice today.

The committee was created in 2017 as the active arm of the university’s new review process for renaming buildings, and President Schlissel followed its first two recommendations, removing the names of noted eugenicist CC Little and crank scientist Alexander Winchell. In the future the same committee will likely be tasked with a recommendation on the honorific naming of Schembechler Hall, and the financial naming gift of the Weiser Center for Emerging Democracies.

[Hit THE JUMP]

Findings of Racism

image
Dan McGugin (far left) was a star on the first Point-a-Minute team. He would become Yost’s brother-in-law, and but for a WWI interruption, coached Vanderbilt from 1904 to his death in 1936, upholding the Vandy administration’s color line on all of his teams. George “Dad” Gregory (center) came with Yost from Stanford, and was thereafter the subject of Stanford president David Starr Jordan’s persistent and unsubstantiated claims of cheating. Stanford recently removed Jordan’s name from a building; Vanderbilt’s athletics building today is still called the McGugin Center. [team photo, courtesy UM Bentley Library]

The report describes Yost’s background as the son of a Confederate soldier (from a Union state so this was by choice), who spent time socially in the Sigma Chi Fraternity and Nashville upper society, which he married into. They paint a picture of a  patronizing “moderate” form of racism, one which was tolerant of segregation but not the violence that enforced it, as was the norm in these circles. There are few signs that Yost ever deviated from this norm.

Most of the report focuses on the Willis Ward scandal in 1934, when Yost not only chose to accede to Georgia Tech’s racist request to sit his star Black end, but hired Pinkertons to report on the leaders of the campus movement to play Ward or cancel the game. Prepare to cringe at Yost’s Michigamua nickname as well as the all-too-familiar behavior of the campus anti-anti-racism movement:

This disruptive group included athletes and fraternity members, but its core were the members of Michigamua, the supposedly secret senior honors society. The group had a very close relationship with both Kipke and Yost, the latter of whom was known as the “Big Scalper.” It is almost certain that the group had been asked to disrupt the meeting, by either Yost, Kipke, or both; in a 1942 alumni questionnaire a former Michigamua member recalling the event asked that the interviewer include “a good plug for Kipke who was behind us.”

If you consider those protesting the sitting of Ward were squarely on the side of history, Yost’s characterization of the student protestors leaves little doubt which side he was on:

In a letter to his brother-in-law Dan McGugin a few days after the game, Yost gave a literary sigh of relief that there had been no disruptions by “the colored organization and local radical students,” commenting that “the colored race must be in a bad situation judging from the number of national organizations that are organized to insure [sic.] racial equality or no racial discrimination.”

In December, Yost wrote to Georgia Tech’s coach, to “express to you personally my great appreciation of your assistance in handling what turned out to be a very difficult problem. I never dreamed there would be so much agitation about the matter.” In neither letter did Yost reveal any interest in second-guessing events, his role in them, or their impact on Ward.

And Willis Ward’s own words on the effect of the incident on himself and his team are excruciating to read:

That impact was devastating. As Ward himself later put it: “It was wrong and it will always be wrong. And it killed my desire to excel.” The same malaise struck the entire football team. Already a weak team that had lost the two games before the one against Georgia Tech, they lost every other game of the season—with Ward scoring Michigan’s only points, a touchdown and two field goals, in the remaining five games.

Ward also lost his competitive drive for competing in track, stating later that he did so out of a belief based on his brush with Jim Crow in Ann Arbor that if Hitler asked the U.S. to leave Black athletes off the 1936 Olympic team, they would. As he summarized in a 1983 interview, the Georgia Tech game “killed my desire. I said, well, I will go through the motions and play this season and get my degree and go about my business and try to get a law degree and practice law.”

There is no doubt that Yost’s actions regarding the sitting of Willis Ward were racist.

The report notes concerns held by Ward about attending the university because of stories of racial prejudice in Ann Arbor. The report demonstrates Ward’s (and really his father’s) apprehensions were well-founded, with ample evidence of racism in the actions of the university administrators Yost worked with and around, notably regarding on-campus housing, which was generating controversy for the school at the time of the Ward incident. They also found other Michigan sports when Yost was the football coach but not yet an administrator (and thus out of town 9 months out of the year) had similar or worse records of integration.

I can add from my research on Ann Arbor that several off-campus establishments of this era were particularly notorious for “unofficial” racial segregation. While anti-racism found its voice in a flourishing new campus left in the 1920s and 1930s, a large proportion of mainstream culture at the University of Michigan in that time did not differ significantly from the portrayal of Yost in this report.

Evidence that Yost’s actions “epitomized a long series of actions that worked against the integration of sports” in the report is sometimes contradictory.

Certainly the lack of any Black varsity football players from 1901-1931 (though teams were much smaller in that time) is the strongest evidence that Yost’s arrival “disrupted Michigan’s participation in the slow process by which racial integration in football was occurring.” George Jewett was the first Black player at Michigan or any other Big Ten team, but when he transferred to Northwestern in 1893 he became the last at Michigan until actions by well-meaning Michigan alumni convinced Ward to join the team.

The report notes that the lack of Black athletes on the football squad was remarked by the African American press, and that Yost’s color line, even if it wasn’t explicit, was known to the African American community, as this example from 1932 (regarding Willis Ward playing for Harry Kipke) suggests:

In 1932, when Ward made Varsity it was reported by Black newspapers “that it was the contention of many that former Coach Yost was prejudiced against the colored player” and that when he first arrived in Ann Arbor he was “alleged to have decreed…that no colored student would ever earn a varsity letter” in football.”

The report did not include one more quote I have to this effect, from former Michigan tennis player Dan Kean, a senior in 1934, who later said “If you want to know what it is was like then I’d have to say black students were AT the University but not OF it.” While evidence for a policy of exclusion was (by design) scant, Yost and Michigan had a reputation; the result of this reputation was Black athletes did not think to come to Michigan.

Yost certainly didn’t step in when basketball coach Frank Cappon refused to let Black athlete Franklin Lett try out for the basketball team. The report includes more incidents when Yost missed an opportunity to stand for justice. There’s a reference to “a simple, Anglo-Saxon desire for clean, energetic sport” by Yost’s ghostwriter in 1905 that he allowed to stand.

The report also notes Yost spoke at the Third Race Betterment Conference, organized by then-Michigan president CC Little. Yost’s words, other than a reference to the conference’s own racist title, were mostly innocuous and in line with his “athletics for all” mantra. But Yost was hardly unused to standing up to Michigan’s presidents when it came to support for athletics, and could have done so here.

The report quotes Yost’s second (there were three) successor as football coach, Tad Wieman, with this particularly noxious example of “Nobody Short of Jackie Robinson” syndrome:

There were certain complications that would be difficult for all with a colored man on the squad; that because of this I did not think it advisable for a colored man to be on the squad unless he was good enough to play a good part of the time. In other words, unless he were a regular or near regular, the handicaps to the squad would be greater than the advantages to say nothing of the difficulties that would encounter the individual himself. I assured him, however, that any man who could demonstrate that he was the best man for any position would have the right to play in that position.

There are also instances in the report when Yost’s actions showed, at least outwardly, that he was at least changing with the times. Regarding the most evident one—that Yost had no Black varsity players on his football teams for 30 years—this exchange with the African American press was interesting:

However, the lack of African Americans who played on Michigan’s Varsity football team began to be noticed in the African American press. In 1922 (the year before the Field House was named for Yost) two articles appeared discussing race in the athletic department. The first appeared in February in the Chicago Defender, which had national syndication, regarding rumors about a “color line” in sports at Michigan. The article quoted a letter from Yost to Oscar Baker, the Black alumnus and lawyer in Bay City who would later help African American students with their housing issues, stating “very positively” that “a Colored student athlete stands on the same footing as regards athletics as anyone else in the university.” Yost claimed that he “would not consider a coach worthy of the name who did not feel that the best men qualified to make up the various teams should have a place.” Both Baker and the article accepted Yost’s statements, commenting, “if the student body has Southern traditions, the same does not affect the athletic department.” A month later, the Cleveland Gazette published an article about Black Ohioan DeHart Hubbard who had just enrolled at Michigan. In it, Yost approvingly described Hubbard “as a boy they were pleased to have at Michigan and stated he intended to see that he got a square deal.”

The report found Yost supported a “Law and Order League” in Nashville whose purpose was to prevent lynching, and they found other Black athletes who participated in football despite not making varsity, undermining the link between Yost’s views and Tad Wieman’s remarks. They found Yost, upon becoming athletic director, cooperated in the recruitment of Black track star William DeHart Hubbard, citing Behee’s characterization of this as motivated by competitiveness. And they found public support (one time) for an organization that helped local Black families, and an antipathy for anti-Semitism and support for Jewish athletes that was somewhat remarkable for his time and place.

Errors, Omissions, and Criticism of the Report

For the most part, the 36-page report is a fair and comprehensive account of the consensus historical knowledge of Yost’s record on race. But there are a few significant problems with it, and I also have some questions about their conclusions.

The report makes numerous references to works by Dr. Tyran Steward, a former UM lecturer (and Ohio State Ph.D.) working on a book about Willis Ward, but does not mention another famous Yost incident from Steward’s research that conflicts with portrayal of Yost, this from 1932:

Although Big Blue relied on the Palmer House Hotel for lodging through the years, the hotel’s management was unreceptive to the requests made by Kipke for Ward to stay there. When they declined to alter their policy, “Yost flip-flopped from being a segregationist.” Ward remembered Yost saying, “Well, we have been staying at this hotel since 1900. We will pull every team that we have and not stay. . . . And I am going to see if I can’t get other Big Ten schools to also not stay at your hotel.” Officials at the Palmer House Hotel relented.

Most of our modern discussion of the Willis Ward incident, in fact, draws heavily on the research and conclusions of Behee in his first book. Behee is a friend, his recent book Coach Yost: Michigan’s Tradition Maker comes recommended by myself and Craig Ross on this site, and Behee has contributed an article on Yost for our Hail to the Victors 2021 magazine this summer. He was not contacted by the commission. Other experienced historians like Dr. Steward, John U. Bacon, and John Kryk who have written books about Yost, can give you a stronger answer than I can, and probably could have done better than the report. So could Greg Kinney and Brian Williams at the Bentley Library. Greg Dooley, the program’s historian in chief, was not even referenced in the report.

The report explicitly drew from familiar works of these historians, though to my knowledge none of them were informed their writings were being used for this purpose, nor that the committee was considering removing Yost’s name from the hockey arena. I believe the committee erred in not seeking feedback from these experts before publishing their recommendation, as this can be interpreted as disinterest in interpretations that do not fit the committee’s conclusions.

I also found one important note was misrepresented in a way that may have played a role in the conclusion. On Page 26 the authors write:

There was some precedent for that hope. McGugin had told Yost how when Ohio State played against the segregated Naval Academy, a Black player, William Bell, was not permitted to play against the Midshipmen in Annapolis, but was allowed to play the following year in Columbus. The Vanderbilt coach had also claimed that he had been willing “not to make any particular point [about playing against Bell] as we were going to their field” in 1931, but he had been overruled by Vanderbilt’s Board of Trustees.

While Ohio State did allow “Big Bill” Bell to play in the return game against Navy in 1931, they only did so because the Naval Academy, under its new head coach Edgar Miller, changed its policy in the interim, a fact that McGugin explained in his letter to Yost (see Benching Jim Crow: The Rise and Fall of the Color Line in Southern College Sports, 1890-1980, by Charles H. Martin). Ohio State benched Bell in the 1931 Vanderbilt game prior to the second Navy title, and in all three of those games deferred to the visitors’ requests. By 1934, Ohio State had hired a new coach who reinstated the color barrier for the rest of the decade, refusing to even let Jesse Owens try out of for the football team (their administration wouldn’t let Owens live on campus either). Yost’s diffident approach in the leadup to the Georgia Tech game was probably seen by him as a softening of OSU’s example.

This is part of a greater failure in the report to contextualize Michigan’s racist performance under Yost against norms for similar schools of the day. I believe this failure is mostly due to a lack of information, not willful ignorance. The report makes reference to only three other studies, two by Ivy League university presses and one by Stanford. The latter (the link in Michigan’s report is broken—the report can be found here), ironically concerns Stanford’s founding president, David Starr Jordan, who in addition to being a leading eugenicist was Yost’s greatest contemporary critic. Michigan knows much more about its racist past in the early 20th Century because we have authors who’ve studied it; few other schools have partisans so willing to look under the hood.

One line of evidence they did not follow but could have used to enlighten Yost’s racial attitudes was his relationship with other important figures at the university in his time. Yost was close with his immediate predecessor Philip Bartelme, his former player and team manager, and athletic director from 1908-1921. Yost was also often in contact with 1910-1913 baseball coach Branch Rickey; Yost trusted him enough to hire Del Pratt and then Ray Fisher on Rickey’s recommendations. Bartelme left Michigan to join his good friend Rickey in Major League Baseball, where Bartelme scouted and Rickey signed Jackie Robinson. It’s a fact that Michigan had no Black baseball players from 1883 to 1923, at which point Yost supported Rudy Ash’s joining the team, under Fisher. Yost’s close association with two men involved in the most famous desegregation moment in sports history is worth at least exploring, especially since their own records at Michigan are hardly better than Yost’s.

There’s little doubt Yost had the power and opportunity in 1934 to support Willis Ward had he chosen, or that some actions by Kipke and associates could be interpreted as carrying out Yost’s will. The report claims Yost was “disappointingly enabled by” 1929-1951 president Alexander Ruthven and members of the Board of Control, though concludes that “our research convinces us that he must bear the responsibility for the actions described in this report.” It is interesting that contemporaries who sought to change Yost’s “cowardly plan” addressed themselves to Ruthven. This could have been because they saw Ruthven as more receptive to their pleas, but could also indicate a balance of power. I also find it interesting that Yost’s most progressive acts (and indeed his hiring as athletic director) took place during the 1920-1925 tenure of President Marion Burton, who was by accounts Yost’s only true ally and friend among the presidents he served under. A more thorough understanding of Yost and other power figures’ relationships and spheres of influence might allay doubts as to which figure bears the brunt of responsibility.

I did not think the evidence in the report supported one of the conclusions, that Yost “endorsed the view that football was an Anglo Saxon sport at a time when that identification carried powerful racial messages.” It’s certainly easy to point at the 1905 book and say “It’s got his name on it.” However the footnote in the report is correct in that consensus historical opinion holds Yost was unlikely to have contributed that line:

Yost was listed as the author on the book’s cover, but the text likely came from Charles Van Keuren, a Michigan alumnus who sought to capitalize on Yost’s fame to boost sales. Per their arrangement, Yost would supply the copy, play diagrams, and team photographs, while Van Keuren supplied the text. Thus, who penned those words is unknown, but Yost clearly did not strongly object to them.

The report also misses some important context by ending its story with Yost, which was absolutely not the end of racism in Michigan’s football program or athletic administration. Fourteen years after the Willis Ward affair, the fall after the Cotton Bowl and SMU quietly backed down after a Penn State player said “all or none,” Gene Derricotte was the only non-white player on Bennie Oosterbaan's 1948 "Mad Magicians" team, which repeated as national champions. A decade later the roster had expanded considerably, but Michigan still only had three Black players on it. Behee’s book has direct evidence that after “integration” Michigan participated in an unofficial quota system that kept Black participation to just one player per class until 1968, an effect you can literally see in the 1969 team photo:

image

I don’t think more examples of racism in Michigan Athletics in any way exonerates Fielding Yost for his actions. To the contrary I think these examples underline the severity of it, and how deeply rooted, though quiet, these practices were, and therefore how righteous and necessary the campus activism of Black students and their allies was to effect change.

My Interpretation

image

Michigan named the rink for Red in 2017. [Bill Rapai]

I speak here for myself, not for MGoBlog or anyone else who works here. I’ve studied a lot of Michigan history from before, during, and long after Yost, and from that I can say with some authority that racism at Michigan neither began nor ended nor changed much on account of Yost.

The Crisler era that followed was marred by unofficial quotas to keep Black players to a minimum. Schembechler made it clear to his players they were to stay away from the successor movements of the social justice activists of Yost’s time. When I was at Michigan in the early 2000s and the school’s admissions policies were national legal news, the College Republicans were given permission to set up in Angell Hall selling “Affirmative Action Bagels” that were $1.00 for white customers and 10 cents for Black students. I doubt any Black student in the history of the school has ever made it through their scholastic career without at least some racist incident on campus. Racism at Michigan isn’t some nebulous problem of the past. It’s our reality today.

How does it happen? Read the report. It’s a culture, a cancer, and nothing would have changed if there hadn’t been people who cared more about justice than whether “polite” society gets smacked in the face.

As for Yost’s culpability, of course he knew he was wrong; why else would this man who loved the limelight suddenly shirk it? Why else would the most competitive man of his era sit one of his best players, or a coach whose entire style was about building up confidence undermine his team? That this was not unusual for a man of his times who mostly changed with his times does not dismiss his failure. He no doubt failed to meet the moment when Michigan played Georgia Tech in 1934, and his subsequent actions to defend his decision rightfully earn him censure by future generations. This was the definition of an “I don’t see what the big deal is”-style racism that allowed that culture to flourish then and survive today. Placing the blame for the effects of one’s moral cowardice on “radicals” and “agitators” had miserable precedents then and more today.

Yost’s upholding of the “gentleman’s agreement” is evidenced enough in the makeup of his teams. If we all take away nothing else from this report, I want us all to understand this is how racism works. It’s not the things that are said aloud, because the whole point is not to have to say anything. Black athletes knew not to play for Michigan under Fielding Yost. When one man finally did, his worst suspicions were confirmed. Yost made racist decisions, and I’ve had no problem saying so when I talk about his contributions to Michigan athletics. I do not find him in any way remarkable in this regard from other athletic directors of his era, and I have no problem with calling out the lot of them if it helps us move past the decision cycle.

I find attempts to place one man on this curve, with “Okay, you can keep your name on your building” at some undefined point along it, to be a shallow exercise for people who want easy labels. The whole society was racist, but inside of that you had some people trying to change things for the betterment of us all. It’s better that we named the renovated room in the student Union after Willis Ward, and that Michigan and Northwestern are choosing to honor George Jewett. Whatever you do with Yost Ice Arena, find something to honor Joseph Feldman, William Fisch, and Danny Cohen, the names of student ringleaders Yost’s Pinkertons gave to President Ruthven, and who were quietly dismissed in July 1935. Without those three the next administrator faced with this question would not have feared a backlash, as Yost didn’t after the example of Ohio State. Whatever they do with Crisler for the quota system, I think we need to honor the few guys who did come: Guy Curtis, David Raimey, Bennie McRae, Jim Pace, Bob Marion, Lowell Perry, Gene Derricotte, and more who had to be greater than great, and carry the reputation of millions with their own.

I believe Willis Ward that Yost’s decision ruined him and the team, as I believe Triplett that his teammates’ support motivated their great 1947 run. I believe that this extends to the Michigan community and greater society, which becomes energized when we stick up for each other, and demoralized when we don’t.

I personally don’t have much care for what a building is named. I have great memories in Yost Ice Arena, and they won’t be affected if it’s renamed Berenson Ice Arena, because most of those experiences were thanks to Red’s teams. If years from now history shows Berenson failed in his moment, they can change it to Hughes Arena to honor the 30 first rounders that family sent here.

I find most conversation around honorifics either obvious or boring, and this one falls in the latter camp. C.C. Little got a building because they noticed all but two presidents—Little and Ruthven—weren’t going to have buildings so they found a pair. Winchell got a house because they needed nine former professors with long tenures. You spent more time reading this than the people who named those spent on their subjects. It’s an easy call.

Yost Ice Arena is not. It’s a balance. The Field House was named after him because he invented the concept, and the name was bestowed after another contentious fight between the faculty who found Yost’s zeal for athletic competition distasteful, and the regents and alumni who were all about the football. His association with hockey is equally earned; Yost raised the hockey program to varsity status in late 1922, and in 1928 he purchased the Weinberg Coliseum they’d been renting, renovated it, and filled it with artificial ice, just before the Depression hit and ended all the building projects. His impact on campus was such that I could make a similar case for almost any sport, and his impact on women's athletics at Michigan is second only to the passage of Title IX.

His impact on Black athletes and would-be athletes who never got a chance to play at Michigan may not have differed from an average man of his time, but it was manifest. When nearing the end of his career he had a chance to demonstrate his growth, Yost chose to duck. That is now as much a part of his legacy as the buildings.

I believe the racial issues at Michigan in Yost’s time were systemic, and while it’s fair to hold one man accountable for his role in that system, wiping his name from the building is a performative gesture, not a remedy. More than a name, I think there should be a bronze placard outside the arena, telling the Willis Ward story where people waiting for their friends will read it because it’s too cold to hold a phone in your face.

I’m less thrilled about the standard that “The names on our buildings constitute a ‘moral map’ of our institution.” I think this runs the risk of making honorees two-dimensional, and will lead to more icky donor names that are harder to correct. History is not a moral map. It shows us where we’ve been, what choices led to darker paths, what perils might lie along the way, and how we’ve corrected mistakes.

More than anything I think that the 36-page report produced by the advisory committee is something every Michigan fan should read, especially if you choose to comment on this after. More important by far than the measure of one long-dead man is that we gain a better awareness of how regular living men and women contribute to racism at the University of Michigan, and how being a part of this society has soaked the stench of it into all of us. If you’re pointing to one guy and saying “He’s a racist (and because I’m pointing I’m not),” you’re missing the point.

I think the story of Willis Ward, and the context it happened in, are relevant today. I think his heroic choice to rebreak Michigan’s color barrier should be celebrated, that the efforts of his recruiters should be recognized, that people should know if not for Harry Kipke those recruiters probably wouldn’t have even tried. I think we should honor the heroic voices of activists of the past, and that the righteousness of the causes they agitated for are instructive in how we regulate our annoyance at their successors’ insistence we face our facts. I think knowing the particular way a man like Fielding Yost failed will help us find our voice when it’s our moment.

Comments

markusr2007

May 25th, 2021 at 3:44 PM ^

I think renaming Yost Arena is the right thing to do.

I'm reminded that there was this TV program several years ago hosted by John Quiñones called "What Would You Do?"  Many clips of it on Youtube.  

An assortment of them include actors being overtly racist toward multi-racial couples or to a black customer in public settings like restaurants, schools, etc.  The reactions of the randomly filmed bystanders include a broad spectrum of people just watching and listening but doing nothing, being visibly upset but still saying nothing, to ignoring the events and minding their own business, to getting extremely emotional and even verbally or physically intervening. 

When John Quiñones then enters the scene, and the bystanders finally realize it was a portrayal and not real, some of them reflect on and admit their feelings of shame, others apologize to the actors for getting so upset, or for not doing enough. Some relay how personal the events were to them from a prior traumatic experience. 

For the most cynical among us, that stupid ABC TV program confirmed just how tolerant of open injustice we humans can still be even today, but also how defiant of injustice we are also capable. 

This whole re-assessment of historical figures, their words and actions, orfailure to act, in the context of racism reveals a lot about ourselves and the choices we made in the past and every day today. 

I mean, if you were Fielding Yost, and the Georgia Tech football coach and GT Board of Trustees are feeding you this request pre-game, "What Would You Do?" 

I'd like to think I'd tell them all to "Go play a game of hide a go eff yourselves!"  I imagine everyone might say a similar, albeit more cultured derivative.

Reality is most racism then and today has not changed one iota.  Comedian Bill Burr joked in one of his sets that real racism is quiet, indirect and "subtle", not the belligerent, gross, overt, knuckle-dragging caricature.   The audience laughed loud at that Bill Burr joke because of the truth about our collective lack of honesty - the chasm between what we will say versus what we actually do.

For Ward and others, one minute people are being friendly, welcoming, warm and kind to your face, but later on, in private they are trashing you, undermining you with words, policy and other actions. 

Personally I am under no illusion anymore that America, or any other countries I've lived and worked in, are EVER going to rid themselves of our racist, tribalistic human nature and bigotry.  Our collective track record for this is just too shitty for words, despite all we have supposedly learned and corrected. And that's depressing AF.    

As for the report, the committee had a desired outcome already in their skulls from the outset, and they intentionally or carelessly or indifferently, selected or left out important content and context in order to support their own desired result. They neglected to consult other experts too. I'm not surprised by this. Even in the most progressive zeal to right such wrongs, we still don't want something black and white to be converted or relegated to an actual gray. What good is that?   

No report is perfect, but if we're really going to decide to keep doing this, re-inspecting the historic record and chain of events and then make selected deductions, attribute quotes, attitudes and sentiments - entire or in part - to people long rotting in their graves, then perhaps it's high-time we re-commit ourselves to more thorough research, a more comprehensive study of the actual content and context of the historical record available to us, and get input from multiple historical experts who actually know what they're talking about with no agenda or outcome in mind. I don't think that was done in this case, and I feel that's unfortunate given what these committees are attempting to do. 

 

SalvatoreQuattro

May 25th, 2021 at 6:35 PM ^

Humanity is inherently a violent, cruel, and unjust creature. Racism being one of many manifestations of the dark side of the human character.

It’s unfortunate that in the age of information so many refuse to acknowledge that the issues we face today have been with us since we emerged as a species. Humans still refuse to reckon with the past.

cazzie

May 25th, 2021 at 4:03 PM ^

Rename it WARD. And tell the story of Yost on a plaque or video or hologram or something. While our history is unchangeable, our values do evolve. Building names may change to keep up, without denying our history. 

racism is always vile, evil. In Yost’s day you didn’t have to be an especially vile person to be a racist. Today you do. That’s the difference. 

YakAttack

May 25th, 2021 at 4:06 PM ^

MGoHOF worthy post, Seth. While nobody's past in athletics is without skeletons, I'm glad a light is shining on the past transgressions of a program that claim to be the "Leaders and Best."

Eschstreetalum

May 25th, 2021 at 4:15 PM ^

I hate naming buildings after people. It seems very undemocratic to me.  How about the Ice Box? Lines up well with the Big House and carries with it the same vintage as Yost.  We could carry the theme to all the renamed buildings. Crisler arena could be The Cage.  

sharklover

May 25th, 2021 at 8:26 PM ^

Don't love the name ideas, but I agree with the spirit of the comment.

The football stadium is officially named, "Michigan Stadium." It's a great name. I'm glad it hasn't been changed in all these years, and that the university has seen fit to not sell sponsorship rights. The Big House is not the official name, but it's a great nickname.

The basketball arena should be named, "Michigan Arena" or "Michigan Center." It already has a nickname: the house that Cazzie built, after the great, Cazzie Russell, who singlehandedly brought the Michigan Basketball program to prominence in the 1960s. 

The hockey facility should be named, "Michigan Field House" or "Michigan Ice Arena." 

 

Edit: forgot the word house

grumbler

May 26th, 2021 at 7:19 PM ^

Michigan Stadium isn't named The Big House, that's just a (Keith Jackson?) nickname that caught on.

"Michigan Ice Arena" is the proper name for the place, and then nicknames will spring up because the actual name is kinda banal.  Ditto for "Michigan Arena" and so forth.  Let the men (and women) be remembered for their deeds, not their buildings.

Hail to the Vi…

May 25th, 2021 at 4:26 PM ^

Great read, and very well written article Seth. Just my two cents (I agree with your sentiment, the point is to understand the report and history of Yost, moreso than express any singular person's opinion on what should happen to the name on a building), while I think you are correct in stating any name changes to buildings/statues are by-and-large honorific, I also think there is some good that can come of that for today's current coaches and administrators as they have to determine how to conduct themselves in the face of decisions related to social justice and equality.

I think this sends a message to the administrators and leaders of the university, both in the AD and in other places, that discrimination and inequality will not be tolerated at the university. Anyone in a leadership position at the University aware enough to reflect on the reckoning of the Yost and Schembechler legacies should begin to consider how they would react in moments that may require moral integrity and ask themselves how history would respond to their actions under the microscope of social justice/equality. 

While certainly there is nothing to be done to change history, and renaming a building does not reconcile the injustices people have been subjected to by University officials, it hopefully provides pause and context to today's leaders about how the University will view behaviors that lead to injustice. So to me, I think it is appropriate to remove Yost and Schembechler's name from administrative buildings. It's certainly ceremonial, but I do think that ceremony can influence people to really consider and think about how they hold themselves accountable to their own integrity in today's world.

tubauberalles

May 25th, 2021 at 9:30 PM ^

I appreciate this comment and think it aligns with my reaction to the report, Seth's post and the discussion about removing Yost's name from the building. Which is less to do with trying to right historical wrongs and more about what it signals about the University's and the greater UM community's commitment to racial justice today.  

What does it say to current and prospective students if the university decides that despite what we know today and what our commitments now are to ending systemic racism, we just feel like keeping Yost's name up there? When faced with the opportunity to reconsider honoring a man with a mixed legacy, the University chooses to let inertia and "tradition" (a phrase often used to enable racist status quo) guide their thinking?  

I don't think that can now happen.

hammermw

May 25th, 2021 at 4:28 PM ^

Thanks for writing this. One of the best things I've read in a while. Many of these issues have nuance and aren't black and white. It has become very difficult to have nuanced conversations in such a polarized society. I think you've done that here.

kehnonymous

May 25th, 2021 at 4:44 PM ^

Adding to the chorus of hosannas for an outstanding column.

Regarding this particular issue, I find myself mostly undecided for the same reasons as others.  You can make a non-insane case for keeping the building's name because Yost was ultimately just a guy who was a product of his time.  Or you could make a non-insane case for renaming the building because... Yost was ultimately just a guy who was a product of his time.

Regardless, if the only thing you do is rename Yost without educating the public at large as to why and the forgotten legacies of people like Jewett and Ward, then you've missed the point. 

Having said that, there is a time and place for performative gestures (even if Yost Ice Arena is not necessarily one of those.) There are people alive today who lived through the darkest moment s of the Civil Rights era, who may still flinch at seeing fire hoses on full blast or who may still limp from having their shins fractured by the billy clubs of Alabama state deputies.  You can't tell me that it was merely performative for them to see Confederate flags taken off public buildings in the cities they live in.

sharklover

May 25th, 2021 at 8:36 PM ^

I didn't exactly glean that "Yost was just a product of his time" from that article. It sounds like there were a lot of countervailing political currents in Ann Arbor in the early 20th century, and that Yost was a particularly reactionary force, who dug in his heels and resisted integration. Were there other racists and white supremacists in Ann Arbor and other parts of the United States at the time? You bet there were. But racism was neither universal or monolithic. 

I agree that there are non-insane cases that could be made either for or against keeping Yost's name. But I don't think either case would be well grounded in the story of Yost if it started and ended with: "He was a product of his time." He had an idiosyncratic moral and political philosophy that was condoned by many at the time, but not shared by all. 

kehnonymous

May 25th, 2021 at 9:39 PM ^

I appreciate your point, and my response is 'yes and no'.

It's certainly true that even in the early 20th century, there were countervailing forces in Ann Arbor that pushed for more integration and equality.  However racism was far more mainstreamed in a way that we would find inconceivable today, and striking a blow for equality would've upset a lot more apple carts then and come with a healthy cost, especially for a guy in a prestigious position who was doubtlessly influenced by a lot of good ol' boys who wanted to keep things the way they are.  I don't say that as a defense or exoneration of Fielding Yost, because he chose wrongly and was undoubtedly on the proverbial wrong side of history.  But whatever you want to call the concomitant "right side" of history, it was generally considered at the time to be profoundly radical.

As much as it makes me shudder to consider this, although we'd like to think ourselves better than that there's a possibility that myself or many others might have also failed that test depending on the circumstances of our upbringing or peer circle had we been in a similar circumstance, without the benefit of knowing what our 21st century selves know. 

Clarence Boddicker

May 25th, 2021 at 4:46 PM ^

I'd like to step back and say that this is maybe he finest piece of writing I've seen on this site and is such a thoughtful reflection on race that I would assign it to my students. Bravo, sir...

micheal honcho

May 25th, 2021 at 4:57 PM ^

"A thousand atta-boys don't make up for one OH SHIT"  

"A man's character is not determined by what he does in times of plenty, but what he does in times of want and woe"

"Character is not what you do under the light of public evaluation, but what you do when nobody is looking" 

Recalling the quotes like these, drilled into my head as a young boy, makes me say get that Character's name off from monuments and buildings. For his character was not of the quality we revere. If this leads to Goerge Washington being diminished in US history from his current status. Maybe that's what needs to be. 

SalvatoreQuattro

May 25th, 2021 at 6:12 PM ^

But without Washington there is no US.

You really can’t diminish Washington without suggesting that you regret the creation of the country. If that is the case than perhaps there should be a peaceful dissolving of the Union.

I support a national discussion about such a thing happening in time. I believe that we need to examine dissolving the Union and breaking up into multiple countries.


It’s time to talk, America.

sharklover

May 25th, 2021 at 8:43 PM ^

+1 for dissolution. Under the current system, the hands of the future are tied by the compromises of the past. I think the United States would be better off remaining as a unified nation. But the current political and electoral system has devolved to exactly the kind of factional politics that the founding fathers warned against (it really only took a few years to get to that state, anyway). American democracy is atrophied and cynical. It needs to be born anew, either as a number of smaller, truly independent states, or through a new constitutional convention.

pescadero

May 26th, 2021 at 8:27 AM ^

Published, peer reviewed, historical papers. Work in the field. Etc.

 

Everyone with a BS in History is not an "experienced historian".

 

Bacon has spent his entire career as a journalist and educator(he has an MS in Ed.) - he is not a historian.  

umich1

May 26th, 2021 at 5:08 PM ^

The guy has published 11 books, many of which have nothing to do with Michigan Athletics and are historically focused, and all of them have a list of endorsements from authoritative figures (ironically many of which refer to him as a historian).

Why would he publish his work in a history journal when he can profit as a New York Times bestseller instead?

You are picking a strange hill.

grumbler

May 26th, 2021 at 7:35 PM ^

"Published, peer reviewed, historical papers. Work in the field. Etc."

That's the definition of an "academic historian."  I'd bet non-academic historians outnumber academic historians 5-1.

Non-academic historians are, for sure, less authoritative than academic historians.  The term "popular history" was invented for their products.

kyeblue

May 26th, 2021 at 12:45 PM ^

I agree with your point that a degree in history doesn't make you historian, but I would definitely consider John Bacon as a historian.

On the other hand, a lot of historians only write history that fit the narrative of the regime that they live under at the time. 

donjohn64

May 25th, 2021 at 5:44 PM ^

I remember when Skyline High School was being named around the time of Bo Schembechler's death, some in the community suggested the school be named after Bo - a person who was generally very highly regarded in the region. Some opposed the suggestion on the off-chance that we might discover later on that he had made poor choices during his life. I specifically recall people feeling that these concerns were ridiculous. That take seems to have suddenly aged quite poorly over the past couple weeks.

I think there's a good distinction to keep in mind when discussing naming buildings after historical figures: everyone has made mistakes but not everyone has actively promoted values and beliefs that are antithetical to the foundations of a specific institution (such as U of M or Ann Arbor Public Schools).

itauditbill

May 25th, 2021 at 5:45 PM ^

Finding the perfect person is very hard. Ghandi slept naked with his 20 year old niece to prove he was above temptation:  https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-49848645

MLK Jr. had rather misogynistic beliefs: https://www.ajc.com/news/local/little-known-side-martin-luther-king-advice-columnist/PnFxY9RgDiU01gzAK8JCfO/

Also he told a gay boy should seek psychiatric help: (Same article above.)

Alexander Hamilton (much to the opposite of what was shown in the musical)  most likely owned slaves. https://www.history.com/news/alexander-hamilton-slavery-facts

I don't think we need to keep Yost's name on the Fieldhouse, but where do we stop.

Perhaps it is this; no buildings should be named after people as all people, even the best, are flawed, and become more flawed as we move forward in history. 

Hannibal.

May 25th, 2021 at 6:06 PM ^

The words “racism” and “racist” weren’t even in our lexicon 100 years ago.  And there are far more dimensions to a man’s character than has attitudes on race.  Or at least there used to be, until a small sect of fanatical devotees to the new religion of Political Correctness took over out society and declared “racism” is the one and only true sin.  Yost was a sinner, and this his work is haram.  

Westside Wolverine

May 26th, 2021 at 12:02 AM ^

The past is not compartmentalized - it impacts the present and the future. Plotting a trajectory to a more perfect union requires an understanding of where we started and where we have been. Conflict is inevitable when change occurs, it doesn't mean we should avoid it. Sacrificing progress to avoid conflict is the cry of those who wish to maintain their power.

Blueisgood

May 25th, 2021 at 6:13 PM ^

Excellent post Seth. The biggest takeaway I have from all of the past racism from the past generations is todays generation don't or haven't talked to their grandparents, great grand parents, etc. You'll be surprised on how many folks that are 80+ now have racist views.

It truly was a different time, whether people want to believe it or not.  I was surprised at some of my own family members views that are gone now. Just scanning through some of the comments on here you can see that they haven't talked to the older generation. I can only imagine what it was like in Yost's time. At this point naming a building after a person is not a great idea. You have no idea what the person may or may not have done. 

crg

May 25th, 2021 at 6:23 PM ^

People see what they want to see - often at the expense of what is easy to overlook (especially when emotions are involved).

m83econ

May 25th, 2021 at 6:24 PM ^

The title pretty much sums up my view:  Either you accept that all people have flaws (even those viewed from a perspective 3/4 of a century later) and are okay with naming things after them or just take away all the names.

Hannibal.

May 25th, 2021 at 10:54 PM ^

This is a good post to keep in mind as we observe Fielding H. Yost's name being removed from a building while "George Floyd Square" is actually a thing in Minneapolis.

A guy whose lone achievements in life were robbing a pregnant woman at gunpoint and then having a fentanyl overdose while a negligent cop knelt on his back is a hero to the same people who think that Fielding H. Yost is a pariah.  Welcome to the insane asylum that is the modern western world.

Thus, my above comment about Political Correctness as the new State Religion.  The only sins in this religion are words that end in "-ism" or "-phobia".  You could cure cancer and they will tear down your statue if they find that you did blackface at a party in high school. 

Maize4Ever

May 26th, 2021 at 1:11 PM ^

BAM!!! and the fact that people down voted you just SHOWS how out of control this PC WOKE BS CRAP has gone..George Floyd was a criminal ..lets elevate him  for being a Criminal...apparently being a criminal resisting arrest and attacking police is cool with all these that down voted you...