Title: Olympic Pride, American Prejudice: The Untold Story of 18 African Americans Who
Defied Jim Crow and Adolph Hitler to Compete in the 1936 Berlin Olympics
Author:
Deborah Riley Draper and Travis Thrasher
Read
by: Leon Nixon
Publisher:
Simon & Schuster Audio
Length:
Approximately 9 hours and 8 minutes
Source:
Review Copy from Simon & Schuster Audio.
Thank-you!
I
was fascinated by the audiobook Olympic Pride, American Prejudice. It is the story of the eighteen African
Americans who made the 1936 Olympic team and traveled to Berlin. Like many, the only African American from the
1936 Olympic team that I had heard of was Jesse Owens. This book tells the story of the rest of the
African American Olympians from this team.
The story was intriging alternating between stories of the individuals
and how they made it to the games, the history of how African Americans were
treated in the United States at that time and rise of Adolph Hitler to power.
I
learned so much in this book. I was
particularly intrigued by Ralph Metcalfe.
He was a sprinter in both the 1932 and 1936 games and later became a
politician in Chicago and helped to pass the bill for Black History month. He was also a helpful older statesman to many
of the younger Olympians in 1936 and won the gold medal for the 400-meter relay
team that year. He also attended
Marquette University in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
I took a few graduate classes there myself and had no idea about this
history. It was so interesting.
I
also learned that Jackie Robinson has an older brother, Mack, that was a famous
Olympian himself. Mack was a super
sprinter that broke the world record for the 200-meter dash at the 1936 Olympics
but was still behind Jesse Owens. The
book had a sad line that he was overshadowed by Jesse Owens at the Olympics and
by his older brother later in life.
After returning to the US, he had a hard time finding a job and ended up
sweeping the streets in his Olympian jacket.
Tidye
Pickett and Louise Stokes were the first two African American women to win a
spot at the Olympics. Unfortunately, in
both 1932 and 1936 they were robbed at their chances to compete. Tidye Pickett did compete in 1936 but broke
her leg during the hurdles and was unable to finish. After hearing their story, I can’t think of
Babe Dietrich in the same way again.
Archie
Williams won the 400-meter dash in the 1936 Olympics, but his real dream was to
be mechanical engineer. He was
discouraged from picking this major as they told him he would not get a job in
the field as an African American. They
were unfortunately correct, but he went on to get a pilot’s license and became
a distinguished pilot. I was really
angry about how he was unable to get a job in a field that he loved and was
good at due to his race.
I
loved track in my younger years and was a sprinter. I loved reading about sprinters and runners
in this Olympics. I loved their
individual stories and how together they were able to prove Hitler’s racial
theories as wrong. I was sad though that
as African Americans, they were not treated better in their own homeland. One positive though is that what they showed
the world helped to lead to the civil rights movement in the United States.
Narrator
Leon Nixon had a deep and wonderful voice for narration. I loved listening to this audiobook.
I
somehow missed that this was a documentary that came out a couple of years
ago. I watched it on Amazon Prime and I
really liked seeing the faces of the people I had read about in the audiobook.
Overall,
Olympic Pride, American Prejudice is an important part of our American History
and a fascinating look at the 1936 team.
Laura, this sounds like an important and fascinating audiobook! I'd also like to watch the documentary. Thank you for an excellent review!
ReplyDeleteThank-you! It was a great documentary and audiobook! I can't see what the author has in store for us next.
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