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The Lost History of Black Jockeys

More news stories on Race and Sports

DeAngelo Starnes, EbonyJet, June 5, 2009

{snip}

From 1823 until the start of the Civil War, horse racing was the most popular sport in America with black jockeys reaping bigger purses for their owners. Earnings from racing provided jockeys lifestyle options other blacks, free or slave, didn’t enjoy. They were allowed to travel off the plantation, sometimes without a white escort. They were treated better than the average black person.

A slave jockey could earn enough money to purchase his and his family’s freedom. He could even earn enough money to purchase his own slaves. {snip}

The Civil War temporarily disrupted horse racing when the horses were needed for war efforts. During Reconstruction, African American jockeys experienced some of their most notable achievements, particularly in the Kentucky Derby. The first winner of the Kentucky Derby was an African American, Oliver Lewis. In fact, there were 13 African American jockeys in that first race, five of whom also had black trainers. Fifteen of the first twenty-eight Kentucky Derby winners were African American. The youngest person to win the Derby was a 15-year old African American named Alonzo “Lonnie” Clayton. Isaac Murphy was perhaps the most successful of these Black jockeys at this time, winning the Derby three times—a record which stood for close to forty years. Arguably, Murphy is the greatest jockey of all time, as his 44 percent winning rate remains the highest in history. Willie Simms is the only African American to have won all of the Triple Crown races.

Eventually, segregated competition took over interracial sporting competition for close to sixty years beginning in 1890. In his book, Forty Million Dollar Slaves, author William Rhoden attributes this demise to the “Jockey Syndrome.” Rhoden describes the Jockey Syndrome as a changing of the rules of the game when competition begins to gain ground. It usually involves a series of maneuvers to facilitate racist outcomes, including the taking away of previously gained rights and the diluting of access through coercive power and force, a phenomenon that was common outside of sports as well, of course. Black Americans would see that clearly when the Civil Rights Act they celebrated in 1875 was almost completely overturned by the Plessy v. Ferguson case of 1890. [Thus] the Jockey Syndrome has been the primary mechanism in American sports for tilting the ostensible level playing field of sport away from equal opportunity and toward white supremacy.

In short, the conspicuous success of the black jockeys led to their demise.

Rhoden’s observation played out in black jockeys being refused membership in Jockey Clubs, which operated as a jockey’s union of sorts. If you weren’t a member of a jockey club, you couldn’t race. In other instances, black jockeys were not hired to race horses. And when a black jockey was allowed to race, white jockeys would gang up on him and commit such acts as pocketing the rider along the rails or bracketing him within the pack, bumping and knocking the rider out of his saddle, or simply running the horse off the track.

It was these kinds of actions that caused Jimmy Winkfield, the last of the great African American jockeys, to take his game overseas. Winkfield, like Murphy, won back-to-back Kentucky Derby races before, like many black American jazz musicians during the bebop era, finding love in Europe.

Black jockeys haven’t disappeared altogether though. Cheryl White, who graced the cover of Jet on July 29, 1971 and achieved many firsts for female jockeys, won close to 750 races on various tracks prior to her retirement in the early 1990s. In 2000, Mark St. Julien was the first African American to race in the Kentucky Derby in 79 years. If you include Blackstyle, Calvin Borel’s chest-pumping upon his upset victory in this year’s Kentucky Derby brought forth the spirit of the Black jockeys as embodied by today’s Black athletes, albeit in a white man’s body. Finally, 19-year old British black jockey, Ricky Alleyne, aspires to be the Tiger Woods of horse racing. Which seems to complete the circle, in a sense.

{snip}

Original article

(Posted on June 10, 2009)

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Comments

1 — Question Diversity wrote at 6:22 PM on June 10:

So they were thin, light and rode horses around in an oval. That doesn’t impress me much.

2 — sbuffalonative wrote at 6:22 PM on June 10:


the conspicuous success of the black jockeys led to their demise

Can you imagine what greatness blacks could achieve if they didn’t have to deal with institutional racism and white supremacy?

We’ll never know because blacks are never going to give up the white gravy train.

3 — ranger wrote at 6:31 PM on June 10:

“From 1823 until the start of the Civil War, horse racing was the most popular sport in America with black jockeys reaping bigger purses for their owners.”


Besides winning the civil war for the North, building the pyramids, inventing everything only to have it stolen by whites, on and on and on, they’re now claiming to have dominated the 105 pound sport until they were ousted because of racism.

It never ends and it never will. We have an entire race of people who haven’t accomplished a penny’s worth of good to mankind and has overburdened societies throughout the world, because they have to be cared for like children. And to keep the lies alive the butt-kissing whiteys all play “Let’s pretend” right along with them in order to keep them from having to admit the truth.

How long can this go on? If we let them continue they’ll so overburden our military and political positions, etc., they’ll destroy us just like all other black societies. If we don’t we’ll have riots and civil war.

4 — Anglokraut wrote at 8:10 PM on June 10:

As a devotee of the sport of kings, I already knew this, and I can give a little more information—the kind that doesn’t make it in to biased reporting.

In the early 20th century, racing was in sharp decline because of a string of betting scandals that gave the sport a tarnished reputation. Laws were passed that banned racing, and many stables folded—the bigger competitors moved to Europe, where racing was still going strong. This wasn’t to “keep the black jockey down,” it was a reaction to do-gooder social groups who considered racing and gambling to be evil.

Today’s jockey is now hispanic—the white jockeys are retiring, or in the sunset of their careers. Hispanics are more likely to be 5’4 and under, and the Thoroughbred breeding industry is almost entirely staffed by hispanic labor. If black horsemen really want to get on top horses, they need to start taking on the hispanics where they ride: Santa Anita, Gulfstream, Churchill Downs, and Belmont—but it’s just so much easier to blame whitey, then to work hard and go after the top trainers.

5 — Tim in Indiana wrote at 8:19 PM on June 10:

A slave jockey could earn enough money to purchase his and his family’s freedom. He could even earn enough money to purchase his own slaves.

I’m surprised they would admit this. Usually they want to keep black ownership of slaves swept under the rug.

Rhoden describes the Jockey Syndrome as a changing of the rules of the game when competition begins to gain ground. It usually involves a series of maneuvers to facilitate racist outcomes

It always has to be some kind of conspiracy theory, doesn’t it? But then, if whites are so determined to keep blacks out of sports, why the dominance of blacks in basketball, a multi-billion dollar industry?

6 — Anonymous wrote at 8:33 PM on June 10:

“In short, the conspicuous success of the black jockeys led to their demise.”—Any chance that such a scenario would repeat itself in basketball??

“A slave jockey could earn enough money to purchase his and his family’s freedom. He could even earn enough money to purchase his own slaves.”—Any chance that contemporary lineal descendants of those slave owning jockeys will be identified and dealt with appropriately when the reparations to descendants of slaves in this country is enacted?

7 — Elrey Jones wrote at 11:50 PM on June 10:

I could care less what blacks say or think. They have proven themselves to be haters and their hate is focused on whitey i.e. me. I respect the horse racing business precisely because it got rid of their racist black race.

8 — d wrote at 12:11 AM on June 11:

“… reaping bigger purses for their owners”

Bigger than what?

“He could even earn enough money to purchase his own slaves.”

Speaks for itself…did Ebony miss this, I’m surprised they allowed it to be published.

”..primary mechanism in American sports for tilting the ostensible level playing field of sport away from equal opportunity and toward white supremacy.”

OK. On the occasions I see American sports on tv, blacks appear to dominate. I don’t see ‘white supremacy’, in fact quite the opposite.

I don’t know enough about the US racing industry to comment but this seems like wishful thinking along the same lines as ‘an African invented the internet’ or ‘blacks invented hair care’. I’m very sick of hearing this and it’s alarming how many blacks seem to believe these fairy tales..

9 — flyingtiger wrote at 1:37 AM on June 11:

Note that blacks are only successful if they are slaves. Once free, they can’t achieve anything. I let others explain why this is true. Good night.

10 — Madison Grant wrote at 2:16 AM on June 11:

I’ve come across some strange conspiracy theories in my day but this one takes the cake. Whites plotted to keep blacks from getting jobs as jockeys?

BTW I once met Angel Cordero, a successful jockey of Puerto Rican descent who somehow managed to succeed in the sport despite the conspiracy.

11 — Obscuratus wrote at 2:48 AM on June 11:

Repeat after me fellow readers:
Black’s are “superior” because they “dominate” football, basketball etc, but
The only reason whites are better at other sports is because of “racism” - all humans are equal, race doesn’t exist, it’s just skin colour/eye shape…

I think I went mad after the 15th repetition, but this is what many black Americans honestly believe!”

It’s the exact same (il)logic behind the “all whites are pedophiles ‘cuz SVU, CSI and Cold Case says so”, but “‘poverty’, ‘bad socioeconomic conditions’, ‘the lingering effects of slavery’” are why black Americans are disproportionately represented in crime, even when mestizo “Hispanics”, Middle Easterners and Central Asians are thrown into the “white” category.

Don’t believe me? Check any “Afro”centric or other black site and come tell me.

12 — john wrote at 4:52 AM on June 11:

Oh, woe and despair! Another group of superior black Africans falls victim to accursed white racism!

It’s only a matter of time before they’re purged from the ranks of professional baseball, football, and basketball! Perhaps they’ll last a bit longer in professional boxing, in which racist whites can revel in the spectacle of pairs of gross aborigines mauling one another in the prize ring.

Is there no limit to the perfidy and cruelty of the white race?

13 — me_lee wrote at 8:56 AM on June 11:

Just how did Calvin Borel’s chest-pumping in his upset victory in the Kentucky Derby bring forth the spirit of black jockeys as embodied by today’s black athletes, albeit in a white man’s body? So, now are we to assume that a white guy who wins, is just the embodiment of spirits of black athletes? I think that’s voodoo or something, and they can take that garbage right back to Haiti or wherever.

14 — Anonymous wrote at 10:29 AM on June 11:

I’d ask, “If blacks are superior to whites, due tell why it took over 300 years to get your ‘rights’? If blacks are superior to whites, then how come blacks are always accusing us of their problems? If someone or a group of people is inferior to you, then there’s no way they can negatively impact your life, correct?”

15 — Anonymous wrote at 4:42 PM on June 11:

There was a song about that, by Frank Zappa, I believe. Something about the jockies (statures) on the lawn. So, the black-jockey is not just a racial stereotype? Learn something new everyday.

16 — Anonymous wrote at 4:51 PM on June 11:

So, the same people who do every thing they can to bring us affirmative-action, in every way, every time possible, because white men are too well-to do, these same people write a montage saying whites should feel guilty for changing the rules on black people, because black Jockeys are too successful.

17 — Whiteplight wrote at 5:05 PM on June 11:

So a White master raises the horses, raises the jockey, others like him set up races, use the jockeys and engage in various swindels and cheats in order to win a purse from his fellows in a gambling game. Sometimes apparently, a kind, generous master lets the jockey have some of the winnings to buy himself and his family out of slavery. The White master actually gave away the jockey who was winning races because of his superior skill, or because he kept his mouth shut at the various cheat plots he knew about? Who knows? But after the conditions that allowed this were wiped out by the Civil War, Black jockeys easy winning skills were no longer valued?

What a dumb bunch of tripe!

18 — Anonymous wrote at 5:09 PM on June 11:

“Rhoden describes the Jockey Syndrome as a changing of the rules of the game when competition begins to gain ground. It usually involves a series of maneuvers to facilitate racist outcomes, including the taking away of previously gained rights and the diluting of access through coercive power and force, a phenomenon that was common outside of sports as well”

If they’re not talking about affirmative action here, they certainly should be.

19 — Whiteplight wrote at 5:18 PM on June 11:

me_lee wrote at 8:56 AM on June 11:

“Just how did Calvin Borel’s chest-pumping in his upset victory in the Kentucky Derby bring forth the spirit of black jockeys as embodied by today’s black athletes, albeit in a white man’s body? So, now are we to assume that a white guy who wins, is just the embodiment of spirits of black athletes? I think that’s voodoo or something, and they can take that garbage right back to Haiti or wherever.”

I was going to comment on this, but you have already. However, I think what they mean is that although a White man won, he was influenced by what they claim is typical Black victory celebration style - a style that has shown up in various forms for some time now, end zone dancing, fist pumping, etc. They are correct in noting how Black “culture” (and I use the term loosely) has come to dominate America, but their link to a racial claim to Calvin Borel’s win is thin to non-existent. That ploy does expose some of the article’s desperation and serves to invalidate a number of its claims.

I used to own a jockey Club registered thoroughbred that was the grandson of Damascus, the hose Willie Shoemaker rode to so many victories in the 1960s. I can tell you this much, it is the horse and its proper management that wins races while jockeys are merely technicians who signal a horse at certain times to perform as they have been trained. Almost any person of small stature and light weight can be trained to be a jockey.

20 — Whiteplight wrote at 5:21 PM on June 11:

“He could even earn enough money to purchase his own slaves.” {snip}

The editor of this piece admits to Black slave ownership in the South. Books have been written on the subject, but here in Jet magazine? Is it possible that Blacks may soon have to confront the contradictions of their own self image and history?

21 — Whitey Ford wrote at 9:31 AM on June 12:

So now White people are responsible for “Jockey Syndrome”? I’m trying to keep a straight face as I type this. “Jockey Syndrome”

Someone should compile a list of all the ailments and mental conditions White men are responsible for creating. Institutional racism, structural racism, Jockey Syndrome,….

22 — JustPlainMean wrote at 12:25 PM on June 12:

Considering blacks’ widespread reputation for mistreating dogs, I prefer not to think of them dealing with large, sensitive animals like horses. If I owned a horse I’d be paranoid about who came even close to it, & for sure my racism would go even deeper into the red zone.

23 — S.L. Cain wrote at 8:11 AM on June 15:

Why, it is exactly just to honor those brave African American jockeys of yore that I have a little figurine of one on my front lawn.


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