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Old
Yale
Levi Jackson: Hometown Hero
The
first African-American to captain a Yale football team continued
his leadership off the field.
October
1999
by Judith Ann Schiff
When
the Eli eleven entered the Bowl 50 years ago at the start of the
football season,
fans witnessed a landmark event in Yale history. Levi Jackson '50,
who as a freshman had become the first African-American on the Yale
football team, was now the first African-American to lead it.
The night
before the first game, students held a rally in which separate torchlight
parades starting from Pierson and Silliman Colleges converged on
the Old Campus into a crowd of 3,000 students who had gathered to
honor Jackson. The New Haven community would feel pride as well,
because Jackson, who had led the local Hillhouse High School football
team, was a bonafide hometown star.
Yale's
70th football captain was born in Branford, Connecticut, in 1926.
Jackson attended his first football game in 1937 when he watched
Heisman Trophy winner Clint Frank '38 direct the Yale team. After
two years at Branford High, Jackson moved to New Haven where he
was coached at Hillhouse by Reggie Root '26, '29LLB. Root, who had
played tackle at Yale and then served as head coach in the 1930s,
encouraged Jackson to apply to his alma mater.
But the
war intervened, and in 1945, during his senior year at Hillhouse,
Jackson entered the Army. His talents earned him a place on the
service team, and after Army defeated the New York Giants 7-0 on
Jackson's 80-yard touchdown run, he was offered a generous contract
by the Giants' coach. Had Jackson accepted, he would have scored
another first, for although blacks had played on professional football
teams in the early years of the sport, they had been excluded from
1933 until 1946.
Jackson
turned down the Giants, and he also declined a substantial football
scholarship that was offered by Indiana University. Instead,
thanks in part to the G.I. Bill for veterans that covered $500 of
Yale's $600 tuition, Jackson fulfilled his parents' dreams by enrolling
at the College, where he was one of only three African-Americans
among 8,500 undergraduates.
Under
the postwar rules then in effect, Jackson was able to play football
as a freshman, and the fullback had a brilliant season. In his junior
year, the team traveled to Wisconsin for a game against the Big
Ten school. It should have been a mismatch, but helped by Jackson's
touchdown, Yale scored an upset victory, 17-7.
When
Jackson was elected captain in November 1948, the news captured
the attention of the nation. The New York Times gave it page-one
coverage, and thousands of congratulatory letters and telegrams
poured in. At the same time he was selected by the Associated Press
for the All-Eastern Team.
Jackson's
last game, against Harvard in the Bowl, was a triumphant finale
to a remarkable career. After racing 34 yards for the first touchdown,
he caught a pass for the second. The final score was 29-6.
In his
Yale career Jackson set numerous modern records and was extolled
as "a magnificent leader, both spiritually and athletically." In
addition to football, he also played on the varsity basketball team
and was a member of the Aurelian Honor Society. Jackson was also
the first African-American to be tapped by a senior society. Declining
offers from Skull and Bones and Scroll and Key, he accepted membership
in Berzelius.
After
graduation, Jackson continued his record of trail-blazing accomplishments.
Hired by the Ford Motor Company, he became the first African-American
to hold an executive position in the corporation. Working in personnel
and labor relations, Jackson devoted nearly a year after the 1967
Detroit riots to counseling Ford and other city and private agencies
on ways to reform hiring and training for minorities. Ford accepted
his proposals, hired 10,000 new people in the city, and later appointed
him urban affairs manager. In 1987, he was welcomed back to New
Haven to receive the Walter Camp Man of the Year Award.
Shortly
after Jackson was elected captain, the Dixwell Community Organizations
of New Haven endowed the Levi Jackson Scholarship Fund in his honor.
Awarded to a member of the junior or senior class, the purpose of
the fund "shall be to promote closer interracial relationship."
The most recent beneficiary of the scholarship was Yasmin Best '99,
who, according to the award criteria, reflected Levi Jackson's qualities
of "character, intellect, achievement, and leadership." Speed out
of the backfield wasn't mentioned.
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