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The death of John Baxter Taylor V08 in December 1908 was front page news in The Philadelphia Inquirer and written up in The New York Times, not to mention The Daily Pennsylvanian. A smallish story in the December 12, 1908 issue of Old Penn nevertheless noted that the funeral of the negro runner from the University of Pennsylvania had attracted hundreds of other athletes and friends of the departed athlete. A stalwart on Penns track teams from 1903-1908 (he entered the University first in Wharton, then switched to the Veterinary School), Taylors specialty was the quarter mile, in which he set records in 1904 and 1907. After graduating with a degree in veterinary medicine in 1908, he traveled to England for the Olympic Games, where he became the first African American to represent the U.S. in international competition and the first to win a Gold Medal (as part of the team that won the 1600 meter relay). Just months later, the 26-year-old was dead from typhoid pneumonia and his story was largely forgotten, until recently. Taylor was
the focus of the Ivy Leagues celebration of Black History Month this
year, and his remarkable career is detailed in a story by Dave Johnson
of the Penn Relays office on the leagues Web site (www.ivyleaguesports.com/documents/jtaylor.asp).
In March, the Ivy Group Presidents announced that an anonymous gift had
been received to establish the John Baxter Taylor trophy, to be awarded
annually to the Ivy League mens heptagonal team champion. Previous issue's column | May/June Contents | Gazette Home Copyright 2002 The
Pennsylvania Gazette Last modified 4/28/02 |
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