1950 Census and Best All-Time D-B Basketball Players
The
1950 Census Is Online!
The
National Archives released the 1950 census the first week of April and I've
been searching it for my family. This is the first census that I appear in!
The index
is still in rudimentary form – there is not a good index yet. In other words
you have to be lucky to find the page your family is on. It is searchable but
the artificial intelligence program used for the index isn't very good.
If you
have the patience, and the time, here are a few tips.
You can find the Census search page at:
https://1950census.archives.gov/search/
The search boxes for state, county, name and enumeration district are on the left. The simplest way to search is click on State and County.
Sullivan County, Tennessee is county number 82.
My neighborhood
is Enumeration District 38, which is composed of 56 pages. If you have the
patience, and you lived near me (it should be called the Garden Basket
Enumeration District), search 82-38. Be aware that that is a lot of pages to look
through.
Frankly
it’s easier to search for names, despite the limitations of the search index.
Think of your old neighborhood in 1950 and the neighbor with the most unusual
name.
I
managed to find my neighborhood because of the woman who lived two houses down,
“Lula Deck,” mother of legendary Kingsport City Schools Bible teacher Margaret
Deck.
Lula
Deck’s name actually shows up in the index. My father, “Lyle Staten,” doesn’t
show up and the index mostly produces links to pages with “Kyle” on them.
I
found the street behind our house, Clover Street, by searching for another
neighbor with an unusual name, “Afton Arnott.”
You
may discover some amazing things in the census, like neighbors you don’t
remember. I discovered my mother and father were renting our upstairs to a
couple I had never heard of, David and Ruby Bradley. Of course I was only two
when the census was taken.
David
Bradley was a student at ETSC and Ruby was a “paper cutter” at the “paper mill.”
(Mead, I assume.) And in digging around I figured out how they came to rent our
apartment: Ruby was the sister of Mildred McKay, my mother’s best friend from
Chuckey High School.
The census also revealed that our next-door neighbors, the Shankels, were renting out their upstairs to another familiar couple, Paul and Joy Jordan. I had no recollection of them living next door. I thought we knew them because my father worked with Paul at Penney’s. The Jordans would later move to Florida when Paul was named manager of the Penney’s store in Tampa. I can remember visiting them when we were vacationing at my aunt’s rental house in St. Petersburg.
My mother was
still getting Christmas cards from the Jordan family in 2002, when I moved back
to Kingsport to take care of her.
On March 13, 1988 the Kingsport Times-News published a short news item headlined “Fans’ List.”
The story
went like this:
“Here
are the results of balloting conducted at the Elizabethton/Dobyns-Bennett basketball
game recently (Feb. 16, 1988) when spectators were invited to vote for the best
all-time D-B basketball players. Assistant coach Al Wilkes, who supervised the Activities
Office project, said selections could have been swayed some by the age factor
of voters. Many of those who cast ballots were under 35:”
THE
TOP 28 listed alphabetically (Coach Wilkes expanded the list to the Top 28
because of ties.)
Jerry
Adams (D-B Class of ‘75)
Mike
Ainslie (’61)
Bobby
Bedford (’51)
Mark
Begley (’72)
Chuck
Blevins (’76)
Frank
Bridwell (’59)
Clark
Bryan (’59)
Anthony
Eckel (’75)
Mark
Elliott (’76)
Mike
Evans (’75)
Leroy
Fisher (’64)
Larry
Garber (’59)
Lee
Garber (’81)
Bill
Greene (’55)
Randy
Harkleroad (’84)
Tommy
Henry (’76)
Carter
Johnson (’73)
Stan
Johnson (’55)
Charlie
Leonard (’58)
Robert
Leonard (’62)
Earl
Lovelace (’63)
Gary
McGinnis (’50)
Cecil
Puckett (’47)
Ronnie
Releford (’69)
Kim
Sensabaugh (’75)
Henry
Stokely (’87)
Bruce
Tranbarger (’83)
Dickie
Warren (’53)
If you’re
counting – and you don’t have to because I did – there is one player who
graduated in the 40s, nine from the 50s, five from the 60s, nine from the 70s
and four from the 80s.
There
is one set of brothers – Charlie and Robert Leonard – and one father-son –
Larry and Lee Garber.
D-B, know then as Kingsport High, began playing basketball in 1916 (in a game against Fall Branch).
But voters at that 1988 game had probably never heard of Matt Lunn (class of 1924),
who held the single-game scoring record of 22, for over a decade, or Blackie
Grills (1933), reputed to be the best player of the early years. And most
probably they knew Cecil Puckett because he had been D-B activities director
until 1985.
Even
given the youth of those who voted, I think there is one glaring omission on
this list: Skip Brown (’73). Perhaps the newspaper editor made an error in
transcribing Coach Wilkes’ handwriting. I don’t think there is any question
that Skip belongs on this list, maybe at the very top.
I
think John Penn (’65) and Sam Bedford (’65), younger brother of Bobby Bedford,
also belong.
If
you put Leroy Fisher on your list, then you should add his teammate at both D-B
and ETSU, Richard Arnold (’64).
I
could make a case for Worley Ward (’63), who was a spot starter on a team that
finished third in the state tournament (this was my sophomore year). Worley
became a starter during the district tournament and just took off, even landing
on the All-State Tournament team and winning a scholarship to North Carolina
State. He eventually ended up at ETSU with Arnold and Fisher on the ’68 team
that beat Florida State and Dave Cowens in the NCAA tournament round of 32
before losing to Ohio State in the round of 16.
A very young Cecil Puckett puts 1945 state championship trophy in the case.
The
Fan Favorite List is light – very light – on players from the early years. Only
Cecil Puckett (’47), George McGinnis (’50) and Bobby Bedford (’51) played
during the forties and Puckett was well-known in 1988 as a coach, teacher and activities
director at the school.
What
about those early players? They played a different style of basketball, where
the set shot reigned and the jump shot hadn’t been invented.
But
in fairness we should note a few of them.
In
1935 legendary D-B coach LeRoy Sprankle picked his Best All-Time Team for the Kingsport
Times. (He had been named head basketball coach in 1922 so he had only a
dozen or so teams to pick from.)
“Guards,
George Grills, Claude Wright and Robert Dodd; centers, ‘Nat’ Reasor and Fred
Saylor; forwards, Matt Lunn, Mansfield Jackson and Luke Bellamy.”
He
wouldn’t pick one all-time best but the Kingsport Times did.
According
to a story in the same issue by Billy Figg, then a sophomore at D-B, “George
‘Blackie’ Grills (’33) has been called by critics the best ‘all-time player of
Dobyns-Bennett.’ Grills played for five years at Dobyns-Bennett and his
spectacular shots and ability at handling rebounds amazed the crowds as did his
magnificent guarding. Grills played last year with the Kingsport Drug
Independents and is now playing on the Augusta Military Academy five.”
30,
37, 49, 50, 53 points!
Guy
B. Crawford, Stan Johnson, Charlie Leonard, Randy Harkleroad and the D-B single
game scoring record
One thing
that stands out to me is that the list includes three record holders for most points
in a single game: Johnson, Leonard and Harkleroad. And two of those – Johnson and
Leonard – were coached by another record-holder, Guy Crawford (before he became
“Guy B.”), who scored 30 in a 1939 game.
Stan
Johnson, the 6 foot 5 inch center on the 1952-1955 D-B teams, set the single-game scoring
record of 49 in a Nov. 27, 1954 contest against Ketron, breaking his own record
of 46, set the season before. As a sophomore he had scored 37 in a game,
breaking Guy B.’s record of 30, set in 1939.
Three
years after Johnson’s 49-point game, Charlie Leonard broke the record by
hitting the 50-point mark in a game against Rogersville.
Leonard’s
record would stand for 27 years until Randy Harkleroad scored 53 in a 1984 game
against Morristown West.
All these
records were set before the advent of the three-point shot and the shot clock.
He is
remembered today, if at all, as the flamboyant – and hugely successful – coach
of Dobyns-Bennett’s basketball teams in the fifties. He famously waved a red
bandana to signal for a timeout. And he famously won games, taking his teams to
the state tournament virtually every season.
But before
he made his name as Coach “Guy B.” Crawford, he made his name as a D-B basketball
player, Guy Crawford, a record-setting scoring machine, who played only one
year, his junior season.
Here’s
what Kingsport Times sports editor Frank Rule wrote about him on Jan. 8,
1939:
“This
boy Guy Crawford, sensational ace of the Kingsport high school cagers, will set
a new high scoring record for the Indians if he continues the pace he has set
in the last seven games.
“Although
resorting to an unorthodox style of firing at the basket, Crawford already this
season has chalked up 151 points, topped by his 26 against Elizabethton in the
Indians’ 45-10 conquest Friday night.
“An
end and tackle on the football team during the past season, Crawford, who hails
from up Fall Branch way, is playing his first season on the hardwood for the
Indians. He has looped 63 baskets from the field and has tossed in 25 free
shots for his 151 total.
“Considered
just another cager at the start of the season, Crawford played only
portions of the first seven games, but since that time has taken part in
practically every minute of play.
“And
it is in the last seven games that Crawford has scored most of his points.
Since he became the Indians’ ace he has accounted for 112 of his points. He
scored only 39 in the first seven games.”
Let that
settle in: Guy Crawford was not expected to be anything more than a serviceable
reserve on LeRoy Sprankle’s team.
He
had varsity basketball experience before arriving in Kingsport. He played on
the Fall Branch High varsity as an eight-grader and as a freshman, transferred
to Jonesboro High as a sophomore – where he played two games in the fall
semester for coach Bob Beck - and wound up at D-B for his junior year.
His
form shooting a basketball was awful, a twisting, turning, jumping style that
sportswriter Rule compared to a “girl throwing a rock double-handed.” His free
throw form was even worse, a two-hand overhead, leaning-backward shot.
But he
made those shots, like no other Kingsport high player before him, and unlike
any who came after him, at least not until the fifties.
He had
perfected his shooting style on the playground rim at Green Shed School in Fall
Branch – they had no indoor gym. (Side note: My father went to Green Shed
School. He was five years ahead of Guy Crawford. He never once mentioned
Crawford to me, probably because my father cared nothing about sports.)
Crawford
set a single-game scoring record at D-B in 1939 – scoring 30 points against
Johnson City - that would stand until it was broken by All-State player Stan
Johnson 13 years later.
He played
only one season at D-B, his junior year, coming off the bench for the first
third of the season, then sitting out another game in the heart of conference
play because of grades.
And still
he set a new record for most points scored in a season: 440 points.
Rule
wrote, “He got his first real test against Homestead while on the Florida trip
and registered 19 points. Against Redlands in the next game he scored nine.
Then against Miami, Jacksonville, Chattanooga and Bradley he racked up 18, 9,
15 and 16 points, respectively. Coach Leroy Sprankle, who has produced many
championship basketball teams for Kingsport, says Crawford is a ‘natural born
basketball player,’ and it is upon the shoulders of this star he is placing his
hopes of returning the Indians to power in upper East Tennessee cage circles.”
And
then Rule got into that unorthodox shooting style: “Crawford doesn't go in for ‘form’
and ‘gracefulness’ in making his baskets. He fires them in a manner that
probably would make Glenn Roberts, Joe Lapchick, Davy Banks and other great
stars of the hardwood, shudder. But they ring true often enough which, after
all, is what counts on the score sheet. On his foul shots, Guy toes the foul
line with one foot, the other back just as far as it will go. He raises the
ball over his head, leans backward and lets go.”
His fellow
students dubbed his field goal shooting style the “hoot-nanny shot.” Hoot-nanny
was used then as a term for something folks didn’t understand, like a “thingamajig”
or a “doohickey.”
Frank
Rule again: “The shot looks like 50 percent physical exertion and 100 per
cent prayer, half of the prayer being provided by the Kingsport rooters--but
how it gets results!”
Guy Crawford
didn’t play basketball at D-B his senior year. Sports editor Frank Rule
explained in August 1939, “Guy Crawford is entering Virginia Polytechnic next
week ... Guy was ruled ineligible to participate in basketball this year at
Dobyns-Bennett, so he attended summer school, gained the credits necessary for
graduation and decided to enter the Virginia school... Guy, who is no slow-poke
in the class room, is expected to make his mark in grades as well as on the
basketball floor at Blacksburg.”
Crawford
graduated from Virginia Tech in four years, served in the Army during the war,
then earned a Masters at Columbia in New York before being hired in 1947 to teach
sociology and coach basketball and baseball at D-B. Although his basketball
teams never won the state – finishing second and third multiple times – his baseball
teams won two state championships, in 1952 and in 1957.
Guy Crawford
became “Guy B” Crawford for the first time in a March 1939 Kingsport Times
story when he made the baseball team. He was “Guy B” from then on.
I
wish that a film existed of him shooting. I’d love to see that “hoot-nanny
shot.”