In the fall of 1957, Little Rock's Central High School was
in the headlines throughout the world as a place of turmoil, even shame, as
Governor Orval Faubus attempted to stop a few black kids from enrolling in that
school. The Little Rock school crisis is well documented, but another civil
rights episode occurring in Arkansas at the same time is less well known.
That year, in Fayetteville, the state had its first widely
known African-American high school football hero. His name was William Lee Hayes, nicknamed Bull Hayes. He played fullback and kicked. His team, Fayetteville
High School, had an outstanding football team that ended the year without
losing a game, outscoring opponents by 269 points to 33. Bull Hayes was the
best of several very good players that led the team to its undefeated season.
Hayes was born and raised in Fayetteville; he attended
segregated schools from grades one through nine. According to researcher Andrew
Brill, Hayes enrolled in FHS as a sophomore in 1955 and that year was "the
first African-American athlete to play against whites at the high school level
in Arkansas" (Brill, p. 56). Also that year, three of FHS's seven scheduled opponents
(Fort Smith, Harrison, and Russellville) cancelled their games against the Bulldogs,
refusing to play an integrated team. (See the article attached at the end of this post urging
teams to refuse to play FHS because it had black players.)
Apparently, Hayes was academically ineligible to play
football during his junior year, but during his senior year, in fall 1957,
Hayes became a celebrity, at least regionally, for his powerful running. His
achievements on the football field were the stuff of legend. Equally impressive was how well he fit into the team. Speaking years later, his teammates expressed
deep affection for him. Jim Shreve, the team's all-district and all-state
quarterback, told Fayetteville sports writer Grant Hall in a 1975 interview,
"Everybody on the team just loved Bull. We kidded him all the time and he
kidded us. There were never any racial problems at Fayetteville High, even
though we were only the second school in the state, I think, to
integrate." (Hall, 1975).
Another FHS player that year, Jim Bob Wheeler, told an
interviewer, "One of the things that I remember about [Hayes] was his
tremendous leg strength -- o my word -- that was the strongest human being that
I ever knew. And yet he was a very gentle person and someone that wouldn't hurt
a fly. (Adams and deBlack, p.133)
Bull Hayes was six feet tall and weighed 190 pounds, not
particularly big for a fullback. But, as Wheeler said, he had powerful legs, plus quickness and speed, that made him an explosive runner. He was a constant threat
to break through the line for a long run. When the opposing teams focused on
stopping him, Shreve would fake handing the ball to him and reel off long
runs.
Shreve described the successful FHS offense:
We actually ran what amounted to a
wishbone," remembered Shreve. "Bull lined up right behind me, and
sometimes we'd just snap the ball through my legs right to him. He would be at
full speed after one or two steps. We were never timed in the 40-yrd dash back
them, But I'm sure he could have run a 4.5. (Hall, 1975).
Though "Bull" seemed an appropriate name for a
hard-charging fullback, and it added some panache to his persona, the name was
not conferred on him because of his smash ahead running ability.
According to Shreve:
"I first met him when we were
both caddying at Fayetteville Country Club about 25 years ago," Shreve
began. "Everybody called him "Bob" but I misunderstood and thought
they were saying "Bull". So that's how he got his nickname. (Grant,
1975)
With an integrated team, FHS
sometimes faced difficulty on road trips finding places to eat because some
restaurants refused to serve black players. According to Brill, the team began
packing lunches prepared by the high school cafeteria staff. Of course, Hayes
would sometimes be singled out by opposing teams. Brill described the game in
Harrison:
In 1957, after the
Bulldogs had resumed playing Harrison, Fayetteville players riding the team bus
through the Harrison town square saw a black dummy hanging from a tree and
signs in store windows that read, ‘Beat Bull.’ During the game, Hayes was
verbally abused by fans, but the night passed without major incident. (Brill,
p. 56).
Rus Bradburd, in
his book Forty Minutes of Hell: The
Extraordinary Life of Nolan Richardson, described the situation in Harrison
more colorfully:
Hayes
had to deal with more than the usual high school hassles. When the Fayetteville
team bused into Harrison for a game, an effigy of a black man was hanging from
a tree in the town square. According to the Democrat-Gazette, Harrison star Don
Branison said his team was told to stop Bull Hayes no matter what it took.
"We tried to kill him...We tried to hurt him real bad," Branison
said.
Fayetteville
beat Harrison anyway. Branison was awarded a scholarship to the University of
Arkansas the following year. (p. 130)
Despite such hostility, FHS and Bull Hayes prevailed for a
perfect season. Hayes received a football scholarship to attend the University
of Nebraska. According to Bardburd,
"Hayes had offers from Oklahoma State and Tulsa, where Arkansas played
regularly. To avoid the embarrassment of a local black player making them look
bad, the Arkansas staff arranged a full ride to University of Nebraska for Bull
Hayes. " (Bardburd, p. 130). Bradburd does not provide a source for this
assertion. Of course, at the time, the University of Arkansas football team was
segregated and would remain so for many years to come.
Picture of William Hayes in the 1958 FHS Yearbook |
Hayes had a good freshman year at the University of
Nebraska, but had to leave the second year because of academic difficulties. He
played football for two years at Joplin Junior College and finished his college
career at Arkansas AM&N. He had a tryout with either the Cleveland Browns
(Brill p. 56) or the St. Louis Cardinals football team (Grant, 1975), but did
not make the team.
After his graduation from Arkansas AM&N, Hayes was hired
to be executive director of the Boys Club in Topeka, and he held that position
until his death, at the age of 36, on September 7, 1975.
Like others African-Americans in Arkansas who
were the first to break different color barriers, Bull Hayes was a pioneer. He was hero not only for his accomplishments on the football field that
won the admiration of his teammates, schoolmates, and much of the population
of Northwest Arkansas, but also for his role in the integration of high school
sports in Arkansas. In truth, thanks to him, 1957 was a
very good year for the desegregation of Fayetteville schools, quite a contrast
to the unseemly events in Little Rock.
Sources:
Adams, Julianne L. and Thomas DeBlack. Civil Obedience: An Oral History of School Desegration in
Fayetteville, Arkansas, 1954-1965. University of Arkansas Press.
Bradburd, Rus. 2010. Forty
Minutes of Hell: The Extraordinary Life of Nolan Richardson. Amistad.
Brill, Andrew. 2006. Brown in Fayetteville: Peaceful
Southern School Desegregation in 1954, The
Arkansas Historical Quarterly, Winter, VOL. LXV, NO. 4, pp. 55-58.
Fort Smith and Russellville Football Games Cancel [sic].
1955. Arkansas Faith, p.17.
Hall, Grant. 1975. 'Bull' Hayes Remembered by Former FHS
Teammate. Northwest Arkansas Times,
Sept. 14.
Ivy, Darren. 2001. Integration Found ‘Bull’ on Front Line. Arkansas
Democrat-Gazette, December 30.
Ivy, Darren
and Jeff Krupsaw. 2002. Untold stories: black sport heroes before integration. Wehco Pub. p. 107-109
The Amethyst,
1958 (Fayetteville High School Yearbook)
Very interesting post, Dan. Bull could become part of this emerging HOF: http://aaasportscenter.com/ Also, I think we have very similar interests - http://www.slate.com/articles/sports/sports_nut/2012/03/eddie_miles_jackie_ridgle_it_s_time_for_southern_states_to_to_integrate_their_high_school_basketball_record_books_.html
ReplyDelete- @evindemirel on Twitter
Many thanks for your comment. I enjoyed your Slate story about two fine athletes who are undeservedly little known in the state. Also, I was pleased to read about the formation of the Arkansas African American Sports Center. Your efforts to get the excluded athletes into the record books are admirable. Also, the idea of an AAASC Hall of Fame is an exciting one, and I'm sure Bull Hayes would be a great candidate for it. I could also suggest a couple of my teammates on 1963-64 and 1964-65 Fayetteville High School basketball team for consideration. They were the first African-Americans to play, in 1964, in the Arkansas basketball state tournament, and they also were on the first integrated teams to play basketball against high schools such as Conway, El Dorado, and Texarkana. Robert Wilks was the best athlete at FHS in 1965 and for a couple of years on either side of that year. Louis Bryant was an excellent basketball player. He later became an Arkansas state trouper and was tragically murdered at a young age while on duty by a racist militia type. Good luck with your initiatives and writing.
ReplyDeleteand in football today and all other sports africans--men and women are winners in most sports --still hockeys short of them yet--and there cheerd--and paid tops
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