Wake up the echoes with a
reference to some long ago battle and watch the lightening
flash from those 94-year-old eyes.
Retired Kansas City Central
hall of fame basketball Coach Jack Bush
has railed against racial injustice his entire life. For nearly a century he has always been
consistent, exhibiting his displeasure with a comment here or a refusal to
shuffle there, at a time being “uppity” could get a black man lynched. Bush
never has compromised his pride or dignity as a man by passively accepting
unfair behavior.
Bush began his coaching career
under the cloud of Jim Crow. He graduated from all-black Kansas City Lincoln
High School in 1944. He then attended and graduated in 1949 with his Bachelor
of Science degree from the all-black Lincoln University in Jefferson City, MO He
is a member of the Lincoln University’s Hall of Fame. In college, Bush was a
record setter in track and field, throwing the javelin. Bush was also a member
of the football team from 1946-1948. He never played college basketball.
The Bush clan has resided in
the same house on South Benton Avenue for over 60 years. Bush and his wife, Marchieta, will
soon celebrate 74 years of marriage. They meet at Lincoln University. “She comes
from Sedalia (MO),” the coach recalled. “She was a professor of English, the
youngest prof ever at LU. I always did need some extra help with the books,” he
says with a winking nod to his long-ago role as teacher’s pet. “I been a
coach’s wife for oh, like 100 years,” Marchieta, teases her husband.
In the late 1990’s, his son
and namesake, Jack Jr., would fill the role of head football coach at Lincoln
University, his father’s alma matter. Over a long career, the younger Bush
worked as a football coach at several other colleges and high schools. Now
retired and living next door to his parents, Jack Jr. is the oldest and only
male of five siblings. His sister, Juanita, also lives next door.
“What I am most proud off,”
the coach states, “is that all my children and all of my grandchildren are
college graduates. It is education that is important, and I think me and the
wife did a good job with our kids and their educations. I grew up here in
Kansas City, graduated from Lincoln High School. I was an only child and my
mother was a stay at home mom. There was never a doubt I was getting an
education. Back talk my mom and there was a whipping coming, “a go out and cut
me a switch” old time type whipping. My dad was a fire starter with the
railroad. He worked on the old steam engines that needed a fire. Working for
the railroad meant his family could ride anywhere the railroad went for free,
as long as we set in the colored section, and we went everywhere, me and my
mom. Texas, California, all over. My friends did not have this (opportunity).
It really made me realize what a big world and what was out there. It motivated
me. Funny thing, I don’t remember my dad ever going with us, just me and mom.”
Bush, even today, has a sharp edge to him, more prone over the years to push back when he felt unfairly treated. There
have been few times anyone would have described the passionate Jack Bush as
mild or soft-spoken. Early in life he was forged in adversity and tempered by the
traumatic experiences of racism. Bush is a proud man, even now as his elderly
age makes it hard for him to get out much, he stays engaged as much as possible
with the local KC black community where he is today still held in the highest
esteem.
In the 1960’s and 1970’s, Bush
parlayed the power his high-profile job
gave him in the KC area to test the social boundaries in a decisive and defining
time when American society was being turned upside down. Bush was not the
devious type to stab a rival in the back; he would figuratively stab him in the
front. Amongst the white KC educational establishment, Bush’s teams, and its
followers, invoked menacing images of potential trouble. Over the year’s
switchblades, broken-down rims, attack dogs, and street fighters were
inaccurately used to describe the M.O. of his Central teams. Bush did
little to dispel such talk, refusing to give such non-sequential racism any
standing or wasted time. Today, while not claiming ownership, he admits he
liked the fear his team’s reputation struck come playoff time when the white suburban
teams - who refused to play Central in the regular season - had no choice but to
square off with his high-flying Blue Eagles.
Bush relished in the academic
achievements of his players. Over the years, when the topic of his 1979 state
championship team would arise, Bush never failed to use the opportunity to
inform listeners that all 12 team members had graduated from college. The veteran coach stressed to his young men
the importance of staying power and a tenacious fighting spirit. Don’t just
show up and be present, he would advise; but participate, “confront your
critics and those who stand in the way of your progress. Put their backs to the
wall, not yours.”
Fifteen years before Martin
Luther King's march had aroused the fury of Birmingham, in the fall of 1949,
Bush began his 53-year high school coaching tenure at the small all-black
segregated by law Washington High School in the small southeast Missouri
community of Caruthersville.
Bush’s experience in Caruthersville, he says is something, “I wouldn’t wish on my worst enemy. There was nowhere in that little town black people could go to socialize. Our students, their parents were cotton filed workers. We were given hardly any money for those kids to educate them. My wife and I both had college degrees. Made no difference, we were treated with no respect by local whites. We might as well been in Mississippi.”
Missouri high schools in 1956 began open racial competition in athletics with all schools belonging to the same Association. “They did give us a chance to play basketball with them and it was now open for us if we really want to do it,” remembers Bush. “But, it wasn’t like the white schools were to hug us and kiss us and welcome us with open arms. We got the opportunity to play, true; we just had a lot of catching up to do. Seems like I spent the next 50 years playing catch up."
After three seasons in the state’s “bootheel,”
Bush moved back to his hometown, Kansas City, MO. He took over the team at R.T.
Coles Vocational School. He later took the top position of the Kansas City
Manual High School program. He had coaching success at every stop.
Bush moved to Central High
School in 1968, where he stayed for 33 years. Overall, Bush led teams won 799
games. He guided the Central Blue Eagles to twelve final four appearances and
the 1979 state championship. He retired in 2002, claiming his 1972 team that
battled Raytown South in the quarterfinal round at Maryville, was the best team
he ever coached. He continued to teach physical education classes at Central
well into his 80’s.
Ed Benton was a 6’6” star on
the 1972 Eagles. “Playing for legendary Coach Jack Bush was a life changer,” says
Benton. “We called him Uncle Jack and we loved the guy. We played so hard for
him, always wanted to have him satisfied with your effort.”
In the spring of 1972, the Missouri State High School Activities Association (MSHSAA) voted, due to a riot after Central had lost in overtime to Raytown South at Maryville in that March's quarterfinal round of the state tournament, to put Central on probation for one year. The Eagles were suspended from
the 1973 post season state playoffs. Central loyalists were outraged. Coach
Bush pointed to the exemplary behavior of his athletes before, during and after
the contest. Bush pointed out that the school was being held accountable for the behavior
of blacks who were not even students at Central. “Not one of our students has
been accused of misbehavior,” Bush observed. “You can’t make us responsible for
the behavior of every black person who attends the game.”
“We play 23 regular season games and have no problems,”
Coach Bush stated. “What the state needed to understand is that when the
playoffs get here and a city school’s team gets beat, they then start following
us, coming to our games. Many of these people (at Maryville) I had never seen
before.” True, but according to MSHSAA, if they have black faces, then Bush and
Central are responsible. “If they are breaking the law, no matter who they are,
throw them in jail” Bush said, “but don’t punish our kids who have done nothing
wrong. The way this was done, they are saying we all failed, student-wise,
player-wise and school-wise. I don’t think that is true or fair.”
Bush felt many of the problems in Maryville were a long
time in coming. “There were no blacks on the state board (MSHSAA). There were no
black officials when you get to state play. Our people felt we were the
outsiders. If a percentage of the state association is black, then why did blacks have no say in the officiating and administration of the state playoffs?”
In 1974, due to a fight in a regional game with Paseo, Central was not allowed to start its season the following year until January 1. For their behavior in the Paseo game, the principal of Central High suspended from school the entire varsity team of 10, except one, for 5 days. The 10th player was suspended for 10 days. In 1976 the Kansas City Officials Association, due to public criticism from Bush of the quality of their work, refused to officiate Central’s game. To end their boycott, they demanded that Bush be fired. Eventually, a shaky true was reached between the two sides; Bush stayed in his job and the officials returned to theirs’.
Bush is passionate in his
belief that as a society we should never forget the degrading barriers and disadvantages
those of color endured to compete with whites on a court that was never really
level.
The coach is still an active and
enthusiastic supporter of the Central Eagles. Last winter, the old floor at
Central’s gym was torn up and a new one laid down in its place. The school
board voted to rename the court Jack Bush Court. A ceremony before a home game
was held to christen the new hardwood, with the legendary Coach Bush in
attendance for a celebration of a loyal man, a recognition of his unbending
courage, and sentimental, full memories of a long life approaching a well lived
end. Bush was touched. “My, oh my,” the
coach remembers, “That was a great night, to see so many people all come
together who had been so important in my life.”
Don’t call Bush a “legend.”
His son tells me his dad hates the word. After you've been around for so long, Bush,
Sr. tells me, everyone speaks of you with reverence in low tones. “Legend makes
one think of death,” Bush relates. “Most of my friends are dead. Some of my
players are dead. I am, you know, an old man."
True, by my what those tired old eyes have seen.
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