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Hidden figures: Tennis, basketball star Jenkins broke down many barriers

By George Von Benko for The 5 min read
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A basketball player in high school, Uniontown graduate Bucky Jenkins later became one of the areaĢƵ great tennis players and teachers. He was among a small group of tennis players who saved Bailey Park from being turned into a parking lot at one time.

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Uniontown graduate Bucky Jenkins gives a tennis lesson at Bailey Park.

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Bucky Jenkins

Fayette County has a rich sports history and unfortunately the stories and exploits of many great players and coaches have been lost and forgotten by the sands of time. This is the fifth in a series of articles that will explore some of these hidden figures. This article concerns former Uniontown High School standout Clarence “Bucky” Jenkins.

Born in 1916, Jenkins’ first love was basketball. He played varsity basketball for the Red Raiders from 1932-34 under the tutelage of AJ. Everhart Sr. The landscape was much different in those days and Jenkins had to deal with discrimination. He described it in a story in the Tribune-Review in 1982.

“I was the only black player on the Uniontown High School team in 1934,” Jenkins recalled. “Some schools didn’t like me being on the team.”

Jenkins was held out of several games for his own safety.

When Jenkins graduated from Uniontown in 1934 he played semi-pro basketball for one season for the McKeesport Ironmen.

“We got $10 a game plus a meal,” Jenkins stated in a 1985 story in the ĢƵ. “If we won, the owner bought us a steak and if we lost we got a hamburger.”

The Ironmen were successful, winning 27 of 29 games. Jenkins and some other players quit when they realized the owner was making a lot of money betting on games. They felt they were being used in a big money making scheme.

Jenkins returned to Uniontown and played independent basketball for the Trojans and 20th Century. Jenkins also played softball and was a 10-time All-Star second basemen. He gave up playing basketball in 1957.

Jenkins got into tennis in 1940 when he bought a pair of bamboo rackets for himself and his wife Josephine. The tennis took off in 1943 when he started playing with Uniontown undertaker Sanford Stephens who had been a southern conference tennis champion.

They played on the courts reserved for blacks near Bailey Park. New tennis courts open at Bailey Park in 1948 and they were integrated, although it was still tough for black players.

In a snapshot of the way it was, in 1952 Jenkins approached a white man playing tennis at Bailey Park and asked for a match. The man beat Jenkins soundly and had a painful parting shot after he refused to shake hands following the match. He sneered, “The day you can beat me, I’ll quit playing tennis.”

Jenkins who worked for State Liquor stores for 36 years all over Fayette County attacked the game of tennis after that. He read every book on tennis in the library and saw movie shorts on the game and observed better players while he sharpened his game.

Fast forward to two years later. Jenkins beat his nemesis in a city championship match. Jenkins reminded the man of his pledge to quit if Jenkins ever beat him. His response “No I’m not going to quit,” he said, “because I made you a better player.”

Jenkins won five City Singles championships and was runner-up four times. He captured the doubles title numerous times. Jenkins played on the Uniontown City Tennis team in the 1950s in the Tri-State League with teams from Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Maryland.

One of Jenkins’ tennis contemporaries, ConnellsvilleĢƵ Joe Galiardi, remembered Jenkins fondly.

“Bucky Jenkins was a wonderful person,” Galiardi said.

Jenkins along with a small group of tennis players saved the tennis court at Bailey Park from being turned into a parking lot.

Jenkins had a lot of firsts in his career: First Black City Champion tennis player, first local black sports official, first black to play basketball at the YMCA, first black tennis instructor and first black commissioner of Midget and Teener League Baseball at Bailey Park.

Teaching tennis became Jenkins’ passion. He taught tennis at the Uniontown Country Club, YMCA, Jewish Community Center, Fayette Campus and taught tennis fundamentals at Bailey Park for over 30 years.

“Tennis was his first love: I’m his second,” his wife Josephine used to say.

The late longtime Uniontown Recreation Department Director Ken Misiak had this to say about Jenkins: “HeĢƵ been such a tremendous influence on the kids and adults who have taken his classes. We could not have found anyone better if we had conducted a search throughout the entire area.”

Truth be known, this writer was one of the kids that Jenkins taught to play tennis. So was former Uniontown High School tennis standout Doug Wood who played for the Red Raiders from 1972 to 1974.

“I took tennis lessons from Bucky when I was 14 or 15 years old,” Wood explained. “Everybody loved Bucky Jenkins. I have wonderful memories of him. I remember being in a class and there were probably 10 of us and he would show you the basics. He was one of the fixtures at Bailey Park.”

Jenkins passed away in 1990 and he gets the last word on his impact on our tennis. Here is a quote from a 1985 ĢƵ article.

“ItĢƵ nice because I can sit back and reflect on many memories,” Jenkins stated. “I touched many peoples’ lives and was able to teach them something good, and I feel proud of that.”

George Von BenkoĢƵ “Memory Lane” column appears in the Sunday editions of the ĢƵ. He also hosts a sports talk show on WMBS-AM radio from 10 a.m. to noon on Saturdays.

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