Boomer HardingWilfred (Boomer) Harding, a pioneering multi-sport athlete, is the subject of a retrospective project by UWindsor researchers.

UWindsor history project traces career of pioneer black athlete

A retrospective on the career of a Chatham athlete who broke multiple racial barriers in the early 20th century will be featured on the Leddy Library’s Centre for Digital Scholarship website in 2017.

Breaking the Colour Barrier will document the life of sports legend and Second World War veteran Wilfred (Boomer) Harding. The first black hockey player in the International Hockey League when he joined the Windsor Staffords in 1946, he was also the first to play at Detroit’s Olympia stadium. Harding, born in 1915, was also a member of the Chatham Coloured All-Stars —the first black team to win an Ontario Baseball Association championship in 1934.

Heidi Jacobs, information literacy librarian, and Miriam Wright, head of the Department of History, are collaborating on the website and digital archive that will document Harding’s life and career using documents and mementos from family scrapbooks. Members of the Harding family lent the researchers their collection so it could be digitized and become the basis of the website and digital archive. Collected by multiple generations of Harding’s family, the scrapbooks contain seven decades’ worth of newspaper clippings, team photographs, programs, letters, and medals.

Over the summer and fall, an Undergraduate Research Experience grant allowed undergraduate history students Lauren Miceli and Kayla Dettinger to scan the scrapbooks and research aspects of Harding’s history and context. They presented their work on the project at the UWill Discover undergraduate research conference in March.

Additionally, Leddy librarian Dave Johnston and history research associate Cal Murgu developed a digital archive so that the digitized documents will be preserved on a long-term basis. They also helped build a website, which they hope to launch in 2017, to highlight and contextualize some of the materials in thematic exhibits.

“Digitization will help preserve these fragile documents for future generations and make them accessible,” says Dr. Jacobs. “This is a rare opportunity for local history enthusiasts, students, and seasoned researchers to learn about Boomer’s life, which is not just a story about sport, or race, but an intersectional narrative of human struggle, perseverance, and success.”

Dr. Wright says there is little written about Canadian black sports history, and outside of Chatham, few people know about Harding or the Chatham Coloured All-Stars. She says sports are a reflection of society and show the same struggles, conflicts and divisions found in daily life. Despite their athletic successes, Harding and his All-Stars teammates regularly faced discrimination both on and off the field.

“It’s important to acknowledge Harding’s story and that of the Chatham Coloured All Stars because people often assume these types of racial barriers never existed in Canada,” Wright says.

The UWindsor researchers partnered with the Chatham Sports Hall of Fame and have received an Ontario Trillium Foundation grant worth $72,500 to develop the site and digital archive and to add an oral history component. Jacobs says they and students they hope to involve in the project will interview family members about Harding, who died in 1991, as well as family members of the other Chatham Coloured All-Stars players to get their stories and experiences.

“As a young man, Boomer was turned away from a public skating event at Detroit’s Olympia Stadium, but just a few years later he came back to the same arena and played on that very ice as the first black player in the IHL—it was a bittersweet moment,” says Jacobs. “These stories will be lost if we don’t do the oral history project.” 

Jacobs and Wright are giving a talk on the project at a meeting of the Essex County Black Historical Research Society on April 21, 7 p.m. in the United Way building, 300 Giles Boulevard East. They also plan to work with local school boards to create instructional materials for the site that will be compatible with curriculum for kindergarten to grade 12.

“Sports are community builders and in the 1920s and ’30s African-Canadian athletes started organizing teams. Despite the barriers, they were creating a strong community identity and sense of achievement,” says Wright. “At the same time, grassroots groups were forming to fight for civil rights. There’s a lot to learn by looking at these stories.”

Stefanie Smith wearing polyester jacketLancer female athlete of the year Stefanie Smith models a spring jacket, the Campus Bookstore’s feature item of the week.

Spring jacket to mark season’s arrival

The Campus Bookstore is ready to welcome the arrival of warmer weather by featuring a lightweight jacket as its weekly featured item.

“It seems to be spring now,” says marketing coordinator Martin Deck, noting the seasonable temperatures. “We’re starting to let ourselves believe that winter is behind us.”

The jackets, available in a range of colours and sizes for $24.95, are made of 100% recycled polyester, with a water-resistant finish, full-zippered front and an adjustable shock cord at the hem. They feature the words “University of Windsor” stitched over the heart and reflective piping on front and back.

Posters to present experience from practicum placements

Senior students of psychology and disability studies will discuss what they learned in their practicum placements, in a display of poster presentations on Tuesday, April 19, in the CAW Student Centre Commons.

The drop-in exhibit runs 3:30 to 6:30 p.m. and features work by students in three courses: Community orientation to disability issues, Practicum in developmental psychology, and Practicum in psychology.

“The students are really excited to share their experiences,” says professor Marcia Gragg. “I’m sure people will be inspired when they learn about the contributions they have been making in the community.”

pulled pork sandwichThe featured pulled pork sandwich costs $6.99 while supplies last at the Burger Bar in the Marketplace.

Pulled pork sandwich to grace Burger Bar menu

The Burger Bar station in the CAW Student Centre’s Marketplace is featuring a pulled pork sandwich, while supplies last.

Served on a soft bun, the sandwich costs $6.99 solo; add a fountain drink and side of fresh fries for an additional $3.

Think tank participantsParticipants in the Cancer Research Think Tank exchange views, Friday in the Joyce Entrepreneurship Centre.

Think tank advances cancer research projects

An afternoon forum on Friday, April 15, brought together researchers and administrators seeking support for inquiries into understanding and fighting cancer.

The Cancer Research Think Tank was organized by the Windsor Cancer Research Group and the Office of Research and Innovation Services to identify and explain the elements of successful grant applications and apply them to specific projects.

A total of 30 participants represented seven UWindsor disciplines—biological sciences, nursing, computer science, human kinetics, psychology, engineering and physics—as well as Windsor Regional Hospital, the Cross Border Institute, Henry Ford Health System, Wayne State University and the diagnostic startup ITOS Oncology.

“We couldn’t have asked for a better turn out,” said Karen Metcalfe, assistant director of the Windsor Cancer Research Group. “The energy in the room was terrific and there are clear projects and next steps that will translate into new grant submissions over the next year.”

She said organizers hope the model will serve to generate future collaborations and stimulate ideas for further discussion. Another think tank event is scheduled for July 15.

Nancy WrightNancy Wright, dean of FAHSS, will leave the University of Windsor for an appointment at the University of Victoria.

West coast beckons dean of arts, humanities and social sciences

Faculty of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences dean Nancy Wright will leave the University of Windsor this summer for an appointment as associate vice-president academic planning at the University of Victoria.

Dr. Wright is a multi-disciplinary scholar of literature, law, and history, and has held a variety of senior positions at universities in the U.S., Australia and Canada, before joining the University of Windsor in 2013.

“I want to congratulate Dr. Wright on her new appointment,” said UWindsor president Alan Wildeman. “She has worked very hard to lead the Faculty of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences through a time when many changes are occurring at the University of Windsor. I wish her the very best in her new role.”

Provost Douglas Kneale says he has greatly enjoyed working with Wright on such strategic planning initiatives as faculty hiring and program development.

“Dean Wright has been an enormously creative and collegial contributor at Deans’ Council, and this opportunity at UVic will allow her broadened scope for her academic and administrative leadership,” he said. “I wish her every success as she moves on to new responsibilities.”

Wright will begin her five-year term on July 1. Further information on next steps regarding an acting dean of the Faculty of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences will follow.

Class aims to make yoga universally accessible

Yoga is accessible to everyone, says instructor Nicole (Coco) Daignault. Her evening classes will return for spring session starting Monday, May 2, through Campus Recreation.

“I teach to any level of experience, including modifications for chair and wall support,” Daignault says. “Whether it’s mat, wall or chair, it’s all yoga!”

The evening classes run 6 to 7 p.m. Mondays and Wednesday in the Multi-purpose room, St. Denis Centre. The first week of its eight-week run is offered free. The class is open to UWindsor students, employees and the general public.

Find more information, including an online registration form, on the Campus Recreation website.