(“Along the Heritage Trail with Tom Castaldi”
– Feb 2015, No. 122)
Central Catholic National Catholic Basketball Champs
Basketball season in Indiana
is a special time and its tradition-storied history is filled with tales retold
and others that have faded with time.
According to Play On Celebrating 100 Years of High School Sports in
Indiana, the book’s dust cover notes state, “Indiana
without high school sports would be an unthinkable place.” Some would say more
so before Class Basketball became the rule, however, looking back there were
other issues.
Somewhat
forgotten as memories fade with time is the debilitating influence of the Ku
Klux Klan. The Indiana Klan had come
into prominence in the 1920s. As such it had been successful in targeting,
“Roman Catholics, followed by Jews, foreign-born immigrants and
African-Americans” and succeeded in eliminating these groups from the Indiana
High School Athletic Association (IHSAA).
Play On goes
on, “Throughout the 1920s and 1930s, the Association barred Catholic, private
and segregated African-American schools from participating in IHSAA tournaments. (However the) schools were under no probation
against playing IHSAA schools during the regular season.” That meant not
playing in the celebrated annual state basketball tournament.
Meanwhile, Catholic schools organized and participated
in their own National Catholic Basketball league and held their own state
tournament. Bob Heiny was a student at Fort Wayne ’s
Central Catholic High School
and explained that his school joined that league, which presented its own
playoff at the state level as well as a national tournament. The schools that
turned in a winning season or won their state competition were invited to play
for the National Catholic Basketball Championship title.
By the end of the 1939 regular season, the Central
Catholic (CC) basketball team finished its schedule losing only four of their
twenty-one games. CC’s 1939 Echo yearbook reported the season’s results
and how Coach John Levicki led his squad during the regular season competing
against IHSAA and private schools alike. Among their seventeen wins were teams
such as Elmhurst , Anderson , North Side and Concordia. The CC winning record
qualified the team to compete in the State Catholic Tournament which they won
beating Catholic schools from Anderson ,
Decatur and Indianapolis . It earned them the right to compete in the
Nationals.
In 1939, the CC’s hardwood squad included Jim
Boedeker, George Bitler, Gene Maxwell, Ed Gorman, Bob Heiny, Ed Stanczak, Ed
Dehner, Ed Klotz, John Falvy and Nick Leto.
The CC Irish swept Central Catholic of Wheeling, W.Va. 41-24, and Southeast
Catholic of Philadelphia, Penna. 46-37. Moving on to the quarter finals they
beat St. Basil’s of Pittsburg , Penna.
45-26. Now playing in Chicago they
rolled over St. George of Evanston ,
Ill. 47-31. Hundreds
of Fort Wayne fans traveled to the Loyola University
gym and witnessed the final game which came down to the wire with Fort Wayne
Central Catholic overcoming Chicago
Leo Catholic
High School with a
final score of 44-37.
World War II brought change to the American
culture. Perhaps the changes had
something to do with the IHSAA Athletic Council’s decision to no longer
discriminate against any group from playing in its tournament. The exclusion
rule that kept targeted groups which were perceived as a threat to the KKK was
overturned on December 20, 1941 , when
the Council voted to end twenty years of discrimination.
One other event took place before the ban was lifted
that was ruled to become effective at the beginning of the 1942-1943 season. The 1939 CC squad lost at least five of its
players who were replaced in the 1940 season with the roster that included Ed
Stancazk, Ed Klotz, Ed Dehner, Bob Heiny, Nick Leto, Harold Morthorst, John
Kartholl, Dick Krouse, Bob Walker and Bert Keenen. After Fort Wayne CC took both the 1939 State
and National Tournament titles…they did it again in 1940.
###
Allen County Historian Tom
Castaldi is author of the Wabash
& Erie Canal Notebook series; hosts “On the Heritage Trail,” which is
broadcast. Mondays on WBOI, 89.1 FM; and “Historia Nostra” heard on Redeemer
Radio. Ft. Wayne 106.3 FM and South Bend 95.7
FM. Enjoy his previously published
columns on the History
Center ’s blog, “Our
Stories,” at history centerfw.blogspot.com.
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