Thursday, September 29, 2011

BOOTS AND BASKETBALLS





When I  was growing up,  and   played in  my friends garages we  detoured  around yard tools , a model T , boxes  never unpacked from residency re locations for their dads corporate jobs, Christmas decorations, or an ancestors dresser.


My parents were in business in the barnstorm  industry for  40 years.Depending on the year and the  season my childhood garage had a landscape of its own. There was never enough room for all of the vehicles.  Depending on the season and the year that landscape changed to.Vehicles ranged from station wagons, sedans, vans and limousines .

In the early years there was one vehicle. When it was on the road October-May there was no household vehicle even in the late fifties, with children at home. Grocery shopping was available at the corner neighborhood mom and pop stores, doctors made house calls, and milk was delivered daily to our door step.

My dad replaced more transmissions, brakes, engines, and autos in a years time than most people do in a lifetime. Replacing vehicles was an extraordinary expense , Autos would have numerous repairs for body and mechanical work every year. The travel was immense. coast to coast 24- 7 sleet, snow, rain ,hail, mountains  could not be avoided traveling thousands and thousands of miles every month. Super highways were not connected  or simply did not exist. Gas stations were self serve, far between and did not offer 24 hour convienance service. My dad was notorious when on tour  for saying "we have to keep time we can make it to the petrol station in whatever city or town was ahead." This resulted in more than one occasion of gas depletion to vapors, flagging down a ride to find gas or pushing the car closer to a gas station and getting an attendant to come to the rescue with gas.

In the nineteen sixties he expanded to fleets a revolving rotation of vehicles to keep the mileage down and have extra vehicles available when one was destroyed, and he needed to have one driven to a location immediately.

My first home was shared with my great grandpa , my older brother, my older sister, my mom, my dad, aunt my mom's sister. We had no garage. I played on the sidewalk and hung out at Billy Coonrod's pigeon coops. My dad was away on the road coaching and managing his Texas Cowgirls basketball team, Chic's Basketball team, Satchel Paige, baseball teams, and halftime acts. Boarding houses  in our hometown were rented for residence when the teams were off the road or in training. Mrs. Springer's  house was one of those homes, her brother Dr Springer delivered me and  most of my siblings. Prior to that my dad stayed in Bismark N.D.  with his basketball players and my older brother. After marrying my mom on the road when she was playing pro basketball for him, he settled her and my brother in Beloit- his hometown to raise a family. My sister Julie was born at Great Grandpa Harley's house and so was I.  Great Grandpa Harley had raised my dad.  He passed away and my dad moved us over the border to a kid friendly neighborhood with a city park and sledding hill across the street.


My first garage of memory was at that small rented brick house. I was a pre schooler. My dad had a downtown office and an office in our basement. The basement held public relation materials, and bunk beds for 8 for the basketball players when they were in the area a TV room , shower and dressing room. They had a home to relax in eat home cooked meals. In the summer professional baseball players ( including Cuban exiles) would sleep in the bunk beds and stay with our family. That garage housed the custom World Famous Texas Cowgirls luggage rack, which on occasion was filled with sand for the kids enjoyment in the summer.  My oldest brother Dennis rode an ice cream cart with a bicycle on the back and an ice cream truck on the front. He would come home from work spark up my dad's public address system throw on his King -Elvis and dance to the albums singing with the microphone. I was awestruck and glued to my lawn chair , my sister Julie and I ready and waiting for the nightly pre- supper show. A Cadillac limo, a two seater powder blue Thunderbird ( my mom's) and a van  occupied the driveway for transportation for all of these people family and athletes alike.

The home I spent  the most years growing up in was purchased when I was in the third grade. We moved after we had a house fire. The athletes  were now  housed in hotels (never motels). That was a  huge expense for my parents. Our family grew to nine. My dad retained a downtown office in our new town and one at home. He had 800 numbers at both, built a basketball court in the backyard and still had the revolving door of athletes and entertainers in and out of our home.  A baseball field was behind our house . The street had a culdesac and over 60 kids in 20 homes. Our family and the White's who lived directly across the street made up 14 of us kids on the block.

This garage was my haven  for a period of time then heated and remodeled to a rec room. When it was the garage  the walls were lined with  crates of Converse shoes, western boots, Harlem Queens and Texas Cowgirls uniforms, basketballs,  annual basketball fan  program books, pageant tiaras,  crates of state and national final program books, sponsor banners, basketball team jackets, baseball program books, public address  sound systems,  a trunk carrier with goofy ball, lasso ropes pistols, cowgirl hats, boots, vests  and the custom team traveling racks.

The garage transformed into my showcase in the summers, where I draped curtains scenery, and lights  to produce and choreograph productions.  A makeshift ticket booth, in the driveway with benches and lawn chairs for spectator  seating required daily set up and take down. There was  no shortage of talent in my  6 siblings and large pool of neighbor kids.

My tenure as summer street entertainer ended when the garage was remodeled into a recreation family room.

The  wares of my dads trade moved to his downtown office.

I drove by my childhood home recently. the basketball court is still there. The recreation family room was reconstructed back to the garage it had been in my grade school summer  showcase days. A new 4 car garage was constructed at the end of a new long driveway. I sat a moment and thought "now that would be a garage to put shows on in"  but quickly felt nostalgic and would prefer the old garage any day over the new modern one. I might just knock on the door and ask the retired coach that lives there if  I could have a moment to stand in my old garage and reminisce .

Thursday, September 22, 2011

VETERAN TEXAS COWGIRL INTERVIEWED BY PRESS SEPT 2011 JOAN RUPP

SHE IS HOLDING A VINTAGE TEXAS COWGIRL BASKETBALL TEAM POSTER
CREATED BY DEMPSEY HOVLAND TEAM  OWNER

Friday, September 16, 2011

"THE JUST OF IT"

I learned a lot of what I know by osmosis or exposure. Growing up in the barnstorm life was an atmosphere  that  reveled  seat of your pants thinking.

Shows, tours, publicity, development, creativity, travel, were  entrenched in my developmental years.
My brother once said to me that I was not able to be satisfied with a day to day life after it all ended.
I approached life in my interests ,careers and volunteer life  with that  zest. Hired in jobs in men's positions, recognized in my community for trailblazing new ideas. Was there any other way?

I have spent the last decade and more of my life researching and piecing together the magnitude of what I experienced growing up as a child and teenager and young women. My experiences are shaping themselves into a book. My recollections and memories are shaping themselves into a feature film.

Each of us conformed enough, but we are we are independently free thinkers I have worked in professional sports-Boxing, a brother in broadcasting, as well as me, another brother fighting for the misunderstood or less fortunate, a sister who should be a professional genealogy specialist, another brother in music. All seven of us have adventurous bones.

Born to parents of trailblazers we are all able to handle life on life's terms a little tougher than some because we think with  an approach that is open ended. We all have an advocacy gene which also came from osmosis. Allot of  the business revolved around raising funds for causes and groups. From Lions Clubs to iron lungs. My dad also had a relationship with the Illinois Moooseheart orphanage. He would book variety entertainment acts  for their fund raises and donate his own money. Easters we as a family were special guests, for the Easter Hunt .   My mom would spend time with the children .I remember her reading books to them as I sat on the floor in their bedrooms. My oldest brother had just returned from Viet Nam in 1969 shortly after our Easter visit. My dad had booked some acts in Harvard, Illinois for another fund raiser for Mooseheart.  My brother went to take care of the acts and  pay them, he never made it home. His mustang was pushed off the road by someone a phone call came in the middle of the night that would change his and  our life forever. He  was med flighted and in a coma with a long road back that caused permanent medical difficulties for him for life. My brother was with my dad since he was an infant on the road and he was going to hand the reigns over to him to run his barnstorm business that was no longer possible.

My oldest sister was sent out on the road  to handle the pageant business without adult supervision as a teenager . I was driving thousands of miles  at sixteen  to manage productions  and sent out to handle the Harlem Queens professional barnstorm basketball team at nineteen by myself.
I worked by my dads side in bookings, promotion, publicity, in my formative years. What he taught me is immeasurable and allowed me to step into positions I was hired for with no experience in each field the osmosis set in.

From idea or concept to fruition and follow through those are skills  I learned by osmosis. There was no room for fear, trouble shooting and dealing with bumps in the road and egos  were required skills.

I imagine my dad and mom thought sending adolescents out on the road was not unusual or unsafe.
My dad was booking the jazz and Big Band Orchestras with crooners as they were called at fifteen, on his own. My mom joined his barnstorm pro basketball team traveling  hundreds of thousands of miles a year just out of high school. What was normal is our family was normal to the other barnstormers.

I met variety acts with kids traveling with their parents making a living as entertainers and saw young seventeen year old girls out of towns with populations less than the crowds they played go on the courts as professionals taking on a man's game. Osmosis and developmental years .

Today when an actor or musician talks about taking their family with them on tours they are revered by some criticized by others for exposing their children to the road. The best education a child can receive, is  exposure to  a rainbow of people communities and   enviroments  and experiences.

Harlean who was a Texas CowGirl said " to this day I can still pack and be ready to go in an instant because I lived that way for years and was responsible as team manager for getting everyone going  and on time to the next game",

The next town, the next game, the next show, the next city, the next season, the next finals The Next was an anthem in our house, and for the small network of barnsormers that lived that  glorious  life.

Friday, September 2, 2011

BASKETBALL PARENTS




My family was raised on basketball, the game put food in 7 kids mouths. Both of my parents were star high school basketball players. After high school my dad made the House of David basketball team. He managed his own team and another barnstorm mens basketball team. The American Indians that he owned and coached. He played basketball during his tour in World War II. When he returned to the states he started The Texas Cowgirls female basketball team in Chicago. He was peers with Abe Saperstein owner of, The Harlem Globetrotters also from Chicago (not NY as many people think). My dad had toured with the Globetrotters when he was a House of David basketball team member. My dad's Texas Cowgirls would come to do the same (tour with the Globetrotters) . My dad also started the Harlem Chicks basketball team and the Harlem Queens basketball team. All three women's teams played against men. The Texas Cowgirls were on the NBA rosters in the first decades playing the opening games arranged by Eddie Gottlieb, requested by Joe Lapchick and Red Auerbach and others.
My mom turned down a full college scholarship after graduating from high school to try out for the Texas Cowgirls. She made the team married my dad a few years later . She continued to play until she was in her mid thirties as the mother of seven children. Two of my aunts played women's barnstorm pro basketball. All were high school basketball all stars, as was my uncle. My sister played on the Texas Cowgirls. My brothers were all excellent ball players and that has carried on with another generation of children, nieces and nephews.
Growing up our home was always filled with basketball players. We had bunk beds in our basement for them to sleep in and shared our dining room table with dozens of players. We grew up as road warriors. Goose Tatum and Marquis Haynes of the Trotters and had their own teams were also part of my child hood. We could not have enough TV'S in our home with seven children and an open door to all of the athletes wanting to watch their favorite teams, sports blared throughout every room. My dad built a lit four hoop court in our backyard. High School, College, Pro,Barnstorming, and retired players were all on that court at some time.My mom successfully taking on all of them. My mom and dad both coached on teams and played as well as owned teams. Our garage was filled floor to ceiling with Converse and Spaulding ,boxes full of uniforms and equipment. My brother was a color commentator for basketball on radio. I made the boys team as the only girl in my school in the sixties and my niece played on the boys team for the Boys Club when they still separated the girls from the boys only a few years ago, still hard for me to believe. I have a great niece and my cousins daughter who have enough talent to make it to the WNBA . The love of basketball and interest in it's history came by osmosis from my families namesake as trailblazers and participants in the sport.  My mom and two of her sister were trailblazers playing women's professional basketball in the 40s-50-60s.
Author: The Hovland Factor: Dempsey Hovland- 
Cowgirls of Another Kind: The World Famous Texas 
Cowgirls Basketball Team 
Dempsey and Satchel

ME AND LARRY KING SPENT A DAY TALKING DEMPSEY HOVLAND IN CHICAGO

ME & LARRY

Thursday, September 1, 2011

NATHANIEL CLIFTON AFRICAN AMERICAN NBA TRAILBLAZER


1970's professional women's basketball -TEXAS COWGIRL


Hank Williams performed at TexasCowgirls games after his death his former wife continued on the road with them as halftime singer.






































































Audrey is Hank William Jr. mom





































Audrey Williams was Hank Williams Sr wife she is the mother of Hank Williams Jr.  Sr 



DEMSPEY'S HAVANA CUBAN ALL STARS - SATCHEL PAIGE-DONKEY BASEBALL- TEXAS COWGIRLS


  1. Billboard - Apr 13, 1959 - Google Books Result

    books.google.com/books?id=vh4EAAAAMBAJ...Vol. 71, No. 18 - 104 pages - Magazine
    ... for booking, including World Famous Texas Cowgirls Basketball Team, plus show . ... Producing the card of quarter- midgets, sports cars, hot rods, classic car ...Stampede officials found the old equipment unsatisfactory for the wide range of ...
    More book results »
  2. Billboard - May 4, 1959 - Google Books Result

    books.google.com/books?id=ciEEAAAAMBAJ...Vol. 71 - 103 pages - Magazine
    ... for booking, including World Famous Texas Cowgirls Basketball Team, plus show . ... Producing thfl card ol qnarler- midgets, sports cars, hot rods, classic car ...Stampede officials found the old equipment unsatisfactory (or the wide range of ...
    More book results »
  3. WHEN ON THE PAGE GRAB THE PAGE WITH THE HAND TO SCROLL DOWN STAYON PG 71 RIGHT CORNER.
  4. THE FIRST LINK HAS A BOOKING ADVERTISEMENT FOR SATCHEL PAIGE DEMPSEY HOVLAND'S
  5. HAVANA CUBAN ALL STARS BASEBALL TEAM EVEN DONKEY BASKETBALL. A MENTION FOR FUTURE FALL BOOKINGS FOR HIS TEXAS COWGIRLS BASKETBALL TEAM FALL SEASON.
  6. THIS AD HISTORICALLY PROVIDES A RECORD THAT SATCHEL PAIGE WAS WITH 2 OF DEMPSEY'S BASEBALL TEAMS.  IT ALSO PROVIDES RECORD THAT THE DONKEY BASEBALL FAMILY WAS BOOKED NATIONWIDE BY HIM LONG BEFORE I WOKE UP TO THEM ONE SUMMER  ON MY LAWN IN 1962. IT ALSO PROVIDES RECORD THAT DEMPSEY WAS INVOLVED IN CUBAN BASEBALL  IN THE EISENHOWER
  7. ERA,  IT IS OF RECORD THAT MORE CUBAN PLAYERS WERE SENT TO HIM DURING JFK PRESIDENCY AND THAT THE INHERITED BAY OF PIGS ALREADY IN PLANS BY EISENHOWER INCLUDED JFK RETURN OF CUBAN DISSIDENTS TO CUBA FROM THE UNITED STATES THAT WERE ARMED BY THE US GOVT TO FIGHT  FIDEL CASTRO MILITANTS. I HAVE CLEAR MEMORIES OF THE CUBAN MEN BEING PICKED UP BY US SPECIAL SERVICES FROM OUR HOME