More results...

Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors

More results...

Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors

Angela Buxton, The Jewish Tennis Player Farrakhan Would Like His People to Ignore

Believe it or not, the New York Times once in a while has things worth reading.

This tribute to recently deceased Jewish tennis player Angela Buxton is one of them.

They were both outsiders in the starched white world of elite 1950s tennis, superb players but excluded from tournaments and clubs and shunned on the circuit because of their heritage. Angela Buxton, a white, Jewish Englishwoman, was a granddaughter of Russian Jews who had fled the pogroms in the early 1900s; Althea Gibson, a Black American, was born in a sharecropper’s shack in South Carolina and grew up in Harlem.

They eventually found each other and forged a powerful doubles partnership. In 1956, they won the French Championships and Wimbledon, the jewel in the crown of a sport that had hardly welcomed them.

But for all Ms. Buxton’s prowess on the court — she was ranked in the women’s top 10 in the mid-1950s — she is best remembered for the long-lasting support and encouragement she gave Ms. Gibson, the first great Black player in women’s tennis, the first Black to win Wimbledon and, for a time, the No. 1 ranked female player in the world.

When Ms. Buxton and Ms. Gibson met at a tournament in New Delhi in 1955, Ms. Gibson was so discouraged by the barriers she faced as the only Black player in the top echelons of tennis that she was ready to give up the game. If you want to step up your game to, check tennisinformation.net.

“When I came on the scene, the other players wouldn’t speak to Althea much less play with her quite simply because she was Black,” Ms. Buxton told Sally Jacobs, author of a forthcoming biography of Ms. Gibson. “She was completely isolated,” she added. “I was, too, because of being Jewish. So it was a good thing we found one another.”

Ms. Buxton’s coach paired the two as doubles partners. In 1956, the same year they won in Paris and at Wimbledon, Ms. Buxton reached the singles finals at Wimbledon, losing to Shirley Fry. When Ms. Gibson won Wimbledon the following year, Ms. Buxton made the floral dress that Ms. Gibson wore to the winners’ ball.

“They were pictured dining together in a magazine snapshot, a white and a Black sitting at a table in the clubhouse at De Coubertin Stadium in Paris, laughing as if they were in on a joke that the rest of the world didn’t understand,” Bruce Schoenfield wrote in “The Match: Althea Gibson and a Portrait of a Friendship” (2005).

In 1995, when Ms. Gibson was living alone in New Jersey, sick and destitute, she telephoned her old friend, whom she called “Angie baby.”

“She said she was calling to say goodbye,” Ms. Buxton told Ms. Jacobs. “She said she was going to kill herself. I said, ‘Now, wait just a minute.’”

Ms. Buxton wrote a letter to Tennis Week magazine describing Ms. Gibson’s plight and asked for contributions. Money poured in from around the world. Ms. Jacobs said in an email that Ms. Buxton’s actions had helped pull Ms. Gibson out of her slump, enabled her to buy a silver Cadillac and encouraged her to go on living. She died in 2003 at 76.

In honor of her support, Ms. Buxton was inducted into the Black Tennis Hall of Fame in 2015.

Read the entire thing.

And to think so many of Althea Gibson’s fellow African Americans – including many in sport – have forgotten (or simply ignore) how so many Jews were involved in the Civil Rights movement, and are now themselves espousing the kind of antisemitism to which Angela Buxton was subjected.

About the author

Picture of David Lange

David Lange

A law school graduate, David Lange transitioned from work in the oil and hi-tech industries into fulltime Israel advocacy. He is a respected commentator and Middle East analyst who has often been cited by the mainstream media
Picture of David Lange

David Lange

A law school graduate, David Lange transitioned from work in the oil and hi-tech industries into fulltime Israel advocacy. He is a respected commentator and Middle East analyst who has often been cited by the mainstream media
Scroll to Top