Born free in
1815 in Baltimore, Maryland, John B. Bailey was one of the first black
Americans to use sports to carve out a living and avoid drudgery. As a sparring
master and an expert with pistols, Bailey had unique skills he could market. He also had a practical reason to master the
art of self-defense and pistol shooting. Physically defending himself could
have been the difference between his freedom and bondage in Baltimore where
free blacks had to worry about being kidnapped and sold into slavery. Like all
free blacks in Baltimore, Bailey faced the threat of racism in a slave society
that limited his rights, economic opportunities, and constantly put his life in
danger.
When Bailey
opened his first gymnasium in 1838, he was one of a few men in the nation that
had their own gym. During the 1830s he taught sparring lessons in Baltimore
and also traveled to Boston and Philadelphia for exhibitions. In Philadelphia, he
sparred with the black sparring master Joseph Battis, who ran a sparring
academy and barbershop. In 1846, Bailey opened “Bailey’s Gymnasium,” where taught
sparring, gymnastics, and operated a pistol gallery. At the time it was illegal
to sell “gunpowder, shot, or lead” to a free black person, mulatto, or slave.
Although he
trained black men like Harry Sallars, who eventually became a boxing champion
in Australia, Bailey’s success derived from that fact that he geared his
business toward white middle-class anxieties and became a leader in the
physical culture movement. The growth of the American physical culture movement
started as an urban response to rapid industrial change. Health seekers
believed industrialization weakened Americans, and they urged that individuals
needed to transform their bodies to battle urbanization. Bailey only had one competitor. As a business owner,
Bailey smartly used the language of health reform to attract customers. He ran
ads offering sparring lessons and training in gymnastics, telling his readers
about the “advantages which accrue from a course of Gymnastic exercise
potential healthy qualities of exercise,” like a “promotion of a healthy and
vigorous state of system,” “muscular powers,” and he suggested that working out
could help fight off “diseases of a nervous and dyspeptic nature.” He also told
his potential middle-class clients that fitness was essential for those who
lived a “sedentary lifestyle.” Even though he thrived as a businessman, the
tightening legal restrictions, the Fugitive Slave Law, and continuous
oppressive racism pushed him out of Baltimore.
In 1851, he took his athletic and business
skills to San Francisco, California. When he arrived in California he was only
one of 2,000 free blacks to complete the journey voluntarily, and one of 18
blacks to open a barbershop in San Francisco. Along with his barbershop he also
operated a pistol gallery and taught sparring lessons. For whatever reason, he
left San Francisco, returned to Baltimore, and then took his family to Boston
in 1853.
In Boston, along with black gymnasium owner Patton
Stewart Jr., Bailey became a leading figure in the physical culture movement. He
taught sparring lessons, operated a pistol gallery, bowling alley, and had one
of the few facilities where men could lift heavy weights. For most of the 1850s
Bailey and Stewart operated the only two middle-class gyms in Boston. In his
book Colored Patriots of the Revolution, the black leader William C.
Nell wrote “it may be noted, that the two most popular gymnasium galleries are
in the proprietorship of J.B. Bailey and Peyton Stewart.” By the end of the decade
Bailey’s real estate holdings jumped from $500 to $5000.
During the 1860s
Bailey left the gymnasium and pistol business and opened up a sparring academy.
He operated one of the most successful sparring academies in the nation until
his death in 1886. As a sparring master he gave lessons and hosted numerous
sparring exhibitions, including exhibitions with his friend Aaron Molienaux Hewlett,
the first black teacher at Harvard. Molineaux taught physical culture and also
owned a gymnasium with his wife in Cambridge. During his tenure in Boston,
Bailey’s most successful student was the Colored Heavyweight Champion
(1883-1888) George Godfrey.
Most
importantly, Bailey was more than just an athlete. He was an activist who
worked to integrate Boston’s schools, fought for abolition, and was part of the
Underground Railroad. According to his
obituary, his “career has in it something to admire and something to praise. He
was a race man in every sense of the word.” “He was deeply interested in all
movements which tended to lift up his people.” As a black athlete-activist,
Bailey set the bar high for others to follow.
A part of American history i had not known. Very interesting and inspirational.
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