"The 81-Year-Old Newspaper Article That Destroys The Redskinsâ Justification For Their Name"
CREDIT: AP
As challenges against the name of the Washington Redskins have persisted for more than four decades, the teams ownership and management has held on to a consistent story: that the team changed its original name â" the Boston Braves â" to the Boston Redskins in 1933 to honor its coach, William âLone Starâ Dietz, who maintained at the time that he was a member of the Sioux tribe.
But in a 1933 interview with the Associated Press, George Preston Marshall, the teamâs owner and original founder, admitted that the story wasnât true.
âThe fact that we have in our head coach, Lone Star Dietz, an Indian, together with several Indian players, has not, as may be suspected, inspired me to select the name Redskins,â Marshall said in the AP report. The quote was originally referenced in a story on the teamâs name at Sports Illustratedâs MMQB site. Jesse Witten, the lead attorney in a lawsuit challenging the legality of the teamâs federal trademark protection, unearthed the actual AP report this week, and provided it to to Washington Post columnist Robert McCartney. ESPNâs Keith Olbermann reported it on his show, âOlbermann,â Thursday night.
Hereâs a copy of the news clip, which ran in the Hartford (Conn.) Courant on July 5, 1933:
CREDIT: Hartford Courant
The teamâs owner, Daniel Snyder, and top management have justified the teamâs name as an âhonorâ to Native Americans in letters to fans and the public. So too has NFL commissioner Roger Goodell. And both have leaned on the story that Marshall chose the name to honor Dietz to make that case.
Snyder referenced the history without using Dietzâs name specifically in a letter to season ticket-holders last October:
As some of you may know, our team began 81 years ago â" in 1932 â" with the name âBoston Braves.â The following year, the franchise name was changed to the âBoston Redskins.â On that inaugural Redskins team, four players and our Head Coach were Native Americans. The name was never a label. It was, and continues to be, a badge of honor.
The team has also used Dietzâs heritage â" and the claim that the Redskins were named in his honor â" to defend itself in the lawsuits challenging its federal trademark.
The NFL, too, has rested its case on that history. Goodell did so in a letter to 10 members of Congress who wrote him to challenge the name last June. The commissioner called the name a symbol of âstrength, courage, pride, and respectâ and specifically referenced Dietzâs role in the name:
In our view, a fair and thorough discussion of the issue must begin with an understanding of the roots of the Washington franchise and the Redskins name in particular. As you may know, the team began as the Boston Braves in 1932, a name that honored the courage and heritage of Native Americans. The following year, the name was changed to the Redskins â" in part to avoid confusion with the Boston baseball team of the same name, but also to honor the teamâs then-head coach, William âLone Starâ Dietz.
Asked for their response to the news clip, neither the NFL nor the Washington Redskins responded by the time of publication.
Dietzâs history was already in question at the time thanks to the work of historian Linda M. Waggoner, whose exhaustive account of Dietzâs life found that he almost certainly was not a Native American, as he had claimed. In fact, Dietz faced a federal trial alleging that he had falsely represented himself as a Native American to avoid the World War I draft. After the first trial ended with a hung jury, Dietz pleaded no contest to the same charges in a second trial and served 30 days in jail.
When ThinkProgress asked the franchise about the claims that Dietz was not a Native American last year, the teamâs president and general manager, Bruce Allen, called the questions âignorant requestsâ and suggested that we speak to Dietzâs family instead.
Amid scrutiny about Dietzâs history, the team has given the appearance of backing away from relying on the claim that he inspired the name. Notably, Allen did not cite Dietz or the origins of the name in his written response to a letter from Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) and 49 other senators who called on the team to drop âRedskins.â
If Marshall didnât choose the name based on Dietz or the presence of Native Americans, what was his reason? As Olbermann notes in his report, the team chose its original name â" the Boston Braves â" because it shared a field with Bostonâs baseball team by the same name. Marshall explains the AP story that he gave up the name âBravesâ because it was too easily confused with the baseball team, and he chose âRedskinsâ to keep the Native American imagery as the team moved away from the Braves and into Fenway Park, the home of the Boston Red Sox.
Until recently, that story was more commonly told than the one about Dietz. In 1972, freelance writer Joe Marshall wrote a story on team nicknames in a promotional program from a game between Washington and the Atlanta Falcons. Joe Marshall didnât reference Dietz in his story, instead writing that the team wanted to âchange names but keep the Indian motifâ:
The Redskins also copied a baseball team, the Boston Braves. George Preston Marshall started with his team in Boston on Braves Field. When he switched playing sites, he wanted to change names but keep the Indian motif. Since he was now sharing a park with the Red Sox and at the same time liked Harvardâs crimson jerseys, Redskins seemed appropriate. Redskins they have remained, a proud tradition. Until now, that is.
In that sense, it seems obvious that the name âRedskinsâ was chosen more as a marketing ploy than anything else, a way to tweak the teamâs name without changing the image it had established. Regardless of the original motive, however, this much is clear: the story the team and NFL have used to justify the nameâs existence as a âbadge of honorâ is not true, and the man who founded the team refuted it himself more than 80 years ago.
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