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In the middle of the night in Marion, Indiana, NBA legend Bill Russell woke up the mayor to return a ceremonial key to the city. His reason? "It doesn't work." Just hours earlier, Russell and his Black teammates had been denied service at a local restaurant—right after the mayor had proudly presented him with that same key in a downtown ceremony. It's a story even die-hard basketball fans have never heard.
Bill Russell wasn't just the greatest winner in NBA history with 11 championships. He was also one of the sport's most fearless civil rights advocates in an era when that came at tremendous personal cost. This forgotten incident in Marion reveals the gulf between symbolic gestures and actual change in 1960s America—and why Russell's courage extended far beyond the basketball court. Along the way, we'll discover his special relationship with legendary coach Red Auerbach and witness one of the most pointed protests in sports history.
Subscribe to Hometown History for forgotten American history stories every week. New episodes release Tuesdays.
Show Notes: In This Episode:
Key Figures:
Tags: Bill Russell, Marion Indiana, Indiana history, 1960s history, NBA history, Boston Celtics, civil rights movement, segregation, forgotten history, local history, American sports history, Red Auerbach, basketball history, civil rights protest, small-town America, racial discrimination, sports activism, Midwest history
Category: History
Chapter Markers: 0:00 - Introduction: Phil Jackson's Dream Team Pick 2:00 - Marion Welcomes a Legend 3:30 - The Restaurant Incident 5:30 - Returning the Key 7:00 - Red Auerbach's Revolutionary Leadership 8:45 - The Lexington Boycott 10:00 - Why Symbolic Gestures Aren't Enough
By Shane Waters4.5
138138 ratings
In the middle of the night in Marion, Indiana, NBA legend Bill Russell woke up the mayor to return a ceremonial key to the city. His reason? "It doesn't work." Just hours earlier, Russell and his Black teammates had been denied service at a local restaurant—right after the mayor had proudly presented him with that same key in a downtown ceremony. It's a story even die-hard basketball fans have never heard.
Bill Russell wasn't just the greatest winner in NBA history with 11 championships. He was also one of the sport's most fearless civil rights advocates in an era when that came at tremendous personal cost. This forgotten incident in Marion reveals the gulf between symbolic gestures and actual change in 1960s America—and why Russell's courage extended far beyond the basketball court. Along the way, we'll discover his special relationship with legendary coach Red Auerbach and witness one of the most pointed protests in sports history.
Subscribe to Hometown History for forgotten American history stories every week. New episodes release Tuesdays.
Show Notes: In This Episode:
Key Figures:
Tags: Bill Russell, Marion Indiana, Indiana history, 1960s history, NBA history, Boston Celtics, civil rights movement, segregation, forgotten history, local history, American sports history, Red Auerbach, basketball history, civil rights protest, small-town America, racial discrimination, sports activism, Midwest history
Category: History
Chapter Markers: 0:00 - Introduction: Phil Jackson's Dream Team Pick 2:00 - Marion Welcomes a Legend 3:30 - The Restaurant Incident 5:30 - Returning the Key 7:00 - Red Auerbach's Revolutionary Leadership 8:45 - The Lexington Boycott 10:00 - Why Symbolic Gestures Aren't Enough

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