The modern history of the “Redskins” name confirms its racist legacy. In 1932, a year before I (Sen. Campbell) was born, a Washington, DC laundry operator, George Preston Marshall purchased part of the National Football League's newest team, the Boston Braves. Perhaps inspired by the era's Saturday matinee westerns where “bloodthirsty Redskin savages” fought “cowboy heroes,” the next year Marshall gave the team a new name: "Redskins." In 1937, Marshall moved his "Redskins" to Washington, DC. After World War II, professional sports franchises faced pressure to integrate. In 1946, Bill Willis and Marion Motley in Cleveland and Kenny Washington and Woody Strode in Los Angeles broke pro football’s “color barrier.” The next year, Jackie Robinson broke the major league baseball “color barrier.” Marshall was strongly opposed to integration and the "Redskins" were the last NFL team to integrate, holding out until 1962, when pressure from NFL owners, Commissioner Pete Rozelle, President Kennedy's Interior Secretary, Stewart Udall, and a groundswell of public opinion finally pushed Marshall to integrate, trading Cleveland for Bobby Mitchell, one of the great players of all-time and a Hall of Famer. Mitchell, an African American, recalled his introduction to Marshall at a welcome luncheon that opened with everyone participating in a sing-along of "Dixie." Jack Kent Cooke owned the Washington football team sometime after Marshall's death in 1969, until he passed in 1997. With new ownership came new hope that the racism would end, yet NFL Merchandising became big business in the 1970's and 80's, and Cooke had a financial incentive. When pressed, he "doubled down" saying “Redskins” was a "tribute to the courage and strength of American Indians." Mr. Cooke needed a new stadium in the District on federal land and I (Sen. Campbell) introduced a Senate bill prohibiting any new stadium from being built on federal land by any “organization exploiting any racial or ethnic group or using nomenclature that includes a reference to real or alleged physical characteristics of Native Americans or other groups of human beings." Cooke's response was to move the team to Landover, MD where FED-EX Field was born. In the late 1990's, Daniel Snyder became the latest owner to thumb his nose at the requests of Indian people for respect, even when his team's trademark was revoked by the U.S. Patent Office in Harjo and Blackhorse v. Pro Football, Inc . It was restored by a Supreme Court decision. Snyder said, "We'll never change the name. It's that simple. NEVER —you can use caps." I (Chairman Stevens) welcome Mr. Snyder to the land of NEVER. The name change is long overdue, and we hope Dan Snyder 'sees the light' and has been touched by the Creator to do what is right. We know FedEX and NIKE brought the light by doing the right thing and pulling corporate sponsorships, including sponsorship of FedEX field. Today, I am more proud than ever to sit on the NIKE N-7 Board of Advisors (Champion) Supporting Native American Youth.
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