WASHINGTON, DC – The University of the District of Columbia Department of Athletics is proud to announce the 7th Annual Athletics Hall of Fame Induction Class. The celebration will be held on February 16th, 2018 at the UDC Student Center Ballroom.
Event Details
Date: Friday, February 16th, 2018
Time: 6:00 p.m. Reception; 7:00 p.m. Dinner and Induction Ceremony
Location:
UDC Student Center Ballroom
4200 Connecticut Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20008
Tickets: To purchase tickets, click here
Parking: Parking is available at the University garage off of Van Ness Street
Metro: UDC Student Center is located adjacent to the UDC-Van Ness Red Line metro station
*For more information, please visit the Hall of Fame page on the UDC Athletics Website.
University of the District of Columbia 7th Annual Hall of Fame Induction Class:
Bennie F. Adams, Jr.
District of Columbia Teachers College – 1966
Baseball and Football Student-Athlete & Coach
Bennie Adams, Jr. played varsity
baseball from 1963-1966 and two years of football for the Cougars. He
excelled in baseball, captaining the team and earning Team Most Valuable
Player honors in both his final two seasons. He played three different
positions over his career, including pitcher, shortstop and catcher, and
his claim to fame was his one-hit shutout he pitched against Howard
University in 1964.
Phillip Stevens
District of Columbia Teachers College – 1976
Basketball and Football Student-Athlete
A dual-sport standout in football and
basketball at District of Columbia Teachers College, Phillip Stevens
earned five varsity letters (three in football, two in basketball) and
was the last DCTC student-athlete to win the Reslyn Woodruff Henley
Award in 1976. An outstanding quarterback, Stevens completed 17
touchdown passes over his three-year career (1971-73) and ran one in
himself during his freshman season as well. He started at quarterback
the final five games of the season as a freshman and carried his team to
five straight victories – the program's longest ever win streak. He
also played two seasons of basketball from 1974-1976.
Carolyn Wells
UDC – 1980
Track & Field Student-Athlete
Carolyn Wells represented the University
of the District of Columbia in several track meets from 1977-1980,
including: the North Carolina State Invitational, William & Mary
Invitational, CYO Invitational, Richmond Invitational, AIAW
Championship, University of Maryland Invitational, and the Howard
University Relays. She ran in the US Olympic Trials in Eugene, Oregon in
1976 where she was a semifinalist in the 400 meter, and she won the 400
meter Intermediate Hurdles at the 1978 Penn Relays.
Alice Butler
University of the District of Columbia - 1984
Basketball Student-Athlete
A transfer student-athlete from American
University who competed for UDC Athletic Hall of Fame head coach Bessie
Stockard, Alice Butler was instrumental in lifting the young University
of the District of Columbia women's basketball program to prominence in
the early 1980's. A top-10 nationally-ranked performer in the points
per-game and rebounding statistical categories, she was considered the
most outstanding intercollegiate women's basketball student-athlete in
Washington, DC. As outstanding as she was on the basketball court, she
was equally as outstanding in the classroom, becoming UDC's first ever
College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA) Academic
All-American in 1981.
Edwin B. Henderson
Miner Normal School - 1904
Basketball Student-Athlete & Coach
Known as the "Father of Black
Basketball" because of his efforts at making Washington, DC known as the
"Birthplace of Black Basketball", Edwin Bancroft Henderson was a
prolific basketball athlete. Well-known for his leaping ability, he
played center – which, at the time was a critical position because each
basket was followed by a jump ball. He graduated first in his class at
Miner Normal School in 1904, then went on to attend Howard University
Medical School until it closed and he ultimately enrolled at Harvard
University. He was the first black man certified to teach physical
education in the United States, formed the first African American
Athletic Conference (ISAA), organized the 12th Street Colored
YMCA (where his team won the 1909 Black National Championship), and
coached the first Howard U. varsity basketball team to an undefeated and
World Basketball Championship season in 1910. He also co-edited the
Spalding Official Handbook from 1910-1913, formed the Public School
Athletic League in 1914, founded the Eastern Board of Officials, and he
helped integrate AAU boxing.
Later, in 1918, he formed the first
Rural Branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People (NAACP) in Falls Church, VA. He authored two books: The Negro in Sports (1938), and The Black Athlete: Emergence and Arrival (1968).
Henderson was inducted into the Black
Athletes Hall of Fame in 1974, and in 2013 he was inducted into the
Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame.
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