<P align=left>Arthur Wharton was the world's first Black professional footballer and 100 yards world record holder. He was probably the first African to play professional cricket in the Yorkshire and Lancashire leagues. But while he was beating the best on the tracks and fields of Britain, the peoples of the continent of his birth were being recast as lesser human beings. The tall Ghanaian irritated white supremacists because his education and sporting triumphs refuted their theories. In the late Victorian era, when Britain's economic and political power reached its zenith and when the dominant ideas of the age labeled all blacks as inferior, it was simply not expedient to proclaim the exploits of an African sportsman. This shaped the way Wharton was forgotten.<P align=left>As his sporting powers waned, so did his fame and earning power. He died a penniless coal-miner, and his grave remained unmarked until 1997. His absence from the histories of football, and to a lesser extent athletics, is being righted, yet this book shows that the deeds of many black and working class people suffered the same fate.<P align=left>The last chapter attempts to explain why Arthur Wharton, such an important figure from the history of sport in Britain, was so quickly forgotten.<P align=left><P class=MsoNormal style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; TEXT-ALIGN: center" align=center><U><SPAN lang=EN-GB style="FONT-SIZE: 16pt">AN ABSENCE OF MEMORY</SPAN></U><U><SPAN lang=EN-GB style="FONT-SIZE: 16pt"><?xml:namespace prefix = o /><o
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></SPAN></U><P class=MsoNormal style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; TEXT-ALIGN: center" align=center><SPAN lang=EN-GB style="FONT-SIZE: 14pt">THE FORGOTTEN HISTORY OF ARTHUR WHARTON, 1865-1930, THE FIRST BLACK PROFESSIONAL FOOTBALLER<o
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></SPAN><P class=MsoNormal style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; TEXT-ALIGN: center" align=center><SPAN lang=EN-GB style="FONT-SIZE: 14pt"></SPAN><SPAN lang=EN-GB style="FONT-SIZE: 14pt">PHIL VASILI</SPAN><SPAN lang=EN-GB style="FONT-SIZE: 16pt"> <o
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></SPAN><P class=MsoNormal style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; TEXT-ALIGN: center" align=center><SPAN lang=EN-GB style="FONT-SIZE: 16pt"></SPAN><HR><P class=MsoNormal style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; TEXT-ALIGN: center" align=center><SPAN lang=EN-GB style="FONT-SIZE: 16pt"><o
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></SPAN><P class=MsoNormal style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; TEXT-ALIGN: center" align=center><SPAN lang=EN-GB style="FONT-SIZE: 16pt">CHAPTER 13<o
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></SPAN><P class=MsoNormal style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%; TEXT-ALIGN: center" align=center><SPAN lang=EN-GB style="FONT-SIZE: 14pt">CLASS, ETHNICITY AND MEMORY: THE SELECTIVE APPROACH TO HISTORY</SPAN><P class=MsoNormal style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%"><SPAN lang=EN-GB><o
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></SPAN><P class=MsoNormal style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%"><U><SPAN lang=EN-GB>Of Princes</SPAN></U><P class=MsoNormal style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%"><SPAN lang=EN-GB>A sporting contemporary of Arthur’s was KS Ranjitsinhji an Indian prince who used the cricket bat to produce fleeting moments of wonder and lasting memories of beauty. During the summer of 1899 he beat the scoring record of the legendary WG Grace by accumulating 3,000 runs over the season. In Beyond A Boundary Trinidadian Marxist CLR James leaves the reader in no doubt as to the elevated status and place ‘Ranji’ held - and still holds - within the sport. He was revered by followers of cricket throughout the British empire. He is irremovable from the pantheon of Great Names of Cricket.</SPAN><P class=MsoNormal style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%"><SPAN lang=EN-GB><o
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></SPAN><P class=MsoNormal style="LINE-HEIGHT: 200%"><SPAN lang=EN-GB>Why has this not been so for Wharton
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