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Changing the Course

How Charlie Sifford and Stanley Mosk Integrated the PGA
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The compelling, little-known story of golfer Charlie Sifford and attorney Stanley Mosk who together made history by taking on the PGA and their Caucasians Only by-law.

It began with a chance meeting at a Los Angeles country club in 1959. That was the day Charlie Sifford, the first Black golfer to get his PGA card, and Stanley Mosk, a crusading attorney general of California and future state Supreme Court justice, met for the first time. Little did either of them know that it would grow into a history-making alliance that would end segregation in professional golf.

In Changing the Course: How Charlie Sifford and Stanley Mosk Integrated the PGA, Peter May tells the captivating story of Sifford and Mosk’s battle to end the rank racial discrimination that had been codified in the constitution of the PGA. Black golfers who preceded Sifford, such as Bill Spiller and Ted Rhodes, had unsuccessfully challenged the PGA’s discriminatory policy. Sifford had been fighting the PGA for years just to be able to compete with the white players. Mosk had little knowledge of the PGA or the fact that Blacks were being discriminated against by the organization’s by-laws. But the golfer had a cause that the attorney general was only too eager to champion. The two made for a powerful pair.

Changing the Course focuses on the individual journeys of Sifford and Mosk before delving into the crucial intersection of their lives that changed the professional golf world forever. Their stories provide a window into the changing landscape of mid-20th century America when the nation was forced to confront its history of racial injustice in professional sports and beyond.

Peter May has spent the last four decades covering sports for the Boston Globe, the New York Times, ESPN, the Hartford Courant and United Press International. He continues to freelance for the Boston Globe and the New York Times. He is the author of five books, most recently The Open Question: Ben Hogan and Golfs Most Enduring Controversy, which was nominated for the Herbert Warren Wind Award. He lives in New Hampshire.

Acknowledgments A Note on Sources Foreword Prologue Chapter 1 BEGINNINGS Chapter 2 STANLEY Chapter 3 THE BENEFACTORS Chapter 4 STANLEY, THE DEATH PENALTY AND THE DEMOCRATIC REVIVAL IN CALIFORNIA Chapter 5 THE FIGHT CONTINUES Chapter 6 THE OBNOXIOUS RESTRICTION ARONIMINK - JULY 1962 Chapter 7 CHARLIE IN THE 60S Chapter 8 STANLEY IN THE 60S Chapter 9 THE MASTERS Chapter 10 BAKKE, BIRD, A SENIOR MOMENT AND AN ELUSIVE BUICK Epilogue Bibliography

The compelling, little-known story of golfer Charlie Sifford and attorney Stanley Mosk who together made history by taking on the PGA and their Caucasian Only by-law.

Peter Mays storytelling here qualifies as marvelous but also as crucial: It’s crucial that we learn the details and the human cost of the vile realities of our history.
— Chuck Culpepper, Washington Post sportswriter and author of William Hill award finalist Bloody Confused: A Clueless American Sportswriter Seeks Solace in English Soccer

Stanley Mosk did as much for us as Charlie Sifford did. We couldn’t play. Even though Charlie laid the groundwork, it was Mosk who opened the door. This book finally tells that story.
— Walter Morgan, three-time winner on the PGA Senior Tour

With cogent reporting and new insights, Peter May resurrects the pivotal story of how Charlie Sifford and Stanley Mosk, improbable allies, valiantly worked together to end codified racial discrimination in golf. It is a 1960s tale thats more relevant than ever today.
— Bill Pennington, the New York Times

In these pages, Peter May lays out with intricate detail the story of the unlikely partnership of the Black North Carolina golfer and the fearless California attorney general with all the highs and lows inherent to such an undertaking.
— Ed Eckstine, son of Charlie’s pal Billy and longtime entertainment executive

Not only is Peter May’s tracking of the chance intersection of Black golf great Charlie Sifford and the first Jew elected statewide in California, attorney general Stanley Mosk, to end golf’s infamous Caucasians-only rule in 1961 revelatory, but it also reminds with interesting recounting from news reports of the day just how ingrained racism was in golf and, disturbingly, how the most celebrated names in the game had refused to engage it.
— Kevin Blackistone, ESPN panelist, University of Maryland journalism professor, and Washington Post sports columnist

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