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Vanderburgh County Crash Reports

03/07/2023
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CrashReportR1 (4)

Attorney General Todd Rokita Shuts Down Massive Robocall Operation

03/07/2023
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Attorney General Todd Rokita shuts down massive robocall operation

Attorney General Todd Rokita this week obtained judgments shutting down a massive robocall operation that has blasted billions of illegal robocalls to people across the country, including in Indiana. In 2019 and 2020 alone, the defendants bombarded Hoosiers with more than 25 million robocalls.

“Winning the war on robocalls requires constantly staying on offense and tracking the latest technologies the scammers are using to carry out their schemes,” Attorney General Rokita said. “We have pledged to do that since we first took office, and we continue to make good on that promise.”

Defendants, in this case, include John Caldwell Spiller II and his business partner Jakob Mears, the owners of Texas-based Rising Eagle Capital Group LLC and JSquared Telecom LLC, as well as Rising Eagle Capital Group–Cayman.

The Office of the Attorney General sued the defendants in June 2020 alleging violations of the federal Telephone Consumer Protection Act and the federal Telemarketing Sales Rule, as well as various state consumer protection laws. The complaint alleged that defendants used their companies to perpetrate scams involving extended car warranties and health care services, among other things.

The defendants also spoofed calls to mislead consumers and called people on Do Not Call lists. The 25 million Hoosiers called in 2019 and 2020 included more than 13.5 million calls to people whose numbers were on the Do Not Call Registry and 5 million calls to Hoosiers on Indiana Do Not Call List.

In achieving the successful multistate settlements, Attorney General Rokita worked with attorneys general in Arkansas, Michigan, Missouri, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, and Texas.

Mears and Spiller are now permanently banned from 1) initiating or facilitating any robocalls, 2) working in or with companies that make robocalls, or 3) engaging in any telemarketing.

The court also ordered monetary judgements totaling more than $244 million for Spiller and Mears combined — though these payments will be largely suspended in favor of the permanent operational bans and because of their inability to pay.

Attorney General Rokita’s legal action in this matter isn’t over. The attorneys general are continuing their cases in this same litigation against Florida-based Scott Shapiro, Michael Theron Smith Jr., and Health Advisors of America Inc. These defendants allegedly worked with Mears and Spiller to make illegal robocalls targeting consumers who never asked to be contacted by Health Advisors.

The Mears and Spiller judgments are attached.

2022 UE Graduates Achieve Strong Outcomes

03/07/2023
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ue building
ue building

EVANSVILLE, IND. (03/06/2023) After surveying the class of 2022 graduates, the University of Evansville (UE) is pleased to report that 98 percent of graduates were employed or pursuing further education within six months of graduation. The median salary of those employed full-time was $55,000.

The survey, conducted annually, is a collaborative effort between the University’s Center for Career Development, Office of Institutional Effectiveness, and the Office of Alumni and Engagement. Data was gathered from surveys at the time of graduation, as well as alumni surveys, academic departments, the National Student Clearinghouse, and other methods. Approximately 93 percent of 2022 graduates provided career outcome information.

Outcomes improved over the previous year, as the nation’s economy slightly recovered from the pandemic. The class of 2021 outcomes included 95 percent of graduates employed or pursuing further education within six months of graduating.

“From academics to ChangeLab, to research and internships, the University of Evansville provides a robust and comprehensive educational experience that incorporates a strong foundation of career readiness,” said Dianna Cundiff, director of the Center for Career Development. “These essential competencies, including critical thinking, communication and leadership, along with support from our office, prepare students for success in their future endeavors.”

For nearly a decade, the Center for Career Development has implemented an “end to end” approach to career success. When a prospective student visits campus, they meet with the Center to review career interests, take a free career assessment, and explore future job opportunities. As a student, the Center offers appointments to assist with resumes and cover letters, mock interviews, and career advising. Job fairs are held throughout the year to connect students with local and regional employers. After graduation, the Center continues its outreach to alums to ensure each individual’s success.

The University of Evansville is a private, comprehensive university located in the southwestern region of Indiana. Established in 1854, UE is recognized across the globe for its rich tradition of innovative, academic excellence and vibrant campus community of changemakers.

Larry Melvin Davis, 76, of Newburgh IN, Passed Away In His Home, Surrounded By Family

03/07/2023
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Larry Melvin Davis, 76, of Newburgh IN, passed away  in his home, surrounded by family

Larry, the eldest of seven children, was born October 11, 1946, in Chicago Heights IL to the late Robert and Alice (Criswell) Davis.

He attended Morley Stanwood High School in Morley MI. After high school, Larry enlisted in the United States Navy, where he served aboard the USS Irex submarine off the coast of Italy.

After the service, he returned to Michigan to work. Larry met Sheila VanAlstine, whom he married in Grant Center MI in 1971. They had two daughters, Michelle and Janie.

Larry earned his Bachelor of Science in Business at Ferris State College in Big Rapids MI. He worked for Western Electric in Nunica MI.

In Spring of 1983, the family of four moved to Chandler IN, where Larry took a position in Quality Control for Bell Communications Research. Larry and Sheila built their home in Newburgh IN, where the two have lived for the last twenty years.

In his younger years, Larry enjoyed fishing, hunting, and golfing. He had a fondness for motorcycles and often spoke of the Ducati he owned and drove while in Italy.

Preceded in death by his parents; brother, Carris Davis; and sister, Aleta (Frank) Starr.

Survived by his wife, Sheila; daughters, Michelle (David) Abney and Janie (Noah) Robinson; grandchildren, Kayla (Colin Hogan) Robinson, Lauren (Fable) McDaniel, Katie (Scott) Klem, Hannah (Matthew Roberts) Abney, Ethan Abney, and Kyle Robinson; great-granddaughter Adeline Klem; and siblings, Robert Lee (Cindy) Davis, Gary Davis, Peggy (Victor) Rempalski, and Linda (Kenneth) Whipple.

Larry’s family would like to extend a special thanks to his nurses; Sonja Collins, Gretchen Simpson, Kristy Patterson, and Amy Barnes.

Funeral service to be held Friday, March 10, 2023, at 1:00 p.m. at Alexander Funeral Home, Newburgh Chapel. Family and friends may visit from Noon until service time at the funeral home. Interment to follow at Rose Hill Cemetery.

In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in honor of Larry to the Wounded Warriors Project at P.O. Box 758516, Topeka, Kansas 66675-8516.

Recent Consumer Alert: Products Recalled 

03/07/2023
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PRODUCT RECALL
PRODUCT RECALL

Recent Consumer Alert: Products Recalled 

Attorney General Todd Rokita alerted Hoosiers of important consumer protection concerns for products recalled in February. Attorney General Rokita encourages consumers to take advantage of opportunities available for those who purchased the recalled items. 

“Hoosiers deserve protection from products that are faulty, especially when they can injure our most precious assets, our children,” Attorney General Rokita said. “If you have one of the recalled products, stop using it immediately and pursue resolution from the manufacturer.” 

According to the Consumer Product Safety Commission, the following consumer products were recalled in February: 

Children’s Pajamas from Paper Cape 

Children’s Robes from Amazon 

Lancaster Table & Seating Brand High Chairs from Clark Associates 

Ovation Protege Equestrian Helmets from English Riding Supply 

ODGER Swivel Chairs from IKEA 

Silver Lining Cloud Activity Gyms from Skip Hop 

LiftMaster myQ Garage Door Control Panels from Chamberlain   

Fabuloso Multi-Purpose Cleaners from Colgate-Palmolive   

Side-By-Side Vehicles from BRP 

“My First” Disney-Character Figurines from Kids Preferred 

Outdoor Kitchens from Paradise Grills    

Electric Bicycles from Linus Bike   

Mainstays Three-Wick Candles from Star Soap Star Candle Prayer Candle   

FOOTNOTE: If you believe you recently purchased a recalled product, stop using it, and check its recall notice. Then follow the notice’s instructions, including where to return the product or what steps must be taken to receive a replacement product. 

 

Otters Looking for gameday staff, announce job fair

03/07/2023
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EVANSVILLE, Ind. – The Evansville Otters are looking for individuals to join the gameday staff for the 2023 season.

The Otters franchise is looking for great candidates to help things run all around Historic Bosse Field.

Our gameday staff is vital, as they help create lifelong memories for all who visit Bosse Field for Evansville Otters games!

The current openings for the 2023 season include:
Concession Stand Manager
Cooks
Cashier
Food Prep
In-Stand Waitstaff/Hawkers
Beer Server
Ticket Taker
Ticket Seller
Operations/Cleaning
Ushers
Picnic Attendants
Grounds Crew
Bat Boys
Video Camera Operator

Candidates must be able to meet the following conditions in the work environment:

Have a friendly personality, connecting and assisting fans of all ages.
Be able to walk/stand on their feet for considerable amounts of time between breaks.
Properly take care of their health and stay hydrated during warm, summer months.

If you would like to join us for the 2023 season, please visit evansvilleotters.com/employment and fill out an application. All jobs can also be found and applied for here.

The Otters are also hosting a Summer Job Fair on March 14th from 4-6 PM at Bosse Field where individuals can drop off applications and have on-the-spot interviews for 2023 employment.

Applicants must be 15 years of age or older to apply, and resumes are encouraged but not necessary.

Senate Passes Senator Braun’s Bipartisan Challenge To Biden 401(k) Rule

03/07/2023
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Senate passes Senator Braun’s bipartisan challenge to Biden 401(k) rule in major rebuke of White House

WASHINGTON — Today, Senator Mike Braun’s challenge to President Biden’s ESG rule that puts politics over profits for Hoosiers’ 401(k)s passed the U.S. Senate.

Senator Braun led every Republican Senator and Senator Joe Manchin as cosponsors on this challenge. Democratic Senator Jon Tester of Montana joined in voting against the Biden rule.

Biden’s rule, which went into effect in February, allows fiduciaries to invest based on ESG factors – which tend to favor President Biden’s political priorities, but produce a lower rate of return. Previously, fiduciaries could only invest based on the best rate of return for their clients. This rule applies to employer-sponsored 401(k)s, meaning 152 million Americans are subject to the new Biden rule.

The Senate passed the measure on a bipartisan vote of 50 to 46. It now goes to President Biden’s desk, where it is anticipated it will be his first veto: a bipartisan, bicameral rebuke of a major policy goal for the president.

Twenty-five states, including Indiana, are suing the Biden administration over this policy.

Senator Braun released this statement following his win on the Senate floor:

“My message to the White House is simple: Keep your hands off Hoosiers’ 401(k)s. President Biden is putting Hoosiers’ retirement savings at risk by changing the rules to allow money managers to invest based on progressive political goals rather than on the best rate of return. So many Americans’ retirement savings are already taking a hit from his inflation crisis,” said Senator Braun. “President Biden will now receive a searing, bipartisan rebuke of his policy that’s going to hurt Americans’ retirement savings.”

FOOTNOTE: Representative Andy Barr led the House version, which passed on a bipartisan vote of 216 – 2014 on Tuesday.

 

Watch out for phone scammers portraying themselves as Indiana State Police

03/07/2023
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Phone scammers are portraying themselves as Indiana State Police to get to unsuspecting Hoosiers.

This is usually an annual problem for the ISP; however, this scam involves the use of the ISP General Headquarters phone number.

ISP Captain Ron Galaviz, chief public information officer, said the perpetrators use ISP’s caller ID, which shows “Indiana State Police” and the phone number “317-232-8248.”

If the call is answered, the scammer says they are an Indiana State Police trooper and that the person they’re calling has drug charges pending in Texas.  The caller then threaten the person with arrest if a payment is not made.

Galaviz released a statement saying, “The ISP would NEVER call and ask for or demand any sort of payment for any reason whatsoever.” He warned the scammers can be “persuasive, convincing, and technically savvy,” and that they can “play” on people’s emotions to learn information.

Galaviz recommends not answering unrecognized numbers and hanging up when an unexpected call feels off.

If you think you have been scammed, immediately report what happened to the police, then alert your bank so the payment can be stopped. Galaviz warned that it’s “nearly impossible” to recover prepaid card or wire transfer transactions.

2 Babies Surrendered In 2 Days At Indiana Safe Haven Boxes

03/07/2023
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INDIANA, Ind. (WANE) — Across the Hoosier state, two newborns were surrendered at Safe Haven Baby Boxes in as many days in the past week. according to Safe Haven Baby Boxes, Inc.

These were the first two babies surrendered in 2023.

The first baby was dropped off at the Cleveland Township Fire Station in Elkhart. Less than 48 hours later, a baby was taken at the Wayne Township Fire Station in Indianapolis.

Monica Kelsey, founder of Safe Haven Baby Boxes explained, “We are very blessed that
these mothers chose to lovingly and legally surrender their infant. It is an act of sacrificial
love for the best interest of the infant. These babies are so loved and are an answered
prayer for adoptive families that will eagerly add them to their family. We work tirelessly to
educate citizens on Safe Haven Law and create positive headlines rather than
heartbreaking headlines where lives are destroyed and lost. Our organization is succeeding
at protecting vulnerable women and their infants by being proactive rather than reactive.”

According to the organization, 26 infants have been placed in a Baby Box since November 2017. Nationwide, 125 surrenders have resulted from calling the National Safe Haven hotline.

Safe Haven representatives will share more information on the newborns at a dual press conference Monday morning.

When the world’s most famous cyclist was a Black man and a Hoosier

03/07/2023
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When the world’s most famous cyclist was a Black man and a Hoosier

  • By Jack Sells, TheStatehouseFile.com
  • March 7, 2023

  • At one point, Indiana had a claim on the fastest cyclist in the world. In consecutive years, Marshall Taylor won a world title and U.S. title in bicycle racing.

    The sport at the time was immensely popular—“races attracted more fans than baseball, boxing, and horse racing combined,” according to Marlene Targ Brill’s book, “Marshall ‘Major’ Taylor”—and Taylor was the star.

    There’s nothing probable about becoming the best in the world at something. To reach the heights he reached, Taylor needed a combination of skill, determination and luck.

    And that alone would make a recount of Taylor’s life worthy of writing. But Taylor’s story is about more than a man born in Indianapolis becoming a world champion. It’s about a Black man, born 13 years after the Civil War, defying racism and sticking with his religious convictions—to the detriment of his career—on the way to immense athletic success.

    Who was Major?

    As Andrew Ritchie details in his biography on the cyclist, while Taylor’s grandparents had been slaves, his parents were born free. His father fought in the Civil War and later settled down with his wife and had eight children.

    At a young age, Taylor became locally famous for the tricks he was able to do on a bicycle. He wore a uniform while doing so and thus earned the nickname Major. Ritchie writes that Taylor wore “a soldier’s uniform” as “a publicity gimmick designed by Hay & Willits”—the bicycle store Taylor worked for.

    But how did Taylor, in the 1890s as a Black teenager who lived on a farm, have a bicycle to develop a skill set? And how did he get a job in the state capital?

    A lot of it came down to luck. His dad secured a job as a coachman for a white family, and after going with him to work sometimes, Taylor became close friends with the son, Daniel Southard. In Taylor’s words, he was “employed as his playmate and companion.” He lived with the Southards in Indianapolis and was even educated alongside Daniel.

    “There, at the Southards’, besides learning to read and write from a private tutor, he learned to talk, think and relate to others in ways different from those he would have learned at home or at a simple rural school,” wrote Ritchie.

    Taylor received a better education than he would have and got his start with a bicycle because of his relationship with the Southards.

    His second family eventually moved, and Taylor went back to his home on the farm, but it wasn’t much later that Taylor was once again taken in by someone—professional cyclist Louis “Birdie” Munger—and moved to Massachusetts.

    “He had gone from being a ‘millionaire’s son’ with the Southard family to being all but adopted by the man [Munger] who had been the world’s fastest cyclist,” Michael Kranish wrote in “The World’s Fastest Man.” “Throughout his life, this would be a pattern, as he simultaneously faced the most brutal racism but also was embraced by a series of benefactors who were impressed by his talent and treated him without regard to race.”

    Being a Black professional cyclist at the turn of the century

    Dated from either 1906 or 1907, this was one of many photos of Taylor taken by French photographer Jules Beau (1864-1932). On Taylor’s 1901 trip to Europe, Michael Kranish wrote, “Taylor’s arrival coincided with the introduction of what would be called photojournalism.” Beau took more photos of Taylor than anyone else, according to Kranish.

    This image, now in the public domain, is from the Bibliothèque national de France, France’s national library, and is a scan of the original picture. It was accessed through Wikimedia Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Major_Taylor,_1906-1907.jpg  Photo by Jules Beau.

    Taylor was in uncharted territory when, in 1897, he “became the first black cyclist to enter bicycle racing as a full-time professional,” according to Ritchie.

    Taylor, while aided by fans and an often supportive press, still faced racism while in his sphere as a professional athlete—from competitors, race organizers and some newspapers. And this was on top of what occurred in the more private realm. There are numerous examples of Taylor being refused entry into a restaurant or hotel when traveling to compete.

    Taylor also lost multiple chances to win a U.S. championship or world title. Sometimes this was because of nefarious actions from race organizers and professional cyclist leagues, and other times Taylor chose to take principled stands.

    The cyclist faced a particularly infuriating and demoralizing sequence of events in Missouri in 1898.

    Taylor traveled to St. Louis to race and couldn’t find a hotel that would allow him to stay there, leaving him to seek shelter with a local family. Not wanting to inconvenience them, Taylor would ride his bike to a restaurant at a train station for every meal.

    Or at least he did so until he was told he could no longer eat there. (A Black waiter stood up for Taylor and was fired as a result.)

    Then a race got postponed to a Sunday, but Taylor had been clear before that he wouldn’t compete on that day of the week due to his religious convictions. “Taylor had in fact been promised … that there would be no Sunday racing, and this decision in St. Louis was an obvious and immediate betrayal,” Ritchie wrote.

    Taylor wanted to go home to Worcester, Massachusetts, but was convinced to travel to another race in Missouri by a race promoter who said he owned a hotel where Taylor could stay. And yet the man went back on his word, instead saying there was a Black family Taylor could stay with, and Taylor left town, breaking his contract in the process.

    Prior to this—before Taylor transitioned to cycling professionally—the League of American Wheelmen voted it would no longer accept Black cyclists as members.

    Strongly agreeing with the move, a columnist for The Referee, described as “a weekly cycling trade journal with a large circulation” by Ritchie, lambasted those not in favor.

    The gist of the racist tirade? The inclusion of African Americans in the league was “an evil which would sooner or later have ruined the LAW in the great southland.”

    The columnist made clear he had “no desire to deprecate … the race,” but that was incongruous with almost every other sentence in the column.

    “Were these enthusiastic lovers of the blacks to question those who know, they would learn that the negro has little interest in anything beyond his daily needs, his personal vanity and a cake walk or barbers’ hall now and then,” it read.

    Black men were a monolith, according to the writer—illustrated by him description them in the singular. “He is a lazy, happy-go-lucky animal” with “lack-brain carelessness” and “thievish … proclivities,” he wrote.

    While not directed at Taylor, this columnist’s opinions were mirrored by plenty of others when Taylor was a professional athlete.

    And the onslaught of discrimination led to Taylor attempting to alter his appearance through an extreme measure—or at least, what would be seen as extreme today.

    Kranish’s account includes details of how Taylor and Munger endeavored to change Taylor’s skin color through advertised products.

    “Birdie Munger … tried in various ways to make me white … and on one occasion by the bleaching process,” according to Taylor. “On that occasion, my hair turned red almost by the action of the cream and the skin was nearly burned off me. Then I thought I was going to die.”

    “We told him that we would bleach him and make him white,” Munger said to the Detroit Free Press in 1897. “He took us at our word and submitted to an operation. The mixture was poisonous in the extreme.

    “It was a sort of cream, and for days and days we poured it on the lad. His hair turned a sort of red, and his skin did seem to be turning whiter and whiter. But the solution was working to the detriment to the lad’s health, and we had to stop it. He has never been as dark, though, as he was before the operation.”

    African Americans during the time felt “pressured to take desperate measures they believed were needed in order to survive a Jim Crow society,” wrote Kranish. “Advertisements in African American newspapers showed before and after pictures of how a black person looked white after the treatment, which was claimed to be ‘harmless.’”

    The Journal of Pan African Studies, in 2011, published scholarship on skin bleaching in the 1920s, and said skin bleach “advertisements directed towards men were more likely to emphasize upward mobility than physical attractiveness.”

    This seems to fit with why Taylor underwent the bleaching. Munger said it came down to Taylor being “refused entry to a race owing to his color.”

    Major’s major accomplishments

    Today, the typical American’s knowledge of cycling may be limited to the Tour de France, and while the multi-day, long-distance race was around during Taylor’s heyday, Taylor largely kept to short distances on a track.

    Taylor set so many records ranging in distances from â…• mile to 2 miles, that it would be tiresome to list them. (But Kranish did for those interested.) Maybe most notably, in a two-day span in 1898, Taylor set world records in seven different distances.

    Kranish also broke down Taylor’s first tours through Europe. In 1901, Taylor got first place 42 times—according to Taylor, 39 according to others—second place 11 times, and third three times.

    And the man was similarly dominant the next year, winning 40 races, finishing second 15 times and nabbing third place twice.

    The various racing organizations and ways to win championships can be difficult to follow, but in 1899, Taylor was named the world champion in the mile, and in 1900, he became the American sprint champion.

    As probably expected, Taylor’s career was full of historical firsts and feats.

    Ritchie lays it out: “He was one of the first black athletes to be a member of an integrated professional team, the first to have a commercial sponsor, the first to establish world records. He was the second African-American world champion in any sport, preceded only by George Dixon, the bantamweight boxer. He was the first black athlete to compete regularly in integrated competition for an annual American championship.”

    Taylor’s legacy

    During his lifetime, the cyclist reached a level of popularity that meant famous people from other fields followed his career.

    Kranish wrote about two separate examples of this. Before Taylor’s 1902 tour in Europe, Booker T. Washington—about a year removed from being invited to the White House by President Teddy Roosevelt—took some students to see Taylor before he got on a boat to cross the Atlantic Ocean.

    And in 1916, Roosevelt himself visited Taylor.

    “Taking into consideration all the millions of human beings on the face of the earth, whenever I run across an individual who stands out as peer over all others in any profession or vocation it is indeed a wonderful distinction, and honor and pleasure enough for me,” Taylor recalled the former commander-in-chief saying.

    “He had become the most prominent black American athlete, and one of the most celebrated black Americans,” Ritchie said, referring to the end of the 1898 season.

    Taylor reached some high highs during his life but he faced tough times towards the end of his life. At the end of his career, Taylor turned back on his promise not to race on Sundays. After retiring, he got involved in multiple business ventures that failed and put him in an unfortunate spot financially.

    In 1932, Taylor died in Chicago at the age of 53, impoverished and estranged from his wife and daughter.

    Because of this, and aided by the fact that cycling’s popularity waned, Taylor’s death went largely unnoticed for a long time. Then, in 1948, a group called the Bicycle Racing Stars of the Nineteenth Century gave Taylor, in Kranish’s words, “a proper memorial.”

    Since then, there have been efforts to tell Taylor’s story to the public. The Major Taylor Association is a nonprofit that raises money to preserve a statue of the cyclist in Worcester, Massachusetts, as well as “to educate people about Major Taylor’s life and legacy.”

    Forty-one years ago, the Major Taylor Velodrome in Indianapolis was built and is now home to the Major Taylor Racing League and Marian University’s 47-time national champion cycling team.

    And in June, the Major Taylor International Cycling Alliance will be hosting a convention named after Taylor in Indianapolis.

    Taylor’s legacy to those who know of him is likely the success he had as a Black cyclist, and as Kranish noted, Taylor wrote in his autobiography that he hoped Black kids would “carry on in spite of that dreadful monster prejudice, and with patience, courage, fortitude and perseverance, achieve success for themselves. I trust they will use that terrible prejudice as an inspiration to struggle on to the heights in their chosen vocations.”

    Taylor’s own “patience, courage, fortitude and perseverance” make up the bedrock of how he was able to become the fastest man in the world and why he can now serve as an inspiration to anyone willing to learn about him almost 150 years after he was born.

    Taylor, in a letter that he sent back to a fan who had applauded him for continuing to not race on Sundays, expresses his overarching attitude toward life:

    “I am laboring under the greatest temptation of my life, and I pray each day for God to give me more grace and more faith to stand up for what I know to be right. … I have no fear for the future, for I feel that I will be taken care of, although things seem very cloudy at present. … Yours in Christ, Major Taylor.”

    Footnote: Quotes from Taylor, whether from his autobiography or newspapers covering him, as well as quotes from his contemporaries, came from the three books referenced in the article: “The World’s Fastest Man” by Michael Kranish, “Major Taylor” by Andrew Ritchie, and “Marshall “Major” Taylor” by Marlene Targ Brill.

 

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