The Brown Bullet: Rajo Jack’s Drive to Integrate Auto Racing

· Tantor Media Inc · Narrated by David Sadzin
Audiobook
9 hr 21 min
Unabridged
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About this audiobook

The powers-that-be in auto racing in the 1920s, namely the American Automobile Association's Contest Board, prohibited everyone who wasn't a white male from the sport. Dewey Gaston, a black man who went by the name Rajo Jack, broke into the epicenter of racing in California, refusing to let the pervasive racism of his day stop him from competing against entire fields of white drivers. In The Brown Bullet, Bill Poehler uncovers the life of a long-forgotten trailblazer and the great lengths he took to even get on the track, and in the end, tells how Rajo Jack proved to a generation that a black man could compete with some of the greatest white drivers of his era, wining some of the biggest races of the day.

About the author

Bill Poehler is an award-winning investigative journalist based in the northwest, where he has worked as a reporter for the Statesman Journal for twenty-one years. His work has appeared in the Oregonian, the Eugene Register-Guard and the Corvallis Gazette-Times, and online at OPB.org and KGW.com. He lives in Salem, Oregon.

When he was seven, David Sadzin's first grade teacher gave him a paragraph to read out loud. She interrupted him halfway to proclaim him "The Ringmaster" in his class's musical extravaganza about the circus. He's been using his voice to get out of trouble ever since.

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