Good Morning POU!
Today we honor the legendary coach of Winston Salem State University, Clarence “Big House” Gaines.
Clarence Edward “Big House” Gaines, Sr. (May 21, 1923 – April 18, 2005) was a college men’s basketball coach with a 47-year coaching career at Winston-Salem State University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Among his numerous honors for his achievements, he is the only African American to have been inducted as a coach into the Basketball Hall of Fame.
Gaines was born in Paducah, Kentucky to Lester and Olivia Bolen Gaines. He attended local Lincoln High School where he excelled academically, played basketball, was an All-State football player, and played trumpet in the school band. He graduated as class salutatorian in 1941.
Jim Crow Era segregation laws and the suggestions of a family friend led him to attend Morgan State University (then Morgan State College), a historically black college in Baltimore, Maryland. He entered in the fall of 1941 on a football scholarship. At Morgan State, Gaines was given his nickname of “Big House”: a fellow student saw the 6 ft. 3in., 265 lb Gaines and declared: “You’re as big as a house.” Gaines played as a lineman for the Bears football team, was a member of the basketball team, and participated in track. Gaines was an All-CIAA selection as a lineman in football all four seasons and twice elected an All-American. When it came to basketball, he said he was “a very average basketball player.” In 2004, he explained, “I was an All-America in football, but I was just on the basketball team to have something to do.”
Gaines graduated from Morgan State in 1945 with a Bachelor’s of Science in Chemistry. He intended to go on into dental school, however his college football coach, Edward P. Hurt, suggested that he temporarily go to what was then known as Winston-Salem Teachers College. At the time, the small southern college had one coach for all sports, Brutus Wilson, who was also a Morgan State graduate; Hurt suggested that Gaines would make a good assistant coach. Gaines agreed and went to Winston-Salem.
In 1946, Wilson left for Shaw University, leaving Gaines as the head coach for football and basketball, athletic director, trainer, and ticket manager. He also taught. He served as football coach for three years (1946–49), and in 1948 was named Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (CIAA) “Football Coach of the Year” after leading his team to an 8-1 season. He dropped coaching football to focus on basketball in 1949.
Gaines coached basketball at Winston-Salem State University (WSSU) from 1946 to 1993, compiling an 828-447 record. He led the Rams to 18 20-win seasons, eight CIAA titles, and in 1967 led WSSU to a Division II NCAA Championship, making the Rams the first basketball program from a historically black college or university to capture an NCAA national championship.
Toward the end of his coaching career, Gaines struggled to recruit student players. The end of the Jim Crow Era laws led to college basketball becoming fully integrated at all levels. This made it difficult to lure star talent to WSSU.
Among Gaines notable student players were Earl Monroe; Cleo Hill, the first African American from an historically Black college or university to be drafted #1 by the National Basketball Association (St. Louis Hawks, 1961); and Stephen A. Smith, who became a noted commentator and columnist.
When Gaines retired from Winston-Salem State University in 1993, only Adolph Rupp had amassed more wins. He was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in 1982. He is the only African-American inducted in the Basketball Hall of Fame as a coach. After winning the national title in 1967, he was named the NCAA Division II College Coach of the Year. Gaines was named the CIAA coach of the year a record six times (1957, 61, 63, 70, 75, 80); received the CIAA Basketball Tournament Outstanding Coach Award eight times (1953, 57, 60, 61, 63, 66, 70, 77); was inducted into the CIAA Hall of Fame (1975), NAIA Helms Hall of Fame (1968) and N.C. Sports Hall of Fame (1978).
In 2006 he was named part of the founding class of the College Basketball Hall of Fame. The C. E. Gaines Center (built 1976), an athletic complex on the WSSU campus and home of the basketball team, is named after him. WSSU’s C.E. “Big House” Gaines Athletic Hall of Fame is also named after him.
Gaines was a member in numerous organizations, including the Sigma Pi Phi (“the Boule”) and Omega Psi Phi fraternities.
Below are parts 2 and 3 of ESPN’s Black Magic documentary on the link between the Civil Rights Era and the history of HBCU basketball: