Skip to main content

User account menu

  • Log in
Shopping cart 0
Cart

Search

Search
Home The Sun-Sentinel
  • Post
    • Leaderboard
    • Post Dashboard
    • Payment Settings
  • Home
    • Contact Us
    • FAQ
    • Monthly Website Statistics
    • Our History
    • Our Staff
    • Privacy Policy
    • Submit News
  • Most Read
    • Most Read This Week
    • Most Read This Month
    • Most Read This Year
    • Most Read All Time
  • Most Recent
  • More News
    • Crime
    • Documents
    • For the Record
    • Politics
    • Public Notices
    • Videos
  • Sports
  • E-Edition
  • Opinion
    • Columnists
    • Comments
    • Editorials
    • Letters
    • Polls
    • Submit a Letter to the Editor
  • Advertising
    • Newspaper Rates
    • Website Rates
  • Calendar
  • Comics/Games
    • Cartoons
    • Crossword
    • Sudoku
  • Obituaries
    • Submit an Obituary
  • Social
    • Anniversaries/Birthdays
    • Engagements/Weddings
    • Schools
    • Submit an Anniversary
    • Submit a Birth
    • Submit an Engagement
    • Submit School News
    • Submit a Wedding
  • Subscribe
  • State
    • Most Read - Statewide

Domain menu for The Sun-Sentinel (mobile)

  • Post
    • Leaderboard
    • Post Dashboard
    • Payment Settings
  • Home
    • Contact Us
    • FAQ
    • Monthly Website Statistics
    • Our History
    • Our Staff
    • Privacy Policy
    • Submit News
  • Most Read
  • Most Recent
  • More News
    • Crime
    • Documents
    • For the Record
    • Politics
    • Public Notices
    • Videos
  • Sports
  • E-Edition
  • Opinion
    • Columnists
    • Comments
    • Editorials
    • Letters
    • Polls
    • Submit a Letter to the Editor
  • Advertising
    • Newspaper Rates
    • Website Rates
  • Calendar
  • Comics/Games
  • Obituaries
    • Submit an Obituary
  • Social
  • Subscribe
  • State

Hattiesburg’s old gym burns down, but so many memories will endure

By Rick Cleveland - Mississippi Today , READ MORE > 2,755 Reads
On Mon, 02/08/2021 - 10:22 AM

Below is a sports column by Rick Cleveland:

Hattiesburg’s old high school gymnasium, long since abandoned, burned down in the wee hours of Sunday morning. Thankfully, the memories live on. And we will get to those.

The gym, completed in 1937, was home to the Hattiesburg High Tigers for nearly 50 years. The gym never really had a name. Some folks called it Hawkins Gymnasium, because Hawkins Junior High was across the street. Mostly, we just called it “the old high school gym,” no capital letters necessary. It was a Works Progress Administration (WPA) project, one of thousands across the U.S. and one of hundreds across Mississippi. Thank you, FDR.

It was both quirky and creaky, that old gym was. It always seemed to me that it might house ghosts. The court was 104 feet long, 12 feet longer than regulation courts. It had humps in the floor. It had dead spots, too, where the ball wouldn’t bounce the way it was supposed to.

“As home court advantages go, it was the best,” said Purvis Short, who led Hattiesburg High to the 1974 state championship, and would go on to score more than 14,000 points in the NBA. “I have literally hundreds of memories of that place, and all of them are good. That’s rare, isn’t it?”

The old gym is where Coach Johnny Hurtt taught Purvis Short how to shoot high-arching jump shots by guarding him in shooting drills with a broomstick. It is where Hurtt often employed a full-court press to run opponents into submission.

“We knew where all those dead spots were and we made sure the other team had to dribble on them,” Short said. “Can’t tell you how many times we stole the ball like that. Plus the court was so long. The visiting teams weren’t used to that. Man, they were huffing and puffing.”

Purvis Short Credit: Hattiesburg Public Schools

Purvis followed two years behind his older brother, Eugene, who led the Tigers to the 1972 state championship. Both Purvis and Eugene would go on to play in some of the most famous arenas in the country: Boston Garden, Madison Square Garden and the Forum in L.A., among them.

“The Boston Garden really reminded me of our old high school gym,” Purvis Short said. “There were some dead spots in the floor, but mostly it was the baskets — best shooting baskets in the world. Our goals in Hattiesburg and the ones at the (Boston) Garden were the sweetest shooting goals. They were soft, forgiving. Great backgrounds too.”

And both gone now.

The old Hattiesburg gym was the site of so many classic Gulfport-Hattiesburg games, back when Bert Jenkins coached Gulfport and Sam Hollingsworth and then Johnny Hurtt coached the Hattiesburg Tigers. For my money, Jenkins remains the greatest high school coach — maybe coach at any level — in Mississippi history. Hollingsworth and Hurtt should make anyone’s top 10. In 1970, my senior year in high school, Gulfport went 45-1, and, yes, the one came in our old gym where the great Buddy Davenport — and maybe the ghosts — led the Tigers past the Commodores 47-39.

My single greatest memory of that fine, old gym did not involve the Short brothers, Hattiesburg or Gulfport. No, this was in February of 1966, when I was a 13-year-old gym rat who had heard all the seemingly tall tales of a basketball phenom down in Hancock County named Wendell Ladner.

Ladner-led Hancock was to play West Lauderdale and the great Randy Hodges, a tall shooting guard, in the South State championship in our gym, which had a capacity of maybe 2,000.

That night it seemed all of south Mississippi — and most every college recruiter in the country — wanted to be in that gym. Every available inch of seating was taken. Fans stood at either end and in all the doorways. If you needed restroom relief, you were out of luck. Fire marshals had their hands full. Hundreds were turned away.

Wendell Ladner

Most of Hancock County got in before the marshals locked the doors. They all wore red, and they all went absolutely berserk when Wondrous Wendell led his team onto the court. Ladner went straight for the bucket at the far end of the court and slammed the ball through with a windmill dunk that brought such thunderous applause that old gym seemed to shake. Ladner continued his dunk show throughout layup drills. After his last dunk, he stood, grinning, beneath the basket and hoisted his teammates, one by one, so they could dunk their last time through the layup line.

And then Ladner scored 39 points and pulled down 27 rebounds to lead Hancock past Hodges and West Lauderdale in one of the great one-man shows you can imagine. At one point, Ladner kept jumping up and down and bouncing the ball off the backboard, almost like playing volleyball with himself, before finally tipping the ball through the hoop. “Aw, Coach, I didn’t think you’d mind me having some fun,” he told his coach, Roland Ladner, when scolded at the next timeout

You should have been there. I am so glad I was. I hate the old gym that never had — nor needed — a name is gone. I am glad the memories remain.

What was left of the old Hattiesburg High gymnasium early Sunday afternoon. (Photo courtesy of Joe Paul)

-- Article credit to Rick Cleveland of Mississippi Today --

‹ PreviousNext ›

Most Recent

Editorial: Jobs incentive reform

We commend the efforts of Mississippi Lieutenant Governor Delbert Hosemann to reform industrial… READ MORE

Wicker Rejects Effort to Weaken Election Integrity
Mission Mississippi - March 05, 2021 Livestream
Wicker Rejects Effort to Weaken Election Integrity
MEC's Virtual Legislative Scrambler - Speaker Philip Gunn
Officials report good participation at Charleston COVID-19 vaccination events

Most Read News Article

  • Week
  • Month
  • Year
  • All Time

Four elected officials face court hearing after charging one another with assault

CORRECTION (2:18 p.m., March 5, 2021): STATEMENTS SAID SIMMONS, NOT McINTYRE, HAD WEAPON

MEC's Virtual Legislative Scrambler - Speaker Philip Gunn
Thousands of Jackson residents enter third week without running water
Gov. Tate Reeves issues new executive order for COVID-19
Why teachers in Mississippi work second jobs to get by
Mississippi Covid-19 Update : March 04, 2021

Four elected officials face court hearing after charging one another with assault

CORRECTION (2:18 p.m., March 5, 2021): STATEMENTS SAID SIMMONS, NOT McINTYRE, HAD WEAPON

Stepping back in time
‘Food that’s going to stick to your ribs’: The significance of soul food in Yalobusha County
Mississippi Covid-19 Update : February 22, 2021
Mississippi Covid-19 Update : February 19, 2021
Courthouse draws filmmakers to Sumner for miniseries about Emmett Till's mother

Welcome to the Brave New World; The devastating effects of Section 230 on America

Kudos to Mississippi U. S. Senator Roger Wicker for sponsoring a bill to amend Section 230 of the… READ MORE

Officials identify nine nabbed in local roundup of drug suspects, say more arrests are possible
Three die after vehicle plummets into waters of Black Bayou near Glendora
Crash claims life of Batesville man
Local inmate's escape short-lived thanks to officers working together
One in custody after fatal shooting Monday afternoon

Welcome to the Brave New World; The devastating effects of Section 230 on America

Kudos to Mississippi U. S. Senator Roger Wicker for sponsoring a bill to amend Section 230 of the… READ MORE

Officials identify nine nabbed in local roundup of drug suspects, say more arrests are possible
Three die after vehicle plummets into waters of Black Bayou near Glendora
Crash claims life of Batesville man
Local inmate's escape short-lived thanks to officers working together
Mistaken identity may have led to shooting death

eedition-button

 

Editorials

Editorial: Jobs incentive reform

We commend the efforts of Mississippi Lieutenant Governor Delbert Hosemann to reform industrial… READ MORE

Get ready for potholes
The elderly and the vaccine
OPINION: Exactly what nation needed to hear
Unacceptable in our democracy
The show will go on

Sign Up for Notifications of Local Breaking News

Start E-mail NotificationsStop E-mail NotificationsStart Mobile NotificationsStop Mobile Notifications

Obituaries

Nell Kirby

JACKSON — Nell Gray Kirby, age 84, passed away on Thursday, Jan. 14,in Jackson. A private family… READ MORE

Nolan Martin
Kathy Robertson
Shirley Harris
Margaret Moss
Dr. Wiley Hutchins

Opinion:

OPINION: 'I implore each of you to find your humanity and to take this vaccine when offered'

Friends, this virus has been prevalent in the U.S. for nine months now. It has changed everything.

Duty calls for taking COVID-19 shot
Light of Christmas so needed this year
Either way, keep the faith
Quilters' mission worthy of recognition
Presidential politics always vicious

Sports

Ole Miss shoots — literally — for state’s first Division I team national crown

Below is a sports column from Rick Cleveland:

Mississippi Braves Announce 2021 Schedule
The Rebels who couldn’t shoot straight suddenly are hitting mark
Hattiesburg’s old gym burns down, but so many memories will endure
Art Davis loved Mississippi so, he came home to die ‘on home turf’
Sports Column: Drew Brees leaves an unforgettable Saints legacy. The story started in Jackson.

For the Record

Charleston Municipal Court, Nov. 2 and Nov. 16, 2020

Judge Tara Lang handed down the following decisions during the Nov. 2 and Nov.

Charleston Municipal Court, Oct. 19, 2020
First Judicial District Justice Court, Oct. 15, 2020
Second District Justice Court, July 22 and Aug. 14, 2020 sessions
Charleston Municipal Court for Nov. 18, Dec. 2 and Dec. 16 (2019) and Jan. 6 (2020)
Second District Justice Court, Oct. 9, 2019

Columnists

Why try and fix what's not broken?

OXFORD — Legislation to change the way Mississippi Department of Archives and History trustees are… READ MORE

Medicaid, state parks deserve attention
On the Homefront, welcome 2021
Duty calls for taking COVID-19 shot
On the Homefront, invaded by COVID
Presidential politics always vicious

COMPANY COMMUNITY ADVERTISE E-EDITIONS MORE NEWS
Contact Community Calendar Subscribe Newspaper Archive Cartoons
FAQ/Help Obituaries Ad Rates Newspaper E-Edition Columns
Our History Engagements/Weddings Ad Staff Special Section Editorials
Our Staff Most Read My Account   For the Record
Statewide Most Recent      

Click on the city name to visit its website.

ACKERMAN  •  CARROLLTON  •  CHARLESTON  •  CLARKSDALE  •  COLUMBIA  •  DUMAS(Ark.)  •  EUPORA  •  FOREST  • 

FRANKLINTON(La.)  • GREENVILLE  •  GREENWOOD  •  GRENADA  •  HATTIESBURG  •  JACKSON  •  KOSCIUSKO  •  INDIANOLA  • 

LOUISVILLE  • MAGEE  • MENDENHALL  •  McCOMB  •  NEWTON  •  PETAL  •  QUITMAN  •  SENATOBIA  •  TALLULAH(La.)  •  WINONA  •  YAZOO CITY


Copyright 2021 - The Sun-Sentinel | Privacy Statement | Help | Terms of Service

The Sun-Sentinel - 149 Court Square - Charleston, MS 38921 - (662)-647-8462

Emmerich Newspapers is proud to serve your local communities.

Thank you for visiting our website.