
New Books in History Brian Hallstoos, "Sol Butler: An Olympian's Odyssey through Jim Crow America" (U Illinois Press, 2026)
Feb 17, 2026
Brian Hallstoos, historian and University of Dubuque professor, tells the life of Sol Butler, a superstar athlete turned entrepreneur. He traces Butler’s rise from record-setting sprinter and 1920 Olympian to savvy sports promoter and journalist. The conversation highlights Butler’s strategies for navigating Jim Crow, family mobility, and the ways fame fueled his business and community influence.
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Athlete As Civil Rights Strategist
- Brian Hallstoos frames Sol Butler as an early civil rights hero who used sports to open doors against segregation.
- Butler's athletic fame became a tool for creative resistance and community uplift.
Family Flight From Violence
- Butler's father escaped slavery and the family fled lynching in Memphis before settling where Sol was born.
- That family history shaped Saul's sense of mobility and purpose in seeking education and safety.
Mobility As Strategy
- The Butlers repeatedly relocated to secure integrated schooling and sports opportunities for their children.
- Mobility functioned as a deliberate strategy to evade segregation and access advancement.

