Rollins Tars football

[3][4] During the 1947 college football season, Rollins was scheduled to have their homecoming game on November 28 at Orlando Stadium against Ohio Wesleyan (OWU).

[5] OWU's team included an African American player, Kenneth Woodward.

In this era, there was concern that "a black player on the field would create a firestorm in the Deep South.

[6] In addressing students and faculty, Rollins president Hamilton Holt stated:[5] May I say this to you students; you will probably have critical decisions like this to make as you go through life—decisions that whatever you do, you will be misinterpreted, misunderstood, and reviled….It seemed to all of us that our loyalties to Rollins and its ideals were not to precipitate a crisis that might and probably would promote bad race relations, but to work quietly for better race relations, hoping and believing that time would be on our side.

Two years later, the 1949 Sun Bowl controversy saw Lafayette College of Pennsylvania decline an invitation to a bowl game in El Paso, Texas, when an African American player on their team would not have been allowed to play.

Rollins team of 1904