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Harold Bradley, Sr. : ウィキペディア英語版 | Harold Bradley, Sr.
Harold "Hal" Willard Bradley, Sr. (September 27, 1905 – 1973) was an American football player for the Chicago Cardinals in 1928. Bradley was one of only 13 African-Americans to play in the National Football League prior to World War II and just the second African-American lineman in the history of the NFL, following Duke Slater. He played collegiately at the University of Iowa in 1926 and was the father of Harold Bradley, Jr., who also played in the NFL. ==Childhood== Harold Willard Bradley, more commonly known as "Hal", was born in Coffeyville, Kansas, in 1905. He was the son of Arthur Bradley, a Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad barber, and his wife, Mamie. Hal Bradley moved with his family to Chicago when he was a boy, and he was raised in Chicago's West Woodlawn neighborhood on the city's south side.〔Polk, Rev Robert L.. Greene, Cheryll Y. (2008). ''Tight Little Island'': Chicago's West Woodlawn Neighborhood, 1900-1950, in the Words of Its Inhabitants. Harold Bradley Jr on his father, Harold Sr. (Bronx, NY : CNG Editions). ISBN 978-0-97165-091-6.〕 He attended Englewood High School and was named all-state as a member of the school's football team. Upon graduation, Bradley enrolled at the University of Iowa.
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