Photo: U.S. Mint
Althea GibsonAmerican Women’s Quarter Series
The adventure begins when you reach into your pocket.
Today, we’re stepping onto the court — not just any court — but one that changed the game forever. And at the center of it all is a woman who didn’t just break barriers… she shattered them.
Her name is Althea Gibson.
Now, before Serena, before Venus, before the world ever imagined what dominance in tennis could look like from a Black woman — there was Althea. Tall, powerful, and determined, she stepped into a sport that, at the time, didn’t exactly roll out the welcome mat.
We’re talking about the 1950s. Country clubs. Grass courts. Closed doors.
But Althea Gibson? She had a game that could not be ignored.
She became the first African American to compete at Wimbledon… and then went on to win it. Not once — but twice. Same story at the U.S. Nationals, what we now know as the U.S. Open.
And she didn’t stop there.
Althea went on to break another barrier — becoming the first Black woman to compete on the LPGA golf tour. Now that’s what you call not staying in one lane.
But here’s the thing I love about her story… it’s not just about trophies and titles. It’s about resilience. It’s about showing up in spaces where you weren’t expected — and leaving the door wide open for others to walk through.
And today, her legacy is literally something you can hold in your hand… honored on a U.S. Mint quarter — a reminder that her story is part of the American journey.
So in this segment, we’re going to travel through Althea Gibson’s world — from Harlem streets to international courts — and explore the places, the people, and the moments that shaped a true pioneer.
Stay with me… because this is one story you don’t just hear — you feel.