Damion Thomas, the museum's sports curator, guided the players through the sports hall, where they were mesmerized by retired NBA star Shaquille O'Neal's Size 20 sneaker.
They took a long look at the Black hockey exhibit, which features O'Ree's statue; a Columbus Black Jackets jersey that belonged to defenseman Seth Jones, who now plays for the Chicago Blackhawks; a stick used by retired NHL player Joel Ward; and items Washington's Fort Dupont Ice Hockey Club, North America's oldest minority-oriented youth hockey program, and Ice Hockey in Harlem.
"What I hope the players take away from this tour … is that African American history is not just a history that belongs to African Americans, that it's a lens to understand all of American history," Thomas said. "We hope that this tour provides them with a broader perspective about America."
Before the players toured the museum, they listened to talks from two local Black hockey pioneers: Fort Dupont Ice Hockey Club founder and coach Neal Henderson and Alexandria Briggs-Blake, a 2020
Willie O'Ree Community Hero Award
finalist who founded Maryland's Tucker Road Parents Hockey Association.
"I thought that it would interesting that they knew the Black history of Washington, D.C. because it is so far south and the second thing is that there are so many Black people playing hockey and so many Black people in Washington, D.C., who like hockey," said Henderson, who was inducted into the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame in 2019.