In the mid-1960s, Charlottesville native George King III became the first African American student-athlete to compete at the University of Virginia.
A decade later, Sharlene Brightly, a Richmond native who also is Black, was a member of the University’s first varsity women’s basketball team.
On Sept. 23, King and Brightly were announced as recipients of the Atlantic Coast Conference’s inaugural UNITE Awards, created to honor individuals affiliated with the conference who have made an impact in the areas of racial and social justice.
“It is my pleasure to announce Mr. King and Ms. Brightly as Virginia’s initial Unite Award recipients,” UVA Director of Athletics Carla Williams said. “Their love for sport helped to break down barriers and blaze trails for generations of future Wahoos. We join the ACC in saluting you and all of the other Unite Award recipients across the league.”
In the first year of the award, the league is celebrating the individuals who – according to available information – are the first male and female athletes of color to integrate the athletic teams at each current ACC institution.
King, who had been a member of the undefeated state championship Lane High School football team in 1963 prior to arriving at UVA, was a freshman letter-winner on the 1964-65 wrestling team and also played on the freshman lacrosse team that spring.
King went on to earn a degree from Hampton Institute after serving in the U.S. Air Force. A former president of the Charlottesville NAACP, he enjoyed a career as a technical adviser for Aerojet Electrosystems and as a data security analyst for UVA Health.