Jackie Robinson

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Jackie Robinson

Jackie Robinson

Personal Info
Birth January 31, 1919, Cairo, Georgia
Death: October 24, 1972, Stamford, Connecticut
Professional Career
Debut April 15, 1947, Brooklyn Dodgers vs. ,
Team(s) As Player

Brooklyn Dodgers (1947 - 1956)

HOF induction: 1962
Career Highlights

Member of the National Baseball Hall of Fame
Jackie Robinson
"n/a"
Inducted as a member of the Brooklyn Dodgers (42)
Year Inducted: 1962
First Year Elligible: 1962

Jack Roosevelt "Jackie" Robinson (January 31, 1919 - October 24, 1972) became the first African American Major League Baseball player of the modern era in 1947.[1] The Baseball Hall of Fame inducted Robinson in 1962 and he was a member of six World Series teams. Jackie earned six consecutive All-Star Game nominations and won several awards during his career. In 1947, Robinson won The Sporting News Rookie of the Year Award and the National League Rookie of the Year Award. Two years later, Jackie won the first MVP National League MVP Award.

In recognition of his accomplishments both on the field and off of it, every Major League Baseball team retired the number 42. This was the number Jackie wore during his career. He was the subject of a 1950 film biography, The Jackie Robinson Story, in which he played himself, and became a political activist in his post-playing days.

Contents

[edit] Early life

Jackie Robinson in the Negro Leagues, 1945
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Jackie Robinson in the Negro Leagues, 1945

In 1919, Jackie Robinson, the youngest of five children,[2] was born in Cairo, Georgia during a Spanish Flu epidemic. [3] In 1920 his family moved to Pasadena, California[3] after his father abandoned them.[4]

Growing up, he lived in relative poverty[5] and even joined a local neighborhood gang. Eventually, friend Carl Anderson persuaded Robinson to abandon the gang.[6]

In 1935 Jackie Robinson graduated from Washington Junior High School and enrolled in John Muir High School ("Muir Tech").[7] There he played on various Muir Tech sport teams. He was a shortstop and catcher on the baseball team, a quarterback on the football team, a guard on the basketball team, and a member of the tennis team and the track and field squad. He won awards in the broad jump.[8]

In 1936 he captured the junior boys singles championship in the annual Pacific Coast Negro Tennis Tournament, starred as quarterback and earned a place on the annual Pomona baseball tournament all-star team, one which included future Major League Baseball Hall of Famers Ted Williams and Bob Lemon. [9] The next year, Jackie played for the high school's basketball team. That year, the Pasadena Star-News newspaper ran a piece on Jackie.[10]

After leaving Muir, Jackie attended Pasadena Junior College and played both football and baseball.[11] He played quarterback and safety for the football team, shortstop and leadoff batter for the baseball team and participated in the broad jump.

While at PJC, he was elected to the "Lancers", a student run police organization responsible for patrolling various school activities.[12] He dated and made friends. However, on January 25, 1938, he was arrested, the reason speculative, and sentenced to two years probation.[13]

In 1938 he was elected to the All-Southland Junior College (baseball) Team and selected as the region's Most Valuable Player.[14]

On February 4, 1939, he played his last basketball game at Pasadena Junior College. Jackie then received a gold pin and was named to the school's "Order of the Mast and Dagger".[15]

[edit] UCLA

On February 15, 1939, Jackie enrolled at the University of California, Los Angeles[16]. While at UCLA, Jackie played basketball, ran track, played varsity baseball, and started for the Bruins football team.

He excelled at each of these four sports and consequently became the first athlete in UCLA history to letter in four different sports in one year.[17][18] He was also a 24-letterman.[19] Until 1947 he was presumed to be the only person ever selected to play in the college all-star games in both basketball and football. [19] He left college in 1941 because of financial problems, not many credits from a bachelor's degree.[citation needed]. Before he left, he met the woman he would eventually marry, Rachel Robinson. He and Rachel married in 1946 and had three children, Jackie Jr., Sharon and David.

[edit] Robinson in the Army

After leaving UCLA his senior year, Robinson enlisted in the U.S. Army during World War II. He was assigned to the U.S. 761st Tank Battalion, an all black battalion. While initially refused admission to Officer Candidate School, he fought for it and eventually was accepted and, upon graduation, was commissioned as a second lieutenant and branched Armor. While training in the Army at Fort Hood, Texas, Robinson refused to go to the back of a public bus. He was court-martialed for insubordination and, therefore, never made it to Europe with his unit. He later received an honorable discharge in 1944, after being acquitted of all charges at the court-martial.

Jackie played baseball in 1944 for the Kansas City Monarchs in the Negro American League, where he was noticed by Clyde Sukeforth, a scout working for Branch Rickey, although David Halberstam, in October 1964, asserts that legendary super-scout Tom Greenwade discovered and secretly followed Robinson for a month on the road.

[edit] The Dodgers

Statue at Montreal's Olympic Stadium
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Statue at Montreal's Olympic Stadium

In the late 1940's, Branch Rickey was club president and general manager of the Brooklyn Dodgers. The Dodgers began to scout Robinson and Rickey eventually selected Jackie from a list of promising African-American players. Robinson became the first player in fifty-seven years to break the Baseball color line.

In 1946, the Dodgers assigned to Jackie to Montreal Royals. Because of Jackie's play in 1946, the Dodgers called him up to play for the major league club in 1947. Robinson debuted on April 15, 1947. Jackie went 0-3 and played first base.

Throughout the season, Robinson experienced harassment at the hands of both players and fans. He was verbally assaulted by both his own teammates and by members of opposing teams. Several Dodger players insinuated they would strike if forced to play alongside Robinson.[citation needed] The mutiny ended when Dodger management informed those players that they were welcome to find employment elsewhere.

Dodgers shortstop Pee Wee Reese, who would be a teammate of Robinson's for the better part of a decade, was one of the few players who publicly stood up for Robinson during his rookie season. During the team's first road trip, in Cincinnati, Ohio, Robinson was being heckled by fans when Reese, the Dodgers team captain, walked over and put his arm around Robinson in a gesture of support that quieted the fans and has now gained near-legendary status. In addition, the Jewish baseball star, Hank Greenberg, who faced considerable anti-semitic abuse himself in his career, made a point of welcoming Robinson to the Major Leagues.

On April 22, 1947, players on the Philadelphia Phillies called Jackie a "nigger" from their dugout. They yelled that he should "go back to the cotton fields."[20] Rickey would later recall that the Phillies' Ben Chapman "did more than anybody to unite the Dodgers. When he poured out that string of unconscionable abuse, he solidified and united thirty men."[citation needed] Baseball Commissioner Happy Chandler admonished the Phillies and asked Chapman to pose for photographs with Robinson as a conciliatory gesture and the two players obliged.

For his services, Jackie earned the major-league minimum salary of $5000--which was standard for many rookies at the time. That year, he played in 151 games, hit .297, lead the National League in stolen bases and won the Rookie of the Year award.

Although Jackie played every game that season at first base, Robinson spent most of his career as a second baseman. in his career, he played games at third base and in the outfield.

Two years later, Jackie won the Most Valuable Player award for the National League. Jackie won his only championship ring when the Dodgers beat the New York Yankees in the 1955 World Series.

After the 1956 season, Robinson's contract was sold by the Dodgers to the New York Giants. Rather than report to the Giants, Robinson chose to retire at age 37.

Robinson was a disciplined hitter and a versatile fielder. He had a .311 career batting average and substantially more walks than strikeouts. He played several defensive positions and was a noted base stealer; no other player since World War II has stolen home more than Robinson. During his career, the Dodgers played in six World Series and Jackie played in six All-Star games. He is a member of the Baseball Hall of Fame and a member of the All-Century Team. In one of his most famous quotes, he said "I'm not concerned with your liking or disliking me... all I ask is that you respect me as a human being."[citation needed]

[edit] Post-baseball life

Jackie Robinson and his son David being interviewed at the "March on Washington"August 28, 1963From the National Archives
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Jackie Robinson and his son David being interviewed at the "March on Washington"
August 28, 1963
From the National Archives

Robinson retired on January 5, 1957. He had wanted to manage or coach in the major leagues, but received no offers.[citation needed] He became a vice-president for the Chock Full O' Nuts corporation instead, and served on the board of the NAACP until 1967, when he resigned. During the early to late 50's, Jackie and Louis Ostrer owned Jackie Robinson's, a men's clothing store located on 125th St. in New York City.

He was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1962, his first year of eligibility, becoming the first African-American so honored. On June 4, 1972 the Dodgers retired his uniform number 42 alongside Roy Campanella (39) and Sandy Koufax (32).

Robinson made his final public appearance on October 14, 1972, before Game 2 of the World Series. He used this chance to express his wish for a black manager to be hired by a Major League Baseball team.[citation needed]

This wish was granted two years later, following the 1974 season, when the Cleveland Indians gave their managerial post to Frank Robinson, a Hall of Fame bound slugger who was then still an active player, and no relation to Jackie Robinson. At the press conference announcing his hiring, Frank expressed his wish that Jackie had lived to see the moment.[citation needed]

Robinson's final few years were marked by tragedy. In 1971, his eldest son, Jackie, Jr., who had beaten back drug problems and was working as a Daytop Village counselor, was killed in an automobile accident. Also, Jackie suffered from diabetes, virtually went blind, and suffered heart problems.

Jackie Robinson was pronounced dead in Stamford, Connecticut on October 24, 1972 and was interred in the Cypress Hills Cemetery in Brooklyn, New York. The highway that goes through the cemetery (Interborough Parkway) has been renamed the Jackie Robinson Parkway.[21]

[edit] Trivia & interesting facts

A statue of Jackie Robinson in Stamford, Connecticut, where a major street has the honorary name Jackie Robinson Way.
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A statue of Jackie Robinson in Stamford, Connecticut, where a major street has the honorary name Jackie Robinson Way.
  • In 1997 (the 50th anniversary of his major league debut), his number 42 was retired by all major league teams, though players who wore the number at the time were allowed to retain it until the end of their careers. In 2004, Major League Baseball designated that April 15 each year would be marked as "Jackie Robinson Day" in all their ballparks.
  • At the November, 2006 groundbreaking for a new New York Mets ballpark, Citi Field, scheduled to open in 2009, it was announced that the main entrance, modeled on the one in Brooklyn's old Ebbets Field, will be called the Jackie Robinson Rotunda. Additionally, Mets owner Fred Wilpon said that the Mets and Citigroup would work with the the Jackie Robinson Foundation to create a Jackie Robinson Museum and Learning Center in lower Manhattan, as well as fund scholarships for "young people who live by and embody Jackie's ideals."[22]

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Rothe, p544
  2. ^ Bigelow, p225
  3. ^ a b Rampersad pp10-11
  4. ^ Robinson, p9
  5. ^ Rampersad, p23
  6. ^ Rampersad, p35
  7. ^ Rampersad, p36
  8. ^ Rampersad, pp 36-37
  9. ^ Rampersad, p37
  10. ^ Rampersad, pp37-39
  11. ^ Rampersad, pp40-41
  12. ^ Rampersad, p47
  13. ^ Rampersad, pp50-53
  14. ^ Rampersad, p54
  15. ^ Rampersad, pp59-61
  16. ^ Rampersad, p62
  17. ^ Rampersad, p75
  18. ^ Bigelow, p226
  19. ^ a b
  20. ^ Ken Burns' documentary, BASEBALL, Part 6, minute 120
  21. ^ Tygiel, p???
  22. ^ New York Daily News Mets honor Robinson at new home. Accessed November 14, 2006

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  • Rampersad, Arnold. Jackie Robinson, a Biography, Alfred A. Knopf (New York), 1997. ISBN 0-679-44495-5
  • Tygiel, Jules. Baseball's Great Experiment, publisher info??, ISBN ???
  • Bigelow, Barbara Carlisle, ed. Contemporary Black Biography vol. 6. Gale Research Inc. 1994. ISBN 0-8103-8558-9
  • Moritz, Charles, ed. Current Biography Yearbook 1972, H.W. Wilson Co, New York, 1972. ISBN 0-8242-0493-X
  • Rothe, Anna, ed. Current Biography, Who's News and Why 1947, H.W. Wilson Co, New York, 1948.
  • Robinson, Jackie. I Never Had It Made. G.P. Putnam's Sons, New York, 1972

[edit] External links

Preceded by:
None, first holder of the award
Major League Rookie of the Year
1947
Succeeded by:
Alvin Dark
Preceded by:
Stan Musial
National League Most Valuable Player
1949
Succeeded by:
Jim Konstanty
Preceded by:
Stan Musial
National League Batting Champion
1949
Succeeded by:
Stan Musial
Major League Baseball | MLB All-Century Team

Nolan Ryan | Sandy Koufax | Cy Young | Roger Clemens | Bob Gibson | Walter Johnson | Warren Spahn | Christy Mathewson | Lefty Grove
Johnny Bench | Yogi Berra | Lou Gehrig | Mark McGwire | Jackie Robinson | Rogers Hornsby | Mike Schmidt | Brooks Robinson | Cal Ripken, Jr. | Ernie Banks | Honus Wagner
Babe Ruth | Hank Aaron | Ted Williams | Willie Mays | Joe DiMaggio | Mickey Mantle | Ty Cobb | Ken Griffey, Jr. | Pete Rose | Stan Musial