You give me the uniform, give me the number on my back, I'll give you the guts.- Jackie Robinson in 42” Robinson is famously know for his jersey number 42, and being a player for the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947. Not only taking his team to the World Series but breaking down the color barrier that stood in the way. Robinson and many others where “helping pave the way for the civil right movement”(Tygiel 1). Not only that but “general manager branch Ricky would offer Robinson a lifetime deal to redefine the color line within baseball”(Tygiel 2). Jackie was the prefect man for the job, to change up the game not only in the professional world but also the real world. Jackie Robison over came the odds of segregation, mistreatment and color barrier, …show more content…
“Without a doubt Jackie suffered more abuse and more hatred than any other player in the history of the game and had good sportsmanship and complimented a young white boy from Oakland”(Wong 153). Even though tough times where rolling around for Jackie. Staying humble when little baseball fans came around spoke a lot about a person true character. “When Jackie was signed to the Brooklyn Dodgers, Pee Wee Reese’s teammates made an effort to sign a petition to be traded than play alongside a black man”(Wong 274). It goes to show that growing up in segregation mixed with a bunch of racist installed wrong morals in little boys which carry out into adulthood. “More than a decade before Martin Luther King’s development for nonviolent protest techniques for the southern racism Ricky was trying the tactic on Jackie”(Glasser 6). Ricky was reteaching Robinson how to react when violence was thrown at him in every which way. Even the battles that Robinson did not know about where being handle in a good manner. “Jackie performance under unimaginable pressure was true one of the greatest athletic triumphs, if not the greatest in American history”(Glasser 8). Words can not put into say what a young black man had to face to play baseball with rowdy, snobby white man that dominated the game. “In the first 37 games Robinson was hit by the pitchers six times, no player in the history …show more content…
But honestly Jackie Robinson squashed that to pieces. “1947 Robinson became the “rookie of the year” made the difference… Jackie instantly became the league’s biggest draw”(Sailer 4). Jackie was getting so much attention that in “1948 one year after Jackie Robinson milestone… Gotham corporation issued him a baseball game named after him”(Wong 30). The company took note on how much popularity a black rookie and instantly became a huge success. “ The liberal world view, discrimination stem from ignorance of the actual talents of blacks in baseball, opposite was true”(Sailer 3). The pigmentation that is visual to the human eye is very noticeable especially the darker tones. Having so much talent and not being white was look down upon it wasn’t till recently like Jackie Robinson and others started to change the different angle people perceived. “Jackie opened people's eyes of all races that skin color had nothing to do with talent ability, hard work, strength of character, matter the most”(Glasser 11). Finally people where paying attention to what a black person had to say, and if no one listened the actions of Robinson showed through even in the tough times. “Between 1949-1962 black players where dominating the game by winning 11 out of 14 NL MVP awards”(Sailer 3). It wasn't to common to see a black man playing in the leagues after WWII. The odds where still being defined Robinson was a intelligent
Baseball has always been more than just a sport to the American people. For many, it is a way of life, teaching not just brute skills but life lessons and morals. In the wake of World War I, racism and bigotry abounded in the United States. Even though the integration of schools had recently been instated, Jim Crow laws severely limited the activity of African Americans in society, resulting in baseball teams being limited to whites. Jackie Robinson made an important step in gaining rights for African Americans when he broke the color barrier of baseball in 1947. He did this by making civil rights his ambition even before the protests began (Coombs 117). Jackie Robinson’s fame as a baseball player and determination to defeat adversity
In 1946, Jackie Robinson altered the course of major league baseball forever, he did what no man ever did before him, Robinson broke the color barrier after 15 years of it withstanding (“Jackie”). Before Robinson, there were no African Americans in MLB
In 1947 if you were any race other than white could not play in major league baseball. “Jackie Robinson, took the first steps toward integrating the sport's major league teams when he signed a contract to play with the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947” (Smith para 1). Jackie Robinson was the first African-American player in the major league baseball. If Jackie Robinson didn’t sign to the Dodgers then who knows how segregated baseball or the world in general would be. The Brooklyn Dodgers were the first to sign an African-American on there team. The Brooklyn Dodger coach ask for Jackie Robinson to come out and talk to him.
My last reason now is that Jackie Robinson is one of the most memorable players the play in the MLB. Some examples of this are to be a pretty memorable player you at least have to have your jersey retired. Usually when you have your jersey retired it just gets retired you’re your team but Jackie’s number was retired all throughout baseball which is a good thing. Most of the time when your jersey is retired nobody ever wears it again. In this case everyone wears number 42 in honor of Jackie Robinson with no last name on their jersey.
Jackie Robinson was an African-American who played for a “Negro League” for a team call the Kansas City Monarchs. Their team colors being white with thin red stripes going vertically down the uniform. But a manager from the MLB’s jaw dropped to the floor when he saw how great of a player Jackie was, and decided to do something that nobody ever thought would happen. “I had never seen a ball player,” stated the Dodgers manager. “quite like Jackie Robinson.” He drafted Jackie Robinson in to the MLB for a team called the Brooklyn Dodgers, but just because something good happens, doesn’t mean that there will a few obstacles along the way.
Since 1839, baseball was a white man’s game. That would all change when Jackie Robinson signed with the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1942. This would be a major victory for African Americans during the Civil Rights Movement. Before Robinson entered the league, African Americans played in the National Negro League and Whites played in the MLB(Major League Baseball). At this time in history blacks were still fighting for equality every single day. They were segregated by going to different schools than whites, drinking from different water fountains than whites, sitting in the back of the bus, etc. Jackie Robinson was the first black baseball player in a white league and one of the greatest athletes of all time. He was able to achieve this despite
First of all, Jackie Robinson was the first black baseball player in the major leagues, setting an example so others could follow, integrating baseball forever. When he joined the major leagues, he “smashed the unwritten law that kept blacks out of the big leagues.”(Robinson) When he joined the Dodgers, he faced verbal and physical threats, angry and racist fans. Even with all these people hating him, he worked hard to be the best player he could be, not another NLB player. Robinson later said that Mr.Ricky “Chosen me as the person to lead the way.” When Jackie heard this, he responded by ignoring the bad things and focusing on the good things and people who gave him support.”I had become the first black player in the major leagues.”(Robinson) This shows that Jackie
Jackie Robinson was the very first African American to play on a major league baseball team; he played on the Brooklyn Dodgers. Jackie was a very passionate African American. Before his baseball career, he had a dream to be the very first African American baseball player. When he finally stepped on the field, he had to deal with “snubs and rebuffs” and “bigoted fans screaming ‘n-----‘. People doubted him and had no hope
In the biography Jackie Robinson and the American Dilemma by John R. M. Wilson, it tells the story of racial injustice done after world war II and explains how Jackie Robinson was pioneer of better race relations in the United States. The obstacles Jackie Robinson overcame were amazing, he had the responsibility to convert the institutions, customs, and attitudes that had defined race relations in the United States. Seldom has history ever placed so much of a strain on one person. I am addressing the importance of Jackie Robinson’s trials and triumphs to American racial dynamics in the post war period to show how Robinson was a prominent figure in the civil rights movement and brought baseball fans together regardless of race.
Jackie Robinson's entry into the Major Leagues was far from a walk in the park. He climbed over countless obstacles just to play with white men, some of which, he was better then. He not only had to compete with the returning players from the war, but he also contended with racism. "Many towns in the South did not want racially mixed teams"(Weidhorn 53). As time went on, cities realized that Robinson offered them free publicity.
Jackie was a phenomenal athlete for young kids to look up to. After the start of World War II he served in the military from 1942 to 1944. After the war he returned to his love for baseball, playing in the Black major leagues. He was chosen by Branch Rickey, vice president of the Brooklyn dodgers, to help integrate the Major Leagues. Rickey hated segregation just as much as Robinson and wanted to change things “Rickey had once seen a Black college player turned away from a hotel… Rickey never forgot seeing this player crying because he was denied a place to lay his weary head just because of the color of his skin” (Mackenzie). He was finally able to do something about segregation and help change baseball and the United States for the better. It wasn’t that all the teams were racist and didn’t want a black player but when the major league teams had an away game they would rent out the stadium to the black teams for them to play at. And the executives of teams didn’t want to loose the money that they were making off of the black teams. “League owners would lose significant rental revenue” (“Breaking”). He soon signed with the all-white Montreal Royals a farm team for the Dodgers. Robinson had an outstanding start with the Royals, “leading the International League with a .349 batting average and .985 fielding percentage” (Robinson). After Robinson’s outstanding year he was promoted to the Dodgers he played his first game on
Since the abolition of slavery in the USA in 1883 and through the first half of the 20th Century, African Americans had been in a constant struggle to try and gain an equal footing in society. Like many aspects of American life, black sportsmen were segregated, and no African American had played professional baseball since 1884. For this reason, the integration of Jackie Robinson to the Brooklyn Dodgers as the first African American to play Major League baseball in the modern era had a grand impact on the entire country. From the moment that Dodgers owner, Branch Rickey decided that Robinson would break the colour lone, the history of sport and the history of African Americans would not be the same again. The importance of his integration and the effect it had on civil rights can be looked at in many different ways. It had great effect on the African American community, instilling pride and belief once again in the American Dream for many who had once thought it impossible. It also had significant importance for civil rights groups, and brought about a figure who would fight his peoples quest for equal rights until the day he died. It was a significant risk taken by both Rickey and Robinson, professionally and personally. But it was a risk that both in the short term for African American sport, and in the long run for African American civil rights, was ultimately well worth taking.
With the same idea as Martin Luther King Jr., he worked hard to stay non-violent and to “turn the cheek” to the many threats and racial slurs he received throughout his time in the Major League. He was the target of many cold-hearted fans, and even some of the players on his own team. He was already born a leader, but these things fueled his fire even more. 5 years after he began playing in the MLB, he testified against discrimination before the House of Un-American Activities Committee and called out the Yankees for not yet breaking the color barrier. Along with that, he also served as a leader on the board of the NAACP until 1967.(www.NAACP.org) There, he made speeches that inspired people to get on board and to fight for their rights and for changes. He said, “Certainly if such revolutionary change can be brought about in baseball, it can be brought about in education, in transportation, and in any other area of American life. (Robinson) He believed that change was just around the corner, and all it needed was a little push. Jackie was a firm believer in his ideas and that is why he is such an important figure in our
Jackie Roosevelt Robinson was born on January 31st 1919. In 1947, at the age of 28, Jackie became the first African American to break the “color line” of Major League Baseball when he debuted with the Brooklyn Dodgers. During his tenure with the Dodgers, Jackie was not simply an average player. Among various other accolades, Mr. Robinson was a starter on six World Series teams as well as being named the National League Rookie of The Year in 1947. His advantageous career was then capped in 1962 when he was inducted in the Major League Baseball Hall of Fame.1 Contrary to popular belief, Jackie's perseverance in implementing racial integration extended beyond his career in Major League Baseball. During the Sixties Jackie Robinson was a
The game of baseball has been argued to be the number one game in America and also around the world. Respectively the game is also known as “America’s pastime” had over 14 million people in the U.S. alone watching the World Series in 20151. Due to the growing popularity of baseball throughout the world the players of Major League Baseball (MLB) have become more diverse. Since 1950 when baseball started to grow in popularity the attendance per game has risen over 40%2.