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Happy Jackie Robinson Day!

Today is the day set aside to commemorate the
life and legacy of professional baseball superstar Jackie Robinson. The United
States had been playing baseball as a general sport since 1846. Before April
15, 1947, baseball had been segregated between whites and brown, or black
skinned players of African descent, as well as Hispanic/Spanish/Latino descent
since about the year 1867. Then in 1876, there was a gentlemen’s agreement
between the owners that the players of color would not be permitted into
baseball. Sure, there were great baseball players such as Fleet Walker of
Toledo, who was the 1st African-American player to play in a
professional league baseball game in 1884. But because of prejudicial preconceived
notions, they weren’t given the proper opportunity to showcase their talent.
Because they were facing more, and more discrimination and segregation, the
Negro Leagues were founded in 1920 by Rube Foster, and those leagues were in
operation off and on up until 1960. That brings me to Branch Rickey. He was the
general manager of the then, Brooklyn Dodgers (moved to LA in 1958), who
was looking to break the color barrier that had been in place for 80 years.
Enter the aforementioned Jackie Robinson, who had been playing for the Kansas
City Monarchs, who were 1 of the winningest teams in the Negro Leagues. They
were the equivalent of the New York Yankees in our more modern Major League
Baseball (MLB) terms. Branch Rickey had kept it a secret as long as he possibly
could. He knew there was an untapped reservoir of talent that was being kept
down by the rest of society’s ignorance. Back then, even though it seems very
foreign to us, it was very radical for the time when Jackie Robinson took his
defensive spot at 1st base. Shortly after Jackie, Larry Doby of the
Cleveland Indians became the 1st player of African descent in the American
League, making the Dodgers the 1st team in the National League to
integrate, and baseball as a whole officially within the confines of how we
think of baseball, which has been played since 1903. In 2004, the MLB decided
to make a day honoring Jackie Robinson on April 15. Since 2009, all the
players, coaches, and umpires wear the number 42 to honor Mr. Robinson. And the
number 42 consequently has been retired from all of baseball since 1997.
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