Alston earned his nickname Smokey as a pitcher for his high-school team. At Miami University (Oxford, Ohio), he was a hard-hitting infielder. He was signed to a contract by the St. Louis Cardinals as a shortstop and played on their minor league teams (1935–40). He played just one game in the majors, striking out in his only at bat. He began managing in the minor leagues (1940–42) and in 1944 moved to the Dodgers’ organization as a minor league player-manager (1944–47) and manager thereafter until 1953, when he became the manager of their major league team. As minor league manager he developed Dodger talent such as Don Newcombe, Roy Campanella, Carl Erskine, and Junior Gilliam; thus, by the time he was moved to the majors, he had managed every player on his first 25-man roster. As a Dodgers manager he won seven pennants and four of the seven subsequent World Series. The 1955 World Series victory was the Dodgers’ first.
Alston retired after the 1976 season. He was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1983.
Jackie Robinson was the first African American to play Major League Baseball in the United States during the 20th century. On April 15, 1947, he broke the decades-old “color line” in baseball when he took the field for the Brooklyn Dodgers in a game against the Boston Braves. He endured racial slurs and death threats on and off the field. “Plenty of times I wanted to haul off when somebody insulted me for the color of my skin, but I had to hold to myself,” he later said. “I knew I was kind of an experiment. The whole thing was bigger than me.”
What was Jackie Robinson’s early life like?
Jackie Robinson grew up in Pasadena, California. An outstanding all-around athlete at Pasadena Junior College and at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), he excelled in football, basketball, track, and baseball. He withdrew from UCLA in his third year to help his mother care for the family. In 1942 he entered the U.S. Army. After World War II, he played for the Kansas City Monarchs of the Negro American League, and in 1945 the president and general manager of the Brooklyn Dodgers, Branch Rickey, signed him to a Dodgers farm team.
Major League Baseball celebrates Jackie Robinson Day each April 15, commemorating his opening of the MLB to all Black players who came after him. On that day the uniform number 42—which Robinson wore for the Brooklyn Dodgers and which was retired from Major League Baseball in 1997—is “unretired” and worn by all players, coaches, and umpires in the MLB games played.
Jackie Robinson (born January 31, 1919, Cairo, Georgia, U.S.—died October 24, 1972, Stamford, Connecticut) was the first Black baseball player to play in the American major leagues during the 20th century. On April 15, 1947, Robinson broke the decades-old “color line” of Major League Baseball (MLB) when he appeared on the field for the National LeagueBrooklyn Dodgers. He played as an infielder and outfielder for the Dodgers from 1947 through 1956.
Early life
On the cusp of making historyJackie Robinson with the Kansas City Monarchs, a Negro league team, in 1945. Two years later he joined the Brooklyn Dodgers, becoming the first Black player in the major leagues in 63 years.
Reared in Pasadena, California, Robinson became an outstanding all-around athlete at Pasadena Junior College and the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). He excelled in football, basketball, and track as well as baseball. In 1941 Robinson withdrew from UCLA in his third year to help his mother care for the family. To provide financial assistance, he began playing semiprofessional football in Hawaii while also working in construction.
In 1942 Robinson entered the U.S. Army and attended officer candidate school; he was commissioned a second lieutenant in 1943. Robinson faced court-martial in 1944 for refusing to follow an order that he sit at the back of a military bus. The charges against Robinson were dismissed, and he received an honorable discharge from the military. However, the incident presaged Robinson’s future activism and commitment to civil rights.
Robinson married Rachel Isum in 1946, six years after they had met at UCLA, where she was studying nursing. She graduated with a B.S. in 1945, and she later, in 1961, earned a master’s in psychiatric nursing from New York University. They had three children: Jackie Jr., born in 1946; Sharon, born in 1950; and David, born in 1952.
Breaking the color barrier
Jackie Robinson: The first Black Major League Baseball playerLearn about the life of baseball pioneer Jackie Robinson.
Upon leaving the army, Robinson played professional baseball with the Kansas City Monarchs of the Negro American League, where he drew the attention of the president and general manager of the Brooklyn Dodgers, Branch Rickey. Rickey had been planning an attempt to integrate baseball and was looking for the right candidate. Robinson’s skills on the field, his integrity, and his conservative family-oriented lifestyle all appealed greatly to Rickey. Rickey’s main fear concerning Robinson was that he would be unable to withstand racist abuse without responding in a way that would hurt integration’s chances for success. During a legendary meeting, Rickey shouted insults at Robinson, trying to be certain that Robinson could accept taunts without incident. On October 23, 1945, Rickey signed Robinson to play on a Dodgers farm team, the Montreal Royals of the International League.
Robinson led that league in batting average in 1946 and was brought up to play for Brooklyn in 1947. He was an immediate success on the field. Leading the National League (NL) in stolen bases, he received MLB’s inaugural Rookie of the Year award. In 1949 he won the batting championship with a .342 average and was voted the NL’s Most Valuable Player (MVP).
How did Jackie Robinson become the first Black player in Major League Baseball?Learn about the life and career of Jackie Robinson, the first Black player in Major League Baseball (MLB).
His personal experiences were quite different. Fans hurled bottles and invectives at him. Some Dodger teammates openly protested against having to play with an African American, while players on opposing teams deliberately pitched balls at Robinson’s head and spiked him with their cleats in deliberately rough slides into bases. But not everyone in baseball was unsupportive of Robinson. In 1947 rumors circulated that players on the St. Louis Cardinals were threatening to strike if Robinson took the field. After Cardinals owner Sam Breadon discussed the rumors with NL President Ford Frick, Breadon met with the Cardinals’ team leaders, who assured him that the threat of a strike was merely idle talk and grumbling from a few players. When fan heckling of Robinson became intolerable, Dodger captain Pee Wee Reese left his position on the field and put an arm around Robinson in a show of solidarity, and the two men became lifelong friends. However, with the ugly remarks, death threats, and Jim Crow laws that forbade a Black player to stay in hotels or eat in restaurants with the rest of his team, Robinson’s groundbreaking experience in the major leagues was bleak. Of this period Robinson later stated:
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Plenty of times I wanted to haul off when somebody insulted me for the color of my skin, but I had to hold to myself. I knew I was kind of an experiment. The whole thing was bigger than me.
Jackie RobinsonBaseball star Jackie Robinson of the Brooklyn Dodgers stealing home as Boston Braves catcher Bill Salkeld is thrown off-balance by the pitcher's throw to the plate during a baseball game at Ebbets Field, Brooklyn, August 22, 1948.
His career in baseball was stellar. His lifetime batting average was .311, and he led the Dodgers to six league championships and one World Series victory. As a base runner, Robinson unnerved opposing pitchers and terrorized infielders who had to try to prevent him from stealing bases.
Robinson suffered a heart attack at his home in Stamford, Connecticut, on the morning of October 24, 1972, and died shortly afterward. He was 53 years old. In his memoir, I Never Had It Made, which was published that same month, he discussed the conflicting feelings he wrestled with on September 30, 1947, when he was poised to become the first Black player to play in the World Series:
There I was, the black grandson of a slave, the son of a black sharecropper, part of a historic occasion, a symbolic hero to my people. The air was sparkling. The sunlight was warm. The band struck up the national anthem. The flag billowed in the wind. It should have been a glorious moment for me…As I write this twenty years later, I cannot stand and sing the anthem. I cannot salute the flag; I know that I am a Black man in a white world. In 1972, in 1947, at my birth in 1919, I know that I never had it made.
In 1984 Robinson was posthumously awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest honor for an American civilian.
Jackie Robinson Day
Jackie RobinsonU.S. Pres. Bill Clinton speaking during the ceremony that marked the 50th anniversary of Jackie Robinson's breaking of the color barrier in Major League Baseball.
In April 1997, on the 50th anniversary of the breaking of the color bar in baseball, baseball commissioner Bud Selig retired Robinson’s jersey number, 42, from Major League Baseball. It was common for a team to retire the number of a player from that team, but for a number to be retired for all the professional teams within a sport was unprecedented. In 2004 Major League Baseball announced that it would annually honor Robinson on April 15, which would thenceforth be recognized as Jackie Robinson Day. Three years later star slugger Ken Griffey, Jr., received permission from the commissioner of baseball to wear the number 42 on Jackie Robinson Day, and the yearly “unretiring” of Robinson’s number gained more adherents until in 2009 Major League Baseball decided that all players, coaches, and umpires would wear number 42 on April 15.
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