Saturday 15 April 2017

Jackie Robinson--70 Years Later, Part I: Beginnings

Jackie Robinson’s Legacy 70 Years Later


Part I – Beginnings


                It was 70 years ago, on April 15, 1947 that the Brooklyn Dodgers took the field with Jackie Robinson at second base. This is one of the most significant moments in the history of Major League Baseball in that it opened the door of opportunity for many ballplayers who, to that point in history, had been denied the chance to compete at baseball’s highest level.
                But Robinson’s story started before that spring afternoon at Ebbets Field, located in the New York borough of Brooklyn. How did he get to that position where he was bestowed the honour of being the man to break baseball’s colour barrier? What was special about him, to be chosen among the many players who could have been selected?
                We’ll start in the small town of Cairo, Georgia, population 1908, where Jack Roosevelt Robinson was born on January 31, 1919, into a family of sharecroppers. His parents, Jerry and Mallie, chose his middle name in honour of US President Theodore Roosevelt. Unfortunately, Jerry Robinson abandoned his family (Jackie had four siblings) just over a year after his son’s birth and the rest of the family moved to Pasadena, California.
                As a youngster, Robinson grew up in poverty, and was often excluded from many recreational opportunities due to being Black. In high-school, (he attended John Muir High School) he played and lettered in four varsity sports including football, basketball, track and field and baseball.
                After graduating high school, he enrolled at Pasadena Junior College where he continued to participate in the same four sports. During his time at PJC, he was arrested after vocally disputing one of his friends being detained by police. He was given a two-year suspended sentence, but this incident gave Jackie a reputation for standing against racial antagonism.
                After graduating PJC in 1939, he enrolled at UCLA and again, played all four sports. In fact, he became the first UCLA student to win varsity letters in four sports. After leaving UCLA just months before he was due to graduate, he travelled to Hawaii where he played semi-pro football. In December of 1941, he returned to California to pursue a professional football career when America’s entry into World War II stopped those plans.
                Robinson was drafted into the Army in early 1942 but never saw action in either Europe or the Pacific. In 1944, he boarded a military bus and was ordered by the driver to sit at the back of the bus. Seeing the racial implications, Robinson refused and was taken into custody by military police. He was charged with multiple offenses, including public intoxication, even though Robinson never drank. While awaiting his court martial, Robinson’s former unit (the 761st Tank Battalion) was deployed overseas and became the first Black tank unit to see action in the War.
                He was acquitted of all charges and then received an honourable discharge late in 1944. While he intended to resume his football career, in early 1945 he was offered a contract by the Kansas City Monarchs, one of the top teams in the Negro Leagues. Robinson accepted the contract, valued at $400 per month.

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