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Auggie

(31,173 posts)
Thu Jan 31, 2019, 01:48 PM Jan 2019

It's Jackie Robinson's 100th birthday

NBC Sports / January 31st, 2019

Today is the 100th anniversary of Jackie Robinson’s birth.

At this point it’s hard to say anything about Robinson that any baseball fan has not already heard, over and over again. But then again, it’s impossible to overstate the significance of the fact that it was only 72 years-ago that he became the first black man to play major league baseball in the modern era. It’s not ancient history. My dad was alive at a time when only white men were allowed to play baseball. Our current president was too. So too were players as recent as Nolan Ryan and Reggie Jackson.

Though you almost certainly know the general parameters of Robinson’s accomplishments, you should nonetheless take some extra time to reacquaint yourself with Robinson’s story once again. Today the New York Times has a fantastic set of images and personal essays about Robinson and his legacy. You should go check out Jackie’s Baseball-Reference.com page too, as we sometimes spend so much time talking about his historical significance that we forget he was a hell of a baseball player regardless. It’s also worth remembering that Robinson’s post-playing career, which includes a lot of important work in the civil rights movement, was also significant.

Finally, let us take a moment to acknowledge that history has a funny way of sanding the edges off of important civil rights figures after they die in order to make them more palatable — or useful — to people in the here and now. People like Robinson, who drew all kinds of ire in life, are cast as being universally beloved later on. That’s fine as far as it goes, but it’s not fine that they are often, at the same time, held up as standing for an awful lot of things they didn’t or wouldn’t, in reality, stand for in life.

MORE: https://news.yahoo.com/jackie-robinson-100th-birthday-164713060.html



11 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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It's Jackie Robinson's 100th birthday (Original Post) Auggie Jan 2019 OP
K&R Kurt V. Jan 2019 #1
Icon! True Dough Jan 2019 #2
I thought the movie 42 was great soryang Jan 2019 #3
Wow. Your mom have any stories? Duppers Feb 2019 #9
No specific stories but... soryang Feb 2019 #10
Thank you. Duppers Feb 2019 #11
Maybe you think you have seen it all murielm99 Jan 2019 #4
Awesome story ... thanks for sharing! Auggie Jan 2019 #6
Dear Mr. President, He was out! Brother Buzz Jan 2019 #5
Rachel Robinson is 96. El Supremo Jan 2019 #7
What an amazing athlete and wife... 40RatRod Jan 2019 #8

soryang

(3,299 posts)
3. I thought the movie 42 was great
Thu Jan 31, 2019, 02:36 PM
Jan 2019

My mom knew Branch Rickey, Pee Wee Reese, and had met Jackie Robinson as well while working for the Brooklyn Dodgers.

soryang

(3,299 posts)
10. No specific stories but...
Fri Feb 1, 2019, 08:52 PM
Feb 2019

She used to say that Branch Rickey was very nice and that Pee Wee Reese was a great guy. When I saw the movie I understood what she meant.

I know she was aware of the racism and controversy surrounding Jackie Robinson and his treatment, because she frequently pointed out discrimination and prejudice wherever she saw it. Whenever we saw Jackie on tv, she would say that man is a hero. I think this experience with the Dodgers shaped her perspective. I'm pretty sure she worked there in the summers of 47 and 48. She was a receptionist and met the players when they came into the "main office."

I'm sorry she didn't live long enough to see the film. She would have loved it, too.

murielm99

(30,745 posts)
4. Maybe you think you have seen it all
Thu Jan 31, 2019, 02:57 PM
Jan 2019

and heard it all, but a Chicago legend wrote a column about Robinson's debut in Chicago that brings tears to my eyes.

Read the second column, written by the late, great Mike Royko. The title is: Jackie's Debut a Unique Day.

https://www.press.uchicago.edu/Misc/Chicago/730719.html

40RatRod

(532 posts)
8. What an amazing athlete and wife...
Thu Jan 31, 2019, 07:08 PM
Jan 2019

I saw him play an exhibition game when the Dodgers came through Knoxville Tennessee after spring training. He hit a home run and a friend got the ball and gave it to me. Jackie was one of a kind and my favorite of all time. Thank you so much for posting this!!!!

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