On April 14, 1947, Major League Baseball was a whites-only sport. Not since the expulsion of black players in 1888 had a non-Caucasian man swung a bat or thrown a pitch in the Big Show.
That changed on April 15, 1947, when Jackie Robinson suited up for the Brooklyn Dodgers at Ebbets Field.
Today—the 63rd anniversary of this historic event—it is our duty, both as baseball fans and as Americans, to appreciate Robinson as not just a courageous man and a skilled ballplayer, but as the hero who forged a path for racial integration in all aspects of American society.
An African-American boards a segregated bus in the heart of the segregated South and takes a seat in the “whites-only” section. “Hey, you,” the driver yells, “Get to the back of the bus.&rdq ...
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Article written by Lewie Pollis
Guts Enough Not To Fight Back: The Enduring Legacy of Jackie Robinson
Posted: 15th April 2010 by Lewie Pollis in MLBComments Off on Guts Enough Not To Fight Back: The Enduring Legacy of Jackie Robinson