Jackie Robinson

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Jackie Robinson
& the Civil Rights
Movement, or,
How Would YOUR life be
different had it not been
for Jackie Robinson?
Drew Kaufman
Hill Campus of Arts and Science
Did Jackie Robinson Have More
of an Effect on Civil Rights as an
Athlete or as a Political Activist?
Before Rosa Parks, Jackie refused
to go to the back of the bus
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=KLnP3fWh1tE&noredirect=1
Jackie’s Youth
Born: January 31, 1919 Cairo Georgia
Jerry Robinson (Father) was making $12 a
month as a sharecropper
Jerry Robinson asked his boss, Jim Sasser,
for more money
Sasser allowed Jerry to work as a half-cropper.
•Half-cropping- receiving half the crops to sell in
market
•Jackie’s father simply walked away from the family
when Jackie was 6 months old, never to be heard
from again
“Even before I went to high school and
college I resolve not to take insults without
retaliating. Growing up in Pasadena, I
encountered many situations which I
considered unjust. I remember going to
the YMCA and being told that Negroes
were allowed to use the facilities of the Y
only on a certain day of the week…”
- Jackie Robinson
Pepper Street in the 20th
Cetury
There were restrictive rules that
banned black people from Pepper
Street.
Mallie got a light skinned black man
to act like he was buying their house
at 121 Pepper Street.
White residents petitioned and
threatened to burn the house down.
Though the threats were there for
all blacks, the Robinson’s remained in
Pasadena
Jackie was determined to do well in
High School
Jackie was a four sport athletic
star
Football
Basketball
Track
Baseball
Jackie was able to combine
athletics and academics to
get into UCLA
1939: enters UCLA on athletic scholarship
First student to earn 4 varsity letters in
one year
 National champion in long jump
 Highest scorer in the pacific coast
conference in basketball
 All-American football running back until
his eligibility expired
Performed better in track, basketball, and
football than in baseball
After UCLA
1941: Joined an
intergraded semi-pro
football league
He played a game at
Pearl Harbor and left
2 days before the
Japanese attacked
1942: Drafted to the
Army
Stationed at fort
Riley in Kansas
The Army was still
segregated
1936 Olympic Games in
Berlin
Older brother, Mack, went to
the 1936 Olympic games in Berlin
as part of the US track team
 200-meter dash
•Silver Medal
Hitler congratulated all the medalists, but
when the black US athletes got up on the
podium, Hitler left the stadium.
 This made a strong statement
Jackie was so proud of his brother
 “Jackie dreamed that someday he too might
use his athletic ability to accomplish
something so wonderful and powerful.”
-Herb Dunn
As a Professional
Athlete
The Negro Leagues
Established on February 13, 1920
 Kansas City, Missouri YMCA
President: Andrew Foster
 “Father of black baseball”
By 1923 there were two leagues
 NNL had teams in the South and Midwest
 ECL had teams on the East coast
1924: First Negro World Series
1945: Robinson released from the Army
and joined the Negro Baseball league
Kansas City Monarchs
Negro League
Team in the NNL
Robinson made
$400 a month
Jackie played 47
games (1 season):
 163 at bats
 5 home runs
 .387 batting
average
 13 stolen bases
The Major Leagues
Branch Rickey: President
of the Brooklyn Dodgers
Wanted to bring the
“ideal” black player
into the MLB
August 28,1945: Jackie
Robinson was interviewed
by Branch Rickey
Jackie showed that he
had the character along
with his baseball talent
Rickey wanted a player
who was strong enough
not to fight back
October 23,1945: Signs
with Montreal Royals, a
Dodgers farm team
“I cannot face my God much longer
knowing that his black creatures are
held separate and distinct from his
white creatures in the game that has
given me all that I can call my own”
-Branch Rickey
Robinson is seen with Branch Rickey
signing a contract with the Brooklyn
Dodgers farm team.
Breaking the Color Barrier
April 1947: Major League debut as Dodgers
first baseman wearing #42
Being Bigger Than Life
Received racial threats from white fans and
players
 Fans threw trash on him
 Opposing pitchers hit him purposely while players
spiked him with their cleats
 Teammates petitioned to get Jackie off the
Dodgers
 Players expected him to carry their bags and
shine their shoes
Robinson family received many death threats
Had to obey segregation laws
 Rode in back of team bus
 Had to enter restaurants through black entrances
while rest of team went through the front
Threats Target Robinson
Spring Training with the
Dodgers
Spring 1947: Jackie goes to Cuba
with the rest of the Brooklyn
Dodgers
 Several Dodger players signed a petition
refusing to play
• This petition was quickly put down by
Branch Rickey who threatened to fire
all protesting players.
• Some players were let go from the
Dodgers because of the petition
Becoming an Idol using
BASEBALL to change America
Jackie excelled for the
Dodgers
Never started any fights
or said anything about all
the abuse he received
Blacks saw Jackie as a
hero
 Eventually, even whites
began to see Jackie as
a heroic figure
Became a symbol in
American society
Allowed whites to see
black players as equal
Respect from his Teammates
I started the season as a lonely man, often feeling like a black
Don Quixote tilting at a lot of white windmills. I ended it feeling
like a member of a solid team. -- Jackie Robinson
Jackie’s Popularity Rises
Life Magazine 1951
Gaining Respect from Whites
Jackie Gains Respect
Jackie Steals Home in World Series
Black Arts
Jackie Robinson’s popularity and
success in Baseball started to become a
major influence in black music, art, and
the press!
Did You See Jackie Robinson Hit That Ball
?
(Words and music by Woodrow Buddy Johnson, June 1949)
Did you see Jackie Robinson hit that ball?
It went zoom in cross the left field wall.
Yeah boy, yes, yes. Jackie hit that ball.
And when he swung his bat,
the crowd went wild,
because he knocked that ball a solid mile.
Yeah boy, yes, yes. Jackie hit that ball.
Satchel Page [i.e., Paige] is mellow,
So is Campanella,
Newcombe and Doby, too.
But it's a natural fact,
when Jackie comes to bat,
the other team is through.
Did you see Jackie Robinson hit that ball?
Did he hit it boy, and that ain't all.
He stole home.
Yes, yes, Jackie's real gone
The Hall of Fame
1962: Inducted into
Hall of Fame
Inducted on first
ballot
 124 votes out of 160
ballots (77.5%)
New Hopes for Black People
Jackie Robinsons success in the
major leagues:
 Proved that blacks could succeed in
America
 Democracy became more meaningful
to blacks
 Increased respect for blacks
As a Political
Activist
“A life is not important except in the impact it
has on other lives.”
-Jackie Robinson
“I could not be doing my work had you not done
what you did.” -Dr. Martin Luther King
Jackie’s Idols
Martin Luther King Jr.
Malcolm X
Though Jackie had similar views and looked up to
these two civil rights leaders, he did not agree
with their actions.
Jackie went about fighting civil rights
differently
Standing up for Black Rights
July 1944: While in the army, Jackie
refuses an order to ride in the back
of the bus
 Fort Hood, Texas
• Robinson was court marshaled
NAACP, black press, and black
population were furious
 Robinson was found innocent, and
was released from the army
President Truman
July 26, 1948: President
Truman desegregates
the Army
 Executive order
9981
4 years after Jackie’s
protest
For the Good of the People
Jackie Robinson Construction Company
 Built low income housing for the poor and
underprivileged
“Afternoon of Jazz”
 Annual Concerts in which first year earnings
went to the Southern Christian Leadership
Conference
• Supported Civil Rights work and voter
registration in the South
Freedom National Bank
 Founded as well as worked as chairman
• It was a minority-owned bank in Harlem, N.Y.
Civil Rights in Baseball
1972: Jackie Criticizes baseball for
having no black manager
 Two years later baseball has its first
black manager
• 1974: Frank Robinson with the Cleveland
Indians
Letter to the White House
August 1957: Letter to Presidential Assistant Fred Morrow
Letter to President Eisenhower
1958: Letter to President
Eisenhower
1954: Supreme Court said that
all states must integrate
schools (Brown v. Board of
Education)
Eisenhower ordered federal
troops to protect black
students in Little Rock
Arkansas
Jackie was elated with
Eisenhower’s actions
But thought they were too
late
Robinson’s letter said that he
was thankful for their support
and reminded them that all
black citizens deserve full
federal support for all civil
rights under the constitution
Integrated
Schooling
Youth march for
integrated schools
Included popular
figures such as
Martin Luther King
Jr., Ralph Bunche, A
Phillip Randolph, Roy
Wilkins, and Jackie
Marched down
Constitutional avenue
to the Lincoln
memorial
Asked all people to
sign a petition and
asked for speedy
integration of schools
Politics
I guess you'd call me an independent, since I've
never identified myself with one party or
another in politics. . . I always decide my vote by
taking as careful a look as I can at the actual
candidates and issues themselves, no matter
what the party label.
-Jackie Robinson
Nixon v. Kennedy
1960 election: Robinson supported Nixon
over Kennedy
 In private meetings with Robinson:
• Nixon seemed friendly, charming, a good
leader, and a big supporter of African
American Civil rights
• Kennedy did not seem as supportive and
had trouble looking Robinson in the eyes.
Jackie wondered if this had to do with a
prejudice against him and other blacks.
Letter to
President
Kennedy
1961
Signified his growing
trust in president
Kennedy
Robinson stated that
he is happy in the way
Kennedy's
administration is going
thus far
However Jackie
wanted Kennedy and
his administration to
help at a quicker pace.
Letter to President Johnson :
1967
Martin Luther King Jr.
and other civil rights
leaders opposed the
Vietnam war
Jackie wrote letter to
let President Johnson
know that he had the
support of many black
Americans regarding
the war
 Wanted Johnson to
remember and
support black
Americans
To President Lyndon B. Johnson
Robinson, as well as many other Americans, were angry about
protestors that were being clubbed in Selma Alabama.
This resulted in several deaths and a lot of injuries
Robinsons letter urged him to stop this immediately
Letter to President Nixon’s
Assistant: 1972
To Roland L. Elliot
(Presidential
Assistant)
Expresses concern
about blacks still not
obtaining full rights
Jackie warns
Government to show
more support towards
blacks
 Thinks blacks will
become more
aggressive and this
could hurt America
Jackie’s Legacy
The Jackie Robinson Foundation
Created in 1973 by Rachel
Robinson
Gives minority youth
scholarships to attend college
 Jackie Robinson Scholars
Each scholar is also given:
 $7,200 in financial support
 Mentors
 summer internships and permanent jobs
266 Scholars attending 93 colleges across
the United States
The Jackie Robinson Award
Rookie of the Year
Award
1987: became
known as The
Jackie Robinson
Award
60th Anniversary
April 15, 2007
Over 200 players wore #42 in honor of
Jackie Robinson
Every member of the Dodgers wore #42
The right of every American to
first-class citizenship is the most
important issue of our time.
-- Jackie Robinson
To Be Considered
Although Jackie Robinson was
more active and affective as a
political activist, would he have
been as successful if he was
not a superior athlete? How?
The End
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