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Jackie Robinson in his Brooklyn Dodgers uniform, 1950. NARA ID 6802718.

JACKIE ROBINSON BROKE COLORBARRIER#OTD 1947

Athlete and Civil Rights Advocate

“Life is not a spectator sport… . If you’re going to spend your whole life in the grandstand just watching what goes on, in my opinion you’re escaping your life.” – Jackie Robinson, 1964

Jack Roosevelt Robinson broke the MLB color barrier 74 years ago today. As the first Black to play in the major leagues, he became the target of vicious racial abuse. He established a “reputation as a black man who never tolerated affronts to his dignity,” but found it increasingly challenging not to respond. In the ballpark, he answered the people he called “haters” with the perfect eloquence of a base hit. In 1949, his best year, Robinson was named the MLB’s MVP, and in 1962 was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame.

He continued to champion the cause of civil rights after he retired from baseball. He believed that racial integration in every facet of American society would enrich the nation, just as surely as it had enriched baseball. Every American President who held office between 1956 and 1972 received letters from Jackie Robinson expressing varying levels of rebuke for not going far enough to advance the cause of civil rights.

Letterto Eisenhower about ittle Rock, 5/13/1958. NARA ID 186627.

Telegramto LBJ about the horrific events in Selma, 3/9/1965.

Letter from Jackie Robinson to Nixon Deputy Special Assistant Roland Elliott, 4/20/1972.

More online:

See also:

Jackie Robinson—Freedom Fighter
Featured Document display, East Rotunda Gallery, National Archives Museum, DC, through April 20, 2022.

Jackie Robinson refused to move to the back of the bus
Drafted into the Army during World War II, 2nd Lt. Jack R. Robinson was stationed at Camp Hood, Texas, in 1944. Riding a military shuttle, Lieutenant Robinson was ordered to move to the rear by the civilian driver. Robinson explained that the War Department had recently desegregated military buses. But this was the Jim Crow South. The driver called the military police. A crowd gathered. Things escalated. Robinson was charged with insubordination and conduct disrespectful to his superior officer.

See Letter from Lt. Jack Robinson to Truman K. Gibson, NARA ID 159703346.

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