The 1946 Reintroduction of Blacks into Professional Baseball and the Social Change that Resulted

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In 1868, blacks were banned from professional baseball and were forced to create their own baseball leagues, known as the Negro Leagues. Then in 1946, blacks were re-introduced into professional baseball when Jackie Robinson debuted with the Brooklyn Dodgers. This event gave hope and tangible evidence that a civil rights movement was possible. The integration of blacks had an effect on much more than baseball; it had an effect on an individual, national, and global level. The introduction of blacks into baseball has led to a social change throughout America.

Professional baseball in America started its segregation in 1868. The separations began when the National Association of Baseball Players decided to ban any team including one or more black players (Robinson 70). The baseball color line began with post-Civil War beliefs about race and civil rights, which were the same from the pre-Civil War beliefs. The baseball color line took several years to be in full effect, but in the mid-1880’s some players started to refuse to take the field alongside African Americans (Goldman 1). This led to the informal acceptance that African Americans were not allowed to participate in Major League Baseball. The Major Leagues never formally banned blacks, but the Minor Leagues did, so blacks had no way to get to the Major Leagues (Goldman 2).

When African Americans were banned from Major League Baseball, they created their own baseball leagues, known as the Negro Leagues (Robinson 71). Several leagues were created, but very few ever grew stability and lasted more than one year. Many of these leagues failed because of low attendance. The first Negro League to be successful was the Negro National League in 1920 (Goldman 3). The Negro Leagues w...

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...elds in city neighborhoods. The MLB now requires teams to interview at least one minority for any open management job (Sailer 6). Although the MLB is trying its best to attract more blacks to baseball, the situation is expected to get worse before any improvement is seen (Isidore 4).

Baseball takes pride in having been ahead of the nation on desegregation, but they also were ahead of most of the nation in drawing the color line. When Jackie Robinson broke the baseball color line, he also broke America’s color line (Sailer 3). Robinson led the way down the road for other black players to join the MLB. If integration in baseball had failed, it would not have put pressure on any other sports, such as basketball, to pursue it (Goldman 4). Baseball laid the groundwork for the progress that led to professional sports emerging as a force for equal rights in America.

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