When the Brooklyn Dodgers recruited Jackie Robinson from the
Negro Leagues' Kansas City Monarchs in 1947, it marked a turning
point both in baseball and civil rights history. Robinson became
the first African American to play in the Major Leagues, and in
doing so, led generations of black players into the previously
all-white world of professional baseball. As one of the greatest
players professional baseball has ever seen, Robinson fought
fiercely for civil rights on and off the diamond throughout his
lifetime, and in doing so became a great American hero.
Mary Kay Linge recounts the extraordinary story of Robinson's
life-from his early childhood in the South, to his college years at
UCLA, to becoming a Hall of Famer and a major figure in the NAACP.
In analyzing the surrounding social and cultural contexts of
Robinson's time, this biography examines the legacy of a man who
forever changed baseball. A timeline, statistical appendix,
bibliography of print and electronic sources for further reading,
and photographs enhance this biography.
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