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Breaking the Color Barrier in Major League Baseball

Breaking the Color Barrier in Major League Baseball

Metropolitan Museum of Art
1000 Fifth Avenue
(at 82nd Street)
New York, NY  10028
Tel: (212) 535-7710
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$12.00 students, $17.00 seniors, $25.00 general.
Admissions are suggested donation.

Dates

Wed, Jan 18, 2012 – Sun, June 17, 2012

Hours

Tues – Thurs, Sun: 9:30 am – 5:30 pm
Fri, Sat: 9:30 am – 9 pm

Closed Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's Day.

In October 1945 Wesley Branch Rickey (1881–1965), general manager of the Brooklyn Dodgers, signed Jack Roosevelt Robinson (1919–1972) from the Negro League's Kansas City Monarchs to the Dodgers organization, thus breaking the color barrier that had existed in professional baseball since 1889.

On April 15, 1947, Robinson took the field for the first time as a Brooklyn Dodger, earning the title "Rookie of the Year" in the National League at the end of the season with 12 homers, 29 steals, and a .297 batting average. Shortly after Robinson's debut, Larry Doby was signed by the Cleveland Indians, who then brought over the Negro League's star pitcher, Satchel Paige, to join Doby the following year.

With these developments, baseball's long-entrenched segregation began, slowly, to crumble; it took another 12 years for the Boston Red Sox—the last team to integrate—to hire Elijah "Pumpsie" Green, three years after Robinson retired from the game.

The selection of baseball cards illustrating some of the earliest and most illustrious players who moved from the Negro Leagues into the Majors is taken from the Jefferson R. Burdick Collection. The more than 30,000 baseball cards collected by Burdick date from 1887 to 1959 and represent the most comprehensive collection outside of the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York.

  • Directions: Subway: 4, 5, 6 to 86th Street

About this Organization

Metropolitan Museum of Art

The Metropolitan Museum of Art was incorporated in 1870 and moved to its present location in Central Park in 1880. It houses an encyclopedic collection of art objects from virtually all periods and continents.
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