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Jackie Robinson
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Published on Nov 18, 2015
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PRESENTATION OUTLINE
1.
Jackie Robinson
A Champion of Equality
2.
Childhood
Born on January 31st, 1919 in Cairo, Georgia
Family of sharecroppers
Youngest of five children
Father left in 1920, family moved to Pasadena, California
Only black family in Pepper Street neighborhood
3.
Childhood (continued)
Experienced lots of racial prejudice- inspired him to fight for equality
Only brought Robinson family closer together
Relatively poor family
Mother was maid, Jackie delivered paper,mowed lawns, many other jobs
Accepted in elementary school- a young sports star
4.
Childhood (continued)
Friends of many races in school- against racism at young age
Began to become a troublemaker
Joined minority Pepper Street Gang
Reverend Karl Downs talked him out of it
Sports helped him forget about gang, guided him away from mischief
5.
High school
Joined John Muir High School in 1935
Excelled in baseball, basketball, football, track, tennis
Received many awards for his athletic ability
Happy, racism-free experience at Muir Tech
Did well academically, graduated
6.
COLLEGE
Joined Pasadena Junior College in 1938
Continued to excel in baseball, basketball, football, track
Received several outstanding citizenship awards- fought back against racism
Transferred to UCLA in 1939 following his brother's death
Was still a star in those four sports, left early due to monetary issues
7.
Life after college, military
Played semi-pro football for Honolulu, Los Angeles in 1941
Drafted to Army in 1942 following Pearl Harbor attack
Was happy serving, planned to stay
1944 bus segregation incident severely angered him
Discharged a few months later, briefly played football again
8.
Negro leagues
Signed with Kansas City Monarchs in early 1945
Hated it- no structure, bad stadiums, horrible scorekeeping
Had great success, caught attention of MLB teams
Left team 47 games through season
Married Rachel Issum on Feb. 10th, 1946- married by Karl Downs
9.
Joining the MLB
Brooklyn Dodgers president Branch Rickey wanted a black player
Signed Jackie on August 29th, 1945
Contract stated Jackie couldn't fight back
Jackie appalled by this- knew it would be very hard not to
Joined Montreal Royals (Dodgers minor league team) in 1946
10.
Breaking the color barrier
Had success with Montreal, racism actually wasn't that bad
Called up, broke color barrier with Dodgers on April 15th, 1947
Thrown at, spiked, booed, called racist names, received death threats
Teammates hated him at first, didn't support him, refused to play
Hate gradually lessened, teammates, fans began to love him
11.
Baseball accomplishments
6-time MLB All-Star
1947 Rookie of the Year
1949 National League MVP
1955 World Series champion
Member of MLB All-Century Team, in the Hall of Fame
12.
Life Outside of/after baseball
Moved to Stamford, Connecticut in 1955
Had three children with Rachel
Taught many children about sports
Also taught them life lessons
Enjoyed spending time with his family
13.
Jackie's Final Years
Highly involved with civil rights, NAACP
Was ABC baseball announcer in 1965
Vice president of Chock Full o'Nuts from 1957-1964
Went to many baseball games
Died on October 24th, 1972 due to a heart attack
14.
pOSITIve influences on humanity
Broke baseball's color barrier
Helped end racism everywhere through baseball
Fought for civil rights after baseball career, strove for total equality
Proved that all problems can be solved
Showed that YOU can truly make a big difference in this world
15.
Positive Influence on humanity (continued)
Rose above hate
Proved that all people are equal
Inspired others to fight for what's right, NEVER quit
Valued others more than himself
Got his message across without violence, changed world for the better
16.
HOW DID HE DO IT?
Used nonviolence, baseball to get his message across
Strongly fought for what he believed was right- no matter what
Was extremely brave, determined- never let hate stop or discourage him
Was mentally strong enough to endure inhumane cruelty toward him
Was iron-willed, passionate- never quit despite his horrible treatment
17.
APplication of influence
Stand up strongly for what you believe in
Never let others' opinions get in your way
Never give up no matter how hard the problem is
Always think about how you can better the lives of others
Be determined- you can do ANYTHING you put your mind to
18.
Jackie's Legacy
Enabled people of all races to play and love baseball
Jackie Robinson Day
Jackie Robinson Foundation
Awarded Presidential Medal of Freedom after his death in 1986
Still very popular in media- including 2013 hit movie "42"
19.
Thanks for watching!
Daniel Ottavi
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