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Jackie Robinson

Published on Nov 18, 2015

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

Jackie Robinson

A Champion of Equality

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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  

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

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"

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