Negro+Baseball+Leagues


 * [[image:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/c3/1924_Negro_League_World_Series.jpg/640px-1924_Negro_League_World_Series.jpg width="998" height="182" align="right"]] ||
 * Negro League World Series, opening game Oct. 11, 1924, Kansas City, Mo. ||



Overview of the Negro Leagues

 * Negro Leagues History, from the Negro Leagues Museum**

Link also to the Negro Baseball Leagues e-Museum with resources for teachers and students.



In the 20 years after the Civil War, about 200 African American baseball teams were formed.

They mostly played each other, since only a few areas allowed interracial playing. African Americans began to play baseball in the late 1800s on military teams, college teams and company teams. They eventually found their way to professional teams with white players. Moses Fleetwood Walker and Bud Fowler were among the first to participate. However, racism and "Jim Crow" laws would force them from these teams by 1900

In 1890, the National Association of Baseball Players forbade African Americans from playing. This formally banned black teams from the organized leagues for 50 years.  =**ORGANIZED LEAGUES:** = = Negro National League--1920-31 = = Southern Negro League --1920 = = Eastern Colored League --1923-28 = = Negro Southern League--1926, 32, 45 = = American Negro League--1929 = = East-West League--1932 = = Negro National League--1933-48 = = Negro American League--1937-60 =   
 * However, the African American teams kept playing. They continued to play each other and occasionally faced white teams.
 * [|Rube Foster Biography]**
 * In 1920, Rube Foster (owner of Chicago American Giants) created an all black league: The Negro National League.
 * This league consisted of Midwestern teams. The North and South regions also created their own leagues. These leagues were successful but fell apart.
 * After the Depression, the National League formed to replace the African American regional teams.
 * The first African American player to be signed to a Major League team was Jackie Robinson in 1946, who played for the Brooklyn Dodgers.
 * Slowly, other Major League teams signed African American players and National League disbanded. The last of the National League's African American teams broke up in 1960. Link here for more information from PBS.



[[image:primary_sources.PNG]]Primary Sources
The Exclusion of African Americans from the National Association of Base Ball Players, Philadelphia, 1867

Baseball Primary Source Set, Middle Tennessee State University

Negro League Baseball Primary Source Set, Digital Public Library of America

[|Smithsonian Negro League Images]

[[image:resourcesforhistoryteachers/Multimedia.png]]Multimedia Resources
Ken Burns has a documentary, "Baseball: the Tenth Inning" that features information on African American baseball players. Link here for the PBS companion site.

For a short quiz, go to Baseball in Black and White

[[image:Screen Shot 2017-02-24 at 12.30.24 PM.png]]Hidden Histories and Untold Stories of African Americans and Baseball
Baseball and Race in the United States, a lesson plan from the Gilder Lehman Institute of American History

Moses Fleetwood Walker
Fleet Walker from Society for American Baseball Research
 * Moses Fleetwood Walker was the first African American to play in the major leagues of professional baseball in 1884 until Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier in 1947.

Effa Manley

 * Effa Manley was a Negro League Baseball Executive
 * Effa Manley Becomes the First Woman in Baseball Hall of Fame, 2006

Declining Numbers of African Americans in Baseball
Click here for an ESPN article from April 19, 2013, on why African Americans are participating less in professional baseball. Click here to watch a short youtube video on the decline of African Americans in baseball

[[image:rotating gif.gif width="66" height="66"]]Connections to History Standards

 * Link to United States History II.9
 * Link to United States History II.26