Smithsonian Magazine

Inside Béisbol

A NEW EXHIBIT ABOUT LATINO BALLPLAYER­S COVERS ALL THE BASES

- By Gabriel Fernandez

ROBERTO CLEMENTE— the Pittsburgh Pirates right fielder whose fabled talents and devotion to charity made him one of the most beloved ballplayer­s ever, and who died tragically at 38 in an airplane crash—began his career in Puerto Rico in 1952, playing for the Cangrejero­s de Santurce before adoring crowds. Arriving in Pittsburgh in 1955, Clemente built a heroic 18-year career, inspiring generation­s of Latino men and women to seek their fortune on the field.

A multitude of players came to the United States from Spanish-speaking islands and countries and helped make baseball, and American life, what they are today. A new Smithsonia­n traveling exhibit, ¡Pleibol!, organized by the National Museum of American History and the Smithsonia­n Institutio­n Traveling Exhibition Service with federal funding administer­ed by the Smithsonia­n Latino Center, brings stories from Latino and Latina ballplayer­s to towns across the United States. A version of the exhibit will open this summer at the Museum of American History.

As ¡Pleibol! shows, nearly every successful profession­al Latino player got started in an atmosphere of community support. During the early to mid20th century, Latino churches, clubs and businesses in the States founded teams to help players—whether immigrants or the children of immigrants— find success.

Mexican American Marge Villa began playing as a kid in Montebello, California, and by 1946 was a star in the All-American Girls Profession­al Baseball League. Anthony Rendon, a Mexican American infielder for the Los Angeles Angels, learned ball at a Houston YMCA. ¡Pleibol! features the uniform Villa wore when she was 13 and a baseball card from Rendon’s Little League days, touching reminders of these stars’ humble beginnings.

Fostering new talent remains a priority. Nine-time All-Star Carlos Beltrán built a baseball academy in Puerto Rico that offers budding players a route to a college education— and to profession­al ball. Such efforts ensure that Latino players—who make up 30 percent of all MLB players today— will continue to find prosperity in their love of the game.

 ??  ?? From top: Amateur player Ernie Martinez’s 1965 glove; a scrapbook about Alonzo Orozco and David Salazar, semipro players in Los Angeles in the 1920s and ’30s; Marge Villa, 13, center front, with the East Los Angeles girls’ community team.
From top: Amateur player Ernie Martinez’s 1965 glove; a scrapbook about Alonzo Orozco and David Salazar, semipro players in Los Angeles in the 1920s and ’30s; Marge Villa, 13, center front, with the East Los Angeles girls’ community team.
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