The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘It was something he never forgot ... but neither should we’

After apology, Philly among many Jackie Robinson tributes

- By errin haines Whack and Joe resnick

PHILADELPH­IA — As cities across the country honored Jackie Robinson’s pioneering baseball career, one also apologized for its racist treatment of Major League Baseball’s first black player nearly 70 years ago.

When Robinson’s Brooklyn Dodgers played the Philadelph­ia Phillies in 1947, he was told to “go back to the cotton fields” by the Phillies’ manager, refused service at a local hotel and taunted by players with racial slurs when he came to bat. On Friday, Philadelph­ia’s city council publicly acknowledg­ed the incident as a dark chapter in the city’s history.

“He faced tremendous racism in our city,” Councilwom­an Helen Gym said. “It was something he never forgot ... but neither should we.”

April 15 is recognized nationally as Jackie Robinson Day, and ballparks around the country are also celebratin­g the 69th anniversar­y of the day he broke the league’s color barrier in 1947. Robinson played for the Dodgers until 1956.

All MLB players, managers, coaches and umpires wore his No. 42 for games Friday. Baseball Commission­er Rob Manfred, at Yankee Stadium for the SeattleNew York game, said he was in his office earlier in the day and saw Colorado playing the Cubs on television, with everyone wearing the same number.

“It’s a constant reminder that today’s different,” Manfred said.

Gym presented a resolution, passed by the council last month, before about 100 children, city leaders and Robinson fans — some wearing his No. 42 Dodgers jersey — gathered at the Philadelph­ia Stars Negro League Memorial Park. Among them was 79-yearold Carolyn Mitchell, who saw Robinson play as a girl.

Mitchell, who is black, said Friday’s ceremony was “very meaningful” and that passing by the park gave her back fond memories of watching baseball growing up. The youngest of eight children and her parents’ only daughter, Mitchell took to sports early and saw Robinson play in Philadelph­ia in the early 1950s.

“He was unbelievab­le,” she recalled, smiling. “He could run like crazy. He used to love to steal bases.”

Robinson’s skill for basesteali­ng is depicted in a mural on Philadelph­ia’s north end painted nearly a decade ago in his honor. Walking near the mural on Friday afternoon with her 10-year-old daughter, Nate’, Tikeena Harris explained that blacks and whites didn’t used to play sports together.

Tommy Keels, who lived nearby and passes the mural regularly, said Robinson was a groundbrea­ker who represente­d his race well.

“I lived through Jim Crow,” said Keels, 60, who is from Miami. “I was raised in the South. I experience­d a lot of things I know he did on a monumental scale.”

In Los Angeles, where the Dodgers played their first game in 1958, Robinson’s widow, Rachel, and daughter Sharon were participat­ing in a pregame ceremony before a game against the San Francisco Giants at Chavez Ravine — where the club first retired Robinson’s uniform number on June 4, 1972.

Dodgers broadcaste­r Vin Scully, who was there for Robinson’s career in Brooklyn, said Robinson’s “selfcontro­l under some pressurize­d circumstan­ces was remarkable.”

“We all knew that that fire of competitiv­eness was always on high, and he was not always welcomed. But he overcame all of that,” Scully said.

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