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Reflections
Jackie Robinson Remembered
By Harvey Frommer
Apr 15, 2005

Jackie Robinson
NEW YORK
-- He was born in Cairo, Georgia on the last day of January in 1919, and died on October 24, 1972 in Stamford, Connecticut. Robinson attended UCLA, where he won letters in three sports.

He was in the Army during World War II and then played briefly in the
Negro Leagues when the war ended. He was signed to a minor league
contract with the Montreal Royals in 1946 by Branch Rickey, and the following year came up to the Brooklyn Dodgers and broke baseball's age-old color line.

He played in the major leagues for a decade. He broke baseball age old
color line on April 15, 1947. He won the inaugural Rookie of the Year
Award in 1947, the National League Most Valuable Player Award in 1949, and he helped the Dodgers win six pennants and one world championship.

Despite all the pressure he played under, he was still able to record a
lifetime batting average of .311. His base-stealing ability and hustle
won many games for the Dodgers. He set several records for fielding for second basemen.

His influence on sports is immeasurable. His breaking of baseball's
color line against the greatest of odds is still one of the most dramatic
stories in all of sports history. And there are those who still have
special memories of the man and the legend. Here is how one from that
time still remembers the great player Brooklyn Dodger fans called "Robby".

When school was out, I sometimes went with my father in his taxi. One
summer morning, we were driving in East Flatbush in Brooklyn down Snyder Avenue. My father pointed to a dark red brick house with a high porch.

"I think Jackie Robinson lives there," my father said. He parked across
the street and we got out of the cab, stood on the sidewalk and looked at the house. Suddenly, the front door opened. A black man in a
short-sleeved shirt stepped out. I didn't believe it. Here we were on a quiet street on a summer morning with no one else around.

The man was not wearing the baggy, ice-cream-white-uniform of the
Brooklyn Dodgers that accentuated his blackness. He was dressed in regular clothes, coming out of a regular house in a regular Brooklyn
neighborhood, a guy like anyone else going out for a bottle of milk and a newspaper.

Then, incredibly, he crossed the street and came right toward me.
Seeing that unmistakable pigeon-toed walk, the rock of the shoulders and hips that I had seen so many times before on the baseball field, I had no doubt who it was.

"Hi Jackie, I'm one of your biggest fans," I said self-consciously. "Do
you think the Dodgers are going to win the pennant this year?"

"His handsome face looked sternly down at me.  "We'll try our best," he
said.

"Good luck," I said."

"Thanks," he replied."

He put his big hand out, and I took it. We shook hands and I felt the
strength and firmness of his grip. I was a nervy kid, but I didn't ask
for an autograph or try to prolong the conversation. I just he walked
away down the street.



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