A vigorous history of a little-known episode in the integration of professional sports.
Jackie Robinson came first, of course, signing with the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947. For that reason, writes Epplin, “it is perhaps inevitable that the second team in Major League Baseball to integrate in the twentieth century would be overshadowed by the first.” But in that season and the next, that second team, the Cleveland Indians, brought on two Black players. The first, renowned pitcher Satchel Paige, is well known today; by that time, he was already in his 40s and had been knocking around in the Negro Leagues for more than two decades, “someone who was incongruously both a major-league rookie and a baseball legend.” Paige did not disappoint, striking fear in the hearts of those who faced him on the mound. The second player, Larry Doby, is less well known, but Epplin brings him vividly to life. The author provides an indelible portrait of the duo galloping across the season, giving the Indians a World Series win in 1948. In this deeply researched account, the author also chronicles the contributions of two White men: team owner Bill Veeck and pitcher Bob Feller, who once could “throw a fastball that some major leaguers deemed the swiftest they’d ever encountered.” Feller had been having a bad time of it, but Indians fans flocked to Paige. Not only did Veeck integrate Cleveland stadium—at one game against the Dodgers, “one out of every six Black residents in Cleveland was in attendance”—he consistently demonstrated his skills as a showman. Quite apart from his role in bringing Black players into the game (Doby considered him a second father), Veeck also pioneered between-innings giveaways, pregame shows, postgame firework displays, and other standard tropes of modern pro baseball, contributions that have been largely unsung.
Social and sports history meet capably in this eventful account, a boon for baseball fans.