Source: Bettmann / Getty
Jackie Robinson made Major League Baseball history 75 years ago today (April 15) after he broke the color barrier in the infamously all-white league. On Twitter, many are saluting the legendary second baseman, and teams across the MLB are joining together to honor number 42.
A portion of Robinson’s biography from his official website can be viewed below:
Growing up in a large, single-parent family, Jackie excelled early at all sports and learned to make his own way in life. At UCLA, Jackie became the first athlete to win varsity letters in four sports: baseball, basketball, football and track. In 1941, he was named to the All-American football team. Due to financial difficulties, he was forced to leave college and eventually decided to enlist in the U.S. Army. After two years in the army, he had progressed to second lieutenant. Jackie’s army career was cut short when he was court-martialed in relation to his objections with incidents of racial discrimination. In the end, Jackie left the Army with an honorable discharge.
In 1945, Jackie played one season in the Negro Baseball League, traveling all over the Midwest with the Kansas City Monarchs. But greater challenges and achievements were in store for him. In 1947, Brooklyn Dodgers president Branch Rickey approached Jackie about joining the Brooklyn Dodgers. The Major Leagues had not had an African-American player since 1889, when baseball became segregated. When Jackie first donned a Brooklyn Dodger uniform, he pioneered the integration of professional athletics in America. By breaking the color barrier in baseball, the nation’s preeminent sport, he courageously challenged the deeply rooted custom of racial segregation in both the North and the South.
Robinson went on to be named the National League’s Rookie Of The Year in 1947 and the NL’s MVP two tears later. In 1955, just a season prior to his retirement, the Brooklyn Dodgers won the World Series.
On Twitter, baseball fans and historians alike are chiming in with their thoughts on the trailblazing Jackie Robinson. Those reactions can be viewed below.
#JackieRobinsonDay is a reminder that a person with uncommon talent & vision can change the course of history. Lead by example & support Jackie Robinson's living legacy https://t.co/XgUz7F9JcB #Jackie42 #JRFoundation
JR Day Activities https://t.co/0d636ulTJX pic.twitter.com/CD8ooIw71M
— Jackie Robinson Foundation (@JRFoundation) April 14, 2022
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Photo: Getty
1.
75 years ago today, No. 42 changed the game forever. #JackieRobinsonDay pic.twitter.com/m6ttlioL40
— National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum
(@baseballhall) April 15, 2022
2.
On the 75th anniversary of his Major League debut, we celebrate Jackie Robinson’s life, legacy, and impact he left on not only baseball, but the world. #Jackie42 #JackieRobinsonDay pic.twitter.com/S0XDQv7KKF
— New York Yankees (@Yankees) April 15, 2022
3.
“I'm not concerned with your liking or disliking me … all I ask is that you respect me as a human being.” #JackieRobinsonDay pic.twitter.com/NH8DieCDsv
— FREEMANBASEBALL (@marvinfreeman84) April 15, 2022
4.
#JackieRobinsonDay Thank You #Jackie42 pic.twitter.com/ZzSphi7bVC
— Taijuan Walker (@tai_walker) April 15, 2022
5.
75 years ago, Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier as he stepped on to the field for the Brooklyn Dodgers. We celebrate the life and legacy of #42!
#JackieRobinsonDay pic.twitter.com/bIi5dUW8TC
— Topps (@Topps) April 15, 2022
6.
He changed the game forever.
Today we honor the life and legacy of Jackie Robinson, a trailblazer and civil rights icon.
As a nod to our borough’s great sports past, the Brooklyn Dodgers flag hangs outside Barclays Center on the former Ebbets Field flagpole.#JackieRobinsonDay pic.twitter.com/FTBwfEqXdM
— Brooklyn Nets (@BrooklynNets) April 15, 2022
7.
75 years ago, Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier when he took the field for the Brooklyn Dodgers on Opening Day. While some players were brilliant hitters or had blazing speed or were remarkable fielders, Robinson had it all. #GameChangers #JackieRobinsonDay #Jackie42 pic.twitter.com/TAENSIM4j0
— Smithsonian NMAAHC (@NMAAHC) April 15, 2022
8.
75 years ago today, #JackieRobinson integrated Major League Baseball on this very spot… Today we honor a hero who changed sports, America and our greater world…
#JackieRobinsonDay #Brooklyn pic.twitter.com/qYlerDsnYe
— Cyrus McQueen (@CyrusMMcQueen) April 15, 2022
9.
“Maybe one day we’ll all wear 42”#JackieRobinsonDay pic.twitter.com/1fJAKfmKi6
— ATBBTTR (@ATBBTTR) April 15, 2022
10.
"Maybe tomorrow, we'll all wear 42, so nobody could tell us apart." – Pee Wee Reese #JackieRobinsonDay pic.twitter.com/nO91GVMHjD
— Space Lawyer (@rrossjd) April 15, 2022
11.
Jackie Robinson broke baseball’s color barrier on April 15, 75 years ago.
Today, we celebrate Jackie's career, life, and the legacy he left on the game we love and the world we live in.
Today, we all wear 42 for #JackieRobinsonDay pic.twitter.com/UJELkm6IVJ
— San Diego Padres (@Padres) April 15, 2022
12.
#OTD in 1947, Jack Roosevelt Robinson bravely walked through a door that had been barred shut for almost 60 years. Here’s my painting of the great man at Ebbets Field, August 28, 1949. #JackieRobinsonDay pic.twitter.com/fn0iDnbol2
— Graig Kreindler (@GraigKreindler) April 15, 2022
13.
Jackie Robinson holding his Hall of Fame plaque in Cooperstown, N.Y. He was voted in on first ballot. 1962 #JackieRobinsonDay pic.twitter.com/hoxoxbm9Hj
— Baseball In Pics (@baseballinpix) April 15, 2022
(@baseballhall)
