Fire crews found the burned remnants this week of a prized bronze statue of Jackie Robinson that was stolen last week from a public park in Kansas, authorities said.
The Wichita Fire Department received a call around 8:40 a.m. about a trash can on fire at Garvey Park in the southern part of the city and discovered what appeared to be pieces of the statue, according to police spokesperson Andrew Ford. At a news conference Tuesday, he described it as “not salvageable.”
The statue, which was cut at the figure's ankles, went missing last Thursday morning. It honors the first player to break Major League Baseball’s color barrier in 1947.
The base is all that remains of a bronze statue of legendary baseball pioneer Jackie Robinson that was stolen last Thursday from a park in Wichita, Kan. The statue, valued at $75,000, was the centerpiece of the League 42 ballpark facility, a baseball league started in 2015 to help kids with little access to organized sports.
Travis Heying, Wichita Eagle“If it turns out it was racially motivated, then obviously that is a deeper societal issue and it certainly would make this a much more concerning theft,” said Bob Lutz, executive director of the Little League nonprofit that commissioned the sculpture. “We’ll wait and see what this turns out to be.”
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League 42, which is named after Robinson’s Dodgers number, paid about $50,000 for the model, which was installed in 2021 in McAdams Park, where roughly 600 children play in the youth baseball league. It also offers educational programs.
Donations poured in Wednesday to replace a destroyed statue on what would have been Robinson's 105th birthday.
The total raised just through one online fundraiser surpassed $140,000, which is far in excess of the estimated $75,000 value of the bronze statue.
Bob Lutz, executive director of the Little League nonprofit that commissioned the sculpture, said the money raised also could enhance some of its programming and facilities. In April, the group opened the Leslie Rudd Learning Center, which includes an indoor baseball facility and a learning lab.
“We’re not just baseball,” Lutz said. “We have after school education, enrichment and tutoring.”
A statue of baseball legend Jackie Robinson, seen April 18, 2021, in Wichita, Kan., was cut down and stolen last Thursday.
Mel Gregory via AP
Police continue to search for those responsible.
The police spokesperson said that with assistance from arson investigators, they have conducted more than 100 interviews. Surveillance video shows two people hauling the sculpture away in the dark, to a truck that was later found abandoned.
“Yes, it's really disheartening to see the remnants of the statue and the disgraceful way in which it has been disrespected,” Wichita police Chief Joe Sullivan said, describing the discovery of it as a “direct indication of the pressure” suspects felt from the ongoing investigation.
He said police are conferring with the prosecutor's office on a regular basis.
“There will be arrests, but we're going to make sure that when we do, we will have a solid case,” he said, adding that for anyone involved in the theft “it is only a matter of time.”
Bob Lutz, the executive director of League 42, a youth baseball league in Wichita, Kan., walks past the charred remains of a trash dumpster Tuesday where pieces of a stolen Jackie Robinson statue were found by Wichita police.
Travis Heying, Wichita EagleRobinson played for the Kansas City Monarchs of the Negro Leagues before joining the Brooklyn Dodgers, paving the way for generations of Black American ballplayers. He’s considered not only a sports legend but also a civil rights icon.
Lutz, whose friend, the artist John Parsons, made the statue before his death, said the mold is still viable and anticipated that a replacement can be erected within a matter of months.
“I'm trying to keep it together," he said, adding: “The statue that reappears at McAdams Park will be the work of John Parsons.” He stressed that “we are ready for some joy.”
The theft was discovered shortly before Black History Month. But Lutz said in an interview after the news conference that he was hopeful the motive wasn't racial, but that the thieves just saw the bronze as monetarily valuable.
Council Member Brandon Johnson described the statue as a “symbol of hope” and said donations for the replacement are coming from local businesses and through an online fundraiser.
1939: Robinson UCLA football
- AP
Jackie Robinson is seen during football training at University of California campus in Westwood, Calif., on September 20, 1939. Robinson, who transferred from Pasadena Junior College, is joining two other black student-athletes at UCLA, Kenny Washington and Woodrow Strode. (AP Photo)
1945: Jackie Robinson
- Anonymous
Jackie Robinson, first black player in the major leagues, signs with the Montreal Royals in Montreal October 23, 1945. From left are: Royals president Hector Racine, Branch Rickey Jr., Robinson and Royals vice-president Romeo Gauvreau. (AP Photo)
1946: Jackie Robinson
- Ed Widdis
Jackie Robinson, signed by the Brooklyn Dodgers and assigned to the Montreal Club, holds hands with his bride, the former Rachel Isum in Los Angeles, Feb. 26, 1946. The couple disclosed in Los Angeles that they were married Feb. 10, 1946. (AP Photo/Ed Widdis)
1946: Royals Robinson Spring Training
- Bill Chaplis
Brooklyn Dodgers' Jackie Robinson chats with Robert L. Finch, assistant to club President Branch Rickey, shortly before he reported as a player with the Montreal Royals at Sanford, Florida, March 4, 1946. (AP Photo/Bill Chaplis)
1947: Jackie Robinson
- AP File Photo
On April 15, 1947, Jackie Robinson broke Major League Baseball's color barrier when he played for the Brooklyn Dodgers. This photo from that day shows, from left, players John Jorgensen, Pee Wee Reese, Ed Stanky and Jackie Robinson pose at Ebbets Field in New York.
1948: Jackie Robinson
- STF
This Aug. 22, 1948 file photo shows Brooklyn Dodgers Jackie Robinson, right, stealing home plate as Boston Braves' catcher Bill Salkeld is thrown off-balance on the throw to the plate during the fifth inning at Ebbets Field in New York. (AP Photo/File)
1948: Robinson autographs
- ASSOCIATED PRESS
Jackie Robinson, first baseman of the Brooklyn Dodgers, returns an autograph book to a fan in the stands, during the Dodgers' spring training in Ciudad Trujillo, now Santo Domingo, in the Dominican Republic, on March 6, 1948. (AP Photo)
1949: Jackie Robinson
- WILLIAM J. SMITH
Brooklyn Dodgers' star Jackie Robinson speaks before the House Un-American Activities committee, July 18, 1949. Robinson said African Americans would fight for this country "against Russia or any other enemy." (AP Photo/William J. Smith)
1949: Jackie Robinson
- ASSOCIATED PRESS
Jackie Robinson, star infielder of the Brooklyn Dodgers, and his wife, Rachel, arrive at the Capitol Hill grounds in Washington, D.C., on July 18, 1949. Robinson is called to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee about the loyalty of blacks to the United States. (AP Photo)
1949: Robinson birthday party
- JOHN ROONEY
Young guests surround Brooklyn Dodgers' second baseman Jackie Robinson and his son Jackie Jr. as they light candles on his birthday cake for his third birthday party in St. Albans in the Queens section of New York, Nov. 18, 1949. Jackie Sr. was also named Most Valuable Player in the National League today. At left is Rachel Robinson, the baseball star's wife, and at right is Sarah Satlow, his secretary. Other children are unidentified. (AP Photo/John Rooney)
1949: The 16th Annual All-Star Game
- Anonymous
Shown here are, left to right, Roy Campanella, Larry Doby, Don Newcombe and Jackie Robinson at the 16th annual All-Star Game at Ebbetts Field in Brooklyn, New York, July 12, 1949. This is the first time African-Americans (Robinson; Campanella, Newcombe, all of the Brooklyn Dodgers, and Doby of the Cleveland Indians) participated in the Mid-Summer Classic. (AP Photo)
1950: Henrich Robinson
- Marty Lederhandler
At dais from left to right are Tommy Henrich, New York Yankee; Jackie Robinson, Top Performer award winner for baseball; O.J. Elder, president of MacFadden Publications and publisher of Sport Magazine who made the award, Jan. 19, 1950 in New York. (AP Photo/Marty Lederhandler)
1950: Jackie Robinson, Branch Rickey
- Jacob Harris
Brooklyn Dodgers' Jackie Robinson, left, smiles as he and Dodgers' president Branch Rickey as they get together on Jackie's 1950 contract in the Dodgers' Brooklyn offices, Jan. 24, 1950. Jackie signed the contract which is estimated at between $30,000 and $35,000. (AP Photo/Jacob Harris)
1950: National League's Most Valuable Player
- AP
Jackie Robinson, right, Brooklyn Dodger second baseman, receives the Mountain Kenisaw Landis Most Valuable Player award as teammates gather around at Ebbets Field, Brooklyn, N.Y. July 6,1950. Jackie was selected as the National League's Most Valuable Player for 1949. (AP Photo)
1950: Roy Campanilla, Peewee Reese, Gil Hodges, Jackie Robinson
- Anthony Camerano
Members of the Brooklyn Dodgers gather around a snowman on the diamond at Ebbets Field in Brooklyn, New York, April 14, 1950 after a freakish mid-spring snowfall caused the cancellation of their game with the New York Yankees. It was the first game scheduled in New York for the teams that have just arrived from spring training in the south. From left to right are: Roy Campanilla, catcher; Peewee Reese, shortstop; Gil Hodges, first baseman, and Jackie Robinson, second baseman. (AP Photo/Anthony Camerano)
1951: Brooklyn Dodgers NY Giants Playoffs
- Anonymous
The Brooklyn Dodgers begin to leave the dugout at the Polo Grounds to greet Jackie Robinson (42) after his first inning two-run homer in the second game of the playoff with the New York Giants, Oct. 2, 1951. Trailing Robinson is Pee Wee Reese (1) who was on base when Robinson connected. (AP Photo)
1951: Gibson Robinson
- Marty Lederhandler
Brooklyn Dodgers' second baseman, Jackie Robinson, gets tennis tips from tennis star Althea Gibson at the celebrity tennis tournament at the 7th Regiment Armory in New York, Feb. 16, 1951. The tournament was staged for the benefit of the American National Theater and Academy. (AP Photo/Marty Lederhandler)
1951: Jackie and Rachel Robinson
- ED WIDDIS
Brooklyn Dodgers star and parade grand marshall Jackie Robinson waves to the crowd at the UCLA homecoming parade, Nov. 2, 1951 in Los Angeles. Robinson is an alumnus of UCLA where he starred in football, baseball and track. His wife Rachel is seen beside him. Others are unidentified. (AP Photo/Ed Widdis)
1951: Jackie Robinson
- ASSOCIATED PRESS
Brooklyn Dodgers teammates whoop it up in their dressing room at Shibe Park in Philadelphia, September 30, 1951, after they nosed out the Phillies 9-8 in 14 innings to go into a playoff series with the New York Giants for the National League pennant. Players at left and left foreground are not identified. Others in the front row, left to right, are: Jackie Robinson, Peewee Reese, Roy Campanella, manager Charley Dressen, and Carl Erskine. (AP Photo)
1951: Marshall Robinson
- HARRY HARRIS
Jackie Robinson of the Brooklyn Dodgers, left, and Willard Marshall of the Boston Braves demonstrate the "Big Mitt" fielding form that put them into the baseball record books during a get-together in New York, Dec. 18, 1951. (AP Photo/Harry Harris)
1951: Robinson and Dressen
- ASSOCIATED PRESS
Jackie Robinson, left, Brooklyn Dodgers' second baseman who slammed out a homer in the 14th inning to beat the Phillies 9-8 at Shibe Park in Philadelphia, September 30, 1951, gets the congratulations of manager Charley Dressen after the game. (AP Photo)
1952: Jackie and Rachel Robinson
- JOHN ROONEY
Baseball legend Jackie Robinson looks at this wife Rachel as she holds their second son, David, at Flower Fifth Avenue Hospital in New York, May 15, 1952. The baby was born yesterday. The Robinsons also have a daughter, Sharon, and a son, Jackie Jr. (AP Photo/John Rooney)
1952: Jackie Robinson
- HH
Roy Campanella, center, Dodgers catcher, finds himself in the middle of both sides of the Dodgers inner defense at Vero Beach, Florida, March 5, 1952. Reading clockwise are Jackie Robinson, second baseman; first sacker Gil Hodges; Campanella; Billy Cox, third baseman; and Peewee Reese, shortstop. (AP Photo)
1952: Pee Wee Reese, Jackie Robinson, and Preacher Roe
- AP
Brooklyn Dodgers players Pee Wee Reese, Jackie Robinson, and Preacher Roe, left to right, are a happy trio in the clubhouse after the Dodgers beat the New York Yankees, 5-3, in the third game of the World Series at Yankee Stadium in New York City on October 3, 1952. Roe pitched six-hit ball in the contest. (AP Photo)
1954: Robinson family
- ASSOCIATED PRESS
Jackie Robinson's wife and children gather close to help him blow out the candle on a cupcake as they celebrate the Brooklyn Dodgers infielder's 35th birthday at home in St. Aldans, N.Y. on Jan. 31, 1954. From left are, Sharon, 4; Jackie, with David, 20 months, on his knee; his wife, Rachel; and Jackie Jr., 7. (AP Photo)
1955: World Series Dodgers Yankees
- AP
Brooklyn Dodgers third baseman Jackie Robinson (42) steals home and slides under catcher Yogi Berra's mitt in the eighth inning of the World Series game opener at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, N.Y., Sept. 28, 1955. Pinch-hitter Frank Kellert (12) stands at bat as steal is made. Umpire Bill Summes calls Robinson safe. The New York Yankees beat the Dodgers, 6-5. (AP Photo)
1956: Jackie Robinson
- JOHN LINDSAY
Jackie Robinson, Brooklyn Dodgers star since breaking into Major League baseball in 1947, is shown with his wife, Rachel, and their four-year-old son, Jackie Jr., in their home in Stamford, Conn., Dec. 13, 1956. Robinson, 37, holds a banner for the rival New York Giants baseball club to which he was traded for relief pitcher Dick Littlefield and $35,000 in cash. Robinson retired in January, voiding the trade. (AP Photo/John Lindsay)
1957: Jackie Robinson
- Harry Harris
Jackie Robinson leans on some of the souvenir bats collected during his Major League reign with the Brooklyn Dodgers, after confirmation of his decision to retire from baseball, in the den of his home in Stamford, Conn., Jan. 6, 1957. (AP Photo/Harry Harris)
1957: Jackie Robinson
- Harry Harris
Baseball player Jackie Robinson sits with his wife Rae and their children, David, 4, Jackie Jr., 10, and Sharon, 7, in the trophy-decorated den of their home, in Stamford, Conn., Jan. 6, 1957. (AP Photo/Harry Harris)
1957: Jackie Robinson
- Jack Harris
Jackie Robinson, 38, empties his locker at the clubhouse of the Brooklyn Dodgers baseball club in Ebbets Field, closing out a ten-year starring stint with the club, in New York, Jan. 7, 1957. Robinson was quitting baseball to sit behind a desk as vice president in charge of personnel for Chock Full O' Nuts company. (AP Photo/Jacob Harris)
1957: Jackie Robinson
- JACOB HARRIS
Jackie Robinson, who has retired after a 10-year career, waves as he leaves the clubhouse after collecting his belongings at Ebbets Field in Brooklyn, N.Y., on Jan. 7, 1957. Robinson, 38, became the first black baseball player in the modern major leagues when he joined the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947. (AP Photo/Jacob Harris)
1957: Jackie Robinson
- JACK HARRIS
Legendary Brooklyn Dodgers' star Jackie Robinson sits behind his desk in the offices of the Chock Full O' Nuts Company in New York, Jan. 7, 1957, where he will assume new duties as Vice President in charge of personnel in February. Robinson quit baseball after the announcement of his trade to the Giants and said he was taking on the new career for the security of his family. (AP Photo/Jack Harris)
1957: Jackie Robinson
- Anthony Camerano
Retired dodger infielder Jackie Robinson, usually in spring training with the Brooklyn baseball club at this time of the year, gets a "workout" of a different nature as he began his new duties as vice president in charge of personnel for the Chock Full O'Nuts firm. Here he meets some of the personnel at the firm’s cafeteria located in the same building as Jackie’s New York office (425 Lexington Ave.) on March 4, 1957. (AP Photo/Anthony Camerano)
1957: Robinson
- Anonymous
Middleweight boxing champ Sugar Ray Robinson, left, playfully wields a bat to fend off blows from the gloved fists of former baseball legend Jackie Robinson, at the boxer's training camp in Greenwood Lake, N.Y., Sept. 12, 1957. (AP Photo)
1957: Robinson King
- HENRY BURROUGHS
Jackie Robinson, former Brooklyn Dodgers infielder, now a New York restaurant chain executive, is followed by Martin Luther King, Jr., leader of the Montgomery, Ala., bus boycott, as they walk in Howard University's academic procession, June 7, 1957. Both men received honorary doctorates of law at commencement exercises. (AP Photo/Henry Burroughs)
1960: Jackie Robinson
- STF
Former baseball star Jackie Robinson grabbed a sign and joined a picket line in Cleveland, Ohio, to protest discrimination against blacks at southern lunch counters, 1960. The picketing was organized by the N.A.A.C.P. (AP Photo)
1960: Richard M. Nixon, Pat Nixon, Jackie Robinson
- Henry Griffin
Vice President Richard Nixon shakes hands with former baseball star Jackie Robinson in Plainfield, New Jersey, Oct. 4, 1960 where Nixon was campaigning. Robinson has been speaking for Nixon around the country. The vice president's wife Pat, right, looks on. (AP Photo/Henry Griffin)
1962: Edd Roush, Jackie Robinson, Bob Feller, Bill McKechnie,
- ASSOCIATED PRESS
Four famous ballplayers were inducted to the Hall of Fame on July 23, 1962 in Cooperstown, New York. From Left to right are Edd Roush, 68, Jackie Robinson, 42, Bob Feller, 42 and Bill McKechnie, 74. They hold plaques presented to them. (AP Photo)
1962: Jackie and Rachel Robinson
- Matty Zimmerman
Jackie Robinson and his wife, Rachel, pose in their Stamford, CT , home January 23, 1962, after Jackie's election into The Baseball Hall Of Fame. Robinson, the former Brooklyn Dodger infielder, had a lifetime batting average of .311. He was the first black player to play in the Major Leagues, and also the first black player to be voted into the Hall Of Fame. ( AP Photo/ Matty Zimmerman )
1962: Jackie and Rachel Robinson
- ASSOCIATED PRESS
Former baseball great Jackie Robinson is seen with his wife Rachel at home in Stamford, Conn., on January 23, 1962, shortly after he was voted into baseball's Hall of Fame. Robinson, the first black athlete to play with a major league team, the Brooklyn Dodgers, is also the first black to become a Hall of Famer. (AP Photo)
1962: Jackie Robinson
- AP
The family of Jackie Robinson from left are his wife, Rachel, who is head psychiatric nurse at a New York hospital; son Jackie, 15; David, 9; Sharon, 12, and Jackie Robinson himself, his hands curled as if around a baseball bat. In the background is the Robinson's home in Stamford, Conn., Feb. 8, 1962. (AP Photo)
1963: Robinson King Abernathy
- Anonymous
African American athletes, boxer Floyd Patterson, left, and former baseball player Jackie Robinson, right, discuss Birmingham race relations with civil rights leaders, Rev. Ralph D. Abernathy, second from left, and Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., in Birmingham, Ala., May 14, 1963. The athletes addressed gatherings at two churches in the area last night. Man at far left is unidentified. (AP Photo)
1963: Robinson pickets in Brooklyn
- AP
Former baseball star Jackie Robinson carries a placard as he joins pickets at the construction site of the Down State Medical Center in Brooklyn, New York City, August 2, 1963. Robinson and members of CORE, the Congress of Racial Equality, have been demonstrating in an effort to stop construction of publicly financed projects until more jobs are given to blacks. (AP Photo)
1966: Jackie Robinson, Nelson Rockefeller
- Anonymous
Former baseball star Jackie Robinson, right, smilingly confers with Gov. Nelson Rockefeller on his new post as a special assistant to the governor on community affairsin Albany, New York on Feb. 8, 1966. Robinson told newsmen he had turned down a job offer by New York Mayor John V. Lindsay because he, Robinson, is a “Rockefeller Republican.” (AP Photo)
1971: Jackie Robinson
- AP
Former Baseball great Jackie Robinson, right, looks over some 2,000 persons assembled on the lawn of his home at Stamford, Connecticut on Sunday, June 27, 1971 before the opening of a Jazz Concert to benefit Daytop Inc., a drug rehabilitation center. The concert was organized by the ex-baseball star’s son, Jackie Jr., a former addict and official at the drug rehabilitation center, who died in an auto accident. Daytop director Kenneth Williams who spoke before the concert, told the crowd: "I want this to be a memorial for young Jack." (AP Photo)
1972: Jackie Robinson funeral
- Anonymous
Some of Jackie Robinson's former Brooklyn Dodger teammates carry his casket from Riverside Church in New York, Oct. 27, 1972, following funeral services. Pallbearers include: Bill Russell, left, former Boston Celtics basketball star; behind him, ex-Dodger pitcher Ralph Branca; former Dodger pitcher Don Newcombe at right. In line at left are: former Dodger catcher Roy Campanella, in wheelchair; Chicago Cubs coach Ernie Banks, fourth from left; and Elston Howard, fifth from left, ex-Yankee catcher. In foreground with white hair is civil rights leader Bayard Rustin. (AP Photo)
2013: Jackie Robinson's Brooklyn
- Beth J. Harpaz
This April 9, 2013 photo shows Jackie Robinson’s gravesite, where fans still leave tributes to the man who integrated Major League Baseball when he joined the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947. (AP Photo/Beth J. Harpaz)
2013: Nationals Marlins Baseball
- Wilfredo Lee
Washington Nationals players wearing the number 42 in honor of Jackie Robinson, are shown during the singing of the National Anthem before the start of a baseball game against the Miami Marlins, Monday, April 15, 2013 in Miami. Baseball is celebrating its fifth Jackie Robinson Day — the 66th anniversary of his breaking baseball's racial barrier with the Brooklyn Dodgers. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)
70 photos to celebrate the 70th anniversary of Jackie Robinson's first major league game
On April 15, 1947, Jackie Robinson became the first African American to play Major League Baseball. Here's a look back at his life in photos:
1939: Robinson UCLA football
- AP
Jackie Robinson is seen during football training at University of California campus in Westwood, Calif., on September 20, 1939. Robinson, who transferred from Pasadena Junior College, is joining two other black student-athletes at UCLA, Kenny Washington and Woodrow Strode. (AP Photo)
1947: Jackie Robinson
- AP File Photo
On April 15, 1947, Jackie Robinson broke Major League Baseball's color barrier when he played for the Brooklyn Dodgers. This photo from that day shows, from left, players John Jorgensen, Pee Wee Reese, Ed Stanky and Jackie Robinson pose at Ebbets Field in New York.
1949: Jackie Robinson
- ASSOCIATED PRESS
Jackie Robinson, star infielder of the Brooklyn Dodgers, and his wife, Rachel, arrive at the Capitol Hill grounds in Washington, D.C., on July 18, 1949. Robinson is called to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee about the loyalty of blacks to the United States. (AP Photo)
1949: Robinson birthday party
- JOHN ROONEY
Young guests surround Brooklyn Dodgers' second baseman Jackie Robinson and his son Jackie Jr. as they light candles on his birthday cake for his third birthday party in St. Albans in the Queens section of New York, Nov. 18, 1949. Jackie Sr. was also named Most Valuable Player in the National League today. At left is Rachel Robinson, the baseball star's wife, and at right is Sarah Satlow, his secretary. Other children are unidentified. (AP Photo/John Rooney)
1949: The 16th Annual All-Star Game
- Anonymous
Shown here are, left to right, Roy Campanella, Larry Doby, Don Newcombe and Jackie Robinson at the 16th annual All-Star Game at Ebbetts Field in Brooklyn, New York, July 12, 1949. This is the first time African-Americans (Robinson; Campanella, Newcombe, all of the Brooklyn Dodgers, and Doby of the Cleveland Indians) participated in the Mid-Summer Classic. (AP Photo)
1950: Henrich Robinson
- Marty Lederhandler
At dais from left to right are Tommy Henrich, New York Yankee; Jackie Robinson, Top Performer award winner for baseball; O.J. Elder, president of MacFadden Publications and publisher of Sport Magazine who made the award, Jan. 19, 1950 in New York. (AP Photo/Marty Lederhandler)
1950: Jackie Robinson, Branch Rickey
- Jacob Harris
Brooklyn Dodgers' Jackie Robinson, left, smiles as he and Dodgers' president Branch Rickey as they get together on Jackie's 1950 contract in the Dodgers' Brooklyn offices, Jan. 24, 1950. Jackie signed the contract which is estimated at between $30,000 and $35,000. (AP Photo/Jacob Harris)
1950: National League's Most Valuable Player
- AP
Jackie Robinson, right, Brooklyn Dodger second baseman, receives the Mountain Kenisaw Landis Most Valuable Player award as teammates gather around at Ebbets Field, Brooklyn, N.Y. July 6,1950. Jackie was selected as the National League's Most Valuable Player for 1949. (AP Photo)
1950: Roy Campanilla, Peewee Reese, Gil Hodges, Jackie Robinson
- Anthony Camerano
Members of the Brooklyn Dodgers gather around a snowman on the diamond at Ebbets Field in Brooklyn, New York, April 14, 1950 after a freakish mid-spring snowfall caused the cancellation of their game with the New York Yankees. It was the first game scheduled in New York for the teams that have just arrived from spring training in the south. From left to right are: Roy Campanilla, catcher; Peewee Reese, shortstop; Gil Hodges, first baseman, and Jackie Robinson, second baseman. (AP Photo/Anthony Camerano)
1951: Brooklyn Dodgers NY Giants Playoffs
- Anonymous
The Brooklyn Dodgers begin to leave the dugout at the Polo Grounds to greet Jackie Robinson (42) after his first inning two-run homer in the second game of the playoff with the New York Giants, Oct. 2, 1951. Trailing Robinson is Pee Wee Reese (1) who was on base when Robinson connected. (AP Photo)
1951: Gibson Robinson
- Marty Lederhandler
Brooklyn Dodgers' second baseman, Jackie Robinson, gets tennis tips from tennis star Althea Gibson at the celebrity tennis tournament at the 7th Regiment Armory in New York, Feb. 16, 1951. The tournament was staged for the benefit of the American National Theater and Academy. (AP Photo/Marty Lederhandler)
1951: Jackie and Rachel Robinson
- ED WIDDIS
Brooklyn Dodgers star and parade grand marshall Jackie Robinson waves to the crowd at the UCLA homecoming parade, Nov. 2, 1951 in Los Angeles. Robinson is an alumnus of UCLA where he starred in football, baseball and track. His wife Rachel is seen beside him. Others are unidentified. (AP Photo/Ed Widdis)
1951: Jackie Robinson
- ASSOCIATED PRESS
Brooklyn Dodgers teammates whoop it up in their dressing room at Shibe Park in Philadelphia, September 30, 1951, after they nosed out the Phillies 9-8 in 14 innings to go into a playoff series with the New York Giants for the National League pennant. Players at left and left foreground are not identified. Others in the front row, left to right, are: Jackie Robinson, Peewee Reese, Roy Campanella, manager Charley Dressen, and Carl Erskine. (AP Photo)
1952: Jackie and Rachel Robinson
- JOHN ROONEY
Baseball legend Jackie Robinson looks at this wife Rachel as she holds their second son, David, at Flower Fifth Avenue Hospital in New York, May 15, 1952. The baby was born yesterday. The Robinsons also have a daughter, Sharon, and a son, Jackie Jr. (AP Photo/John Rooney)
1952: Jackie Robinson
- HH
Roy Campanella, center, Dodgers catcher, finds himself in the middle of both sides of the Dodgers inner defense at Vero Beach, Florida, March 5, 1952. Reading clockwise are Jackie Robinson, second baseman; first sacker Gil Hodges; Campanella; Billy Cox, third baseman; and Peewee Reese, shortstop. (AP Photo)
1952: Pee Wee Reese, Jackie Robinson, and Preacher Roe
- AP
Brooklyn Dodgers players Pee Wee Reese, Jackie Robinson, and Preacher Roe, left to right, are a happy trio in the clubhouse after the Dodgers beat the New York Yankees, 5-3, in the third game of the World Series at Yankee Stadium in New York City on October 3, 1952. Roe pitched six-hit ball in the contest. (AP Photo)
1954: Robinson family
- ASSOCIATED PRESS
Jackie Robinson's wife and children gather close to help him blow out the candle on a cupcake as they celebrate the Brooklyn Dodgers infielder's 35th birthday at home in St. Aldans, N.Y. on Jan. 31, 1954. From left are, Sharon, 4; Jackie, with David, 20 months, on his knee; his wife, Rachel; and Jackie Jr., 7. (AP Photo)
1955: World Series Dodgers Yankees
- AP
Brooklyn Dodgers third baseman Jackie Robinson (42) steals home and slides under catcher Yogi Berra's mitt in the eighth inning of the World Series game opener at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, N.Y., Sept. 28, 1955. Pinch-hitter Frank Kellert (12) stands at bat as steal is made. Umpire Bill Summes calls Robinson safe. The New York Yankees beat the Dodgers, 6-5. (AP Photo)
1956: Jackie Robinson
- JOHN LINDSAY
Jackie Robinson, Brooklyn Dodgers star since breaking into Major League baseball in 1947, is shown with his wife, Rachel, and their four-year-old son, Jackie Jr., in their home in Stamford, Conn., Dec. 13, 1956. Robinson, 37, holds a banner for the rival New York Giants baseball club to which he was traded for relief pitcher Dick Littlefield and $35,000 in cash. Robinson retired in January, voiding the trade. (AP Photo/John Lindsay)
1957: Jackie Robinson
- Jack Harris
Jackie Robinson, 38, empties his locker at the clubhouse of the Brooklyn Dodgers baseball club in Ebbets Field, closing out a ten-year starring stint with the club, in New York, Jan. 7, 1957. Robinson was quitting baseball to sit behind a desk as vice president in charge of personnel for Chock Full O' Nuts company. (AP Photo/Jacob Harris)
1957: Jackie Robinson
- JACOB HARRIS
Jackie Robinson, who has retired after a 10-year career, waves as he leaves the clubhouse after collecting his belongings at Ebbets Field in Brooklyn, N.Y., on Jan. 7, 1957. Robinson, 38, became the first black baseball player in the modern major leagues when he joined the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947. (AP Photo/Jacob Harris)
1957: Jackie Robinson
- JACK HARRIS
Legendary Brooklyn Dodgers' star Jackie Robinson sits behind his desk in the offices of the Chock Full O' Nuts Company in New York, Jan. 7, 1957, where he will assume new duties as Vice President in charge of personnel in February. Robinson quit baseball after the announcement of his trade to the Giants and said he was taking on the new career for the security of his family. (AP Photo/Jack Harris)
1957: Jackie Robinson
- Anthony Camerano
Retired dodger infielder Jackie Robinson, usually in spring training with the Brooklyn baseball club at this time of the year, gets a "workout" of a different nature as he began his new duties as vice president in charge of personnel for the Chock Full O'Nuts firm. Here he meets some of the personnel at the firm’s cafeteria located in the same building as Jackie’s New York office (425 Lexington Ave.) on March 4, 1957. (AP Photo/Anthony Camerano)
1957: Robinson King
- HENRY BURROUGHS
Jackie Robinson, former Brooklyn Dodgers infielder, now a New York restaurant chain executive, is followed by Martin Luther King, Jr., leader of the Montgomery, Ala., bus boycott, as they walk in Howard University's academic procession, June 7, 1957. Both men received honorary doctorates of law at commencement exercises. (AP Photo/Henry Burroughs)
1960: Richard M. Nixon, Pat Nixon, Jackie Robinson
- Henry Griffin
Vice President Richard Nixon shakes hands with former baseball star Jackie Robinson in Plainfield, New Jersey, Oct. 4, 1960 where Nixon was campaigning. Robinson has been speaking for Nixon around the country. The vice president's wife Pat, right, looks on. (AP Photo/Henry Griffin)
1962: Edd Roush, Jackie Robinson, Bob Feller, Bill McKechnie,
- ASSOCIATED PRESS
Four famous ballplayers were inducted to the Hall of Fame on July 23, 1962 in Cooperstown, New York. From Left to right are Edd Roush, 68, Jackie Robinson, 42, Bob Feller, 42 and Bill McKechnie, 74. They hold plaques presented to them. (AP Photo)
1962: Jackie and Rachel Robinson
- Matty Zimmerman
Jackie Robinson and his wife, Rachel, pose in their Stamford, CT , home January 23, 1962, after Jackie's election into The Baseball Hall Of Fame. Robinson, the former Brooklyn Dodger infielder, had a lifetime batting average of .311. He was the first black player to play in the Major Leagues, and also the first black player to be voted into the Hall Of Fame. ( AP Photo/ Matty Zimmerman )
1962: Jackie and Rachel Robinson
- ASSOCIATED PRESS
Former baseball great Jackie Robinson is seen with his wife Rachel at home in Stamford, Conn., on January 23, 1962, shortly after he was voted into baseball's Hall of Fame. Robinson, the first black athlete to play with a major league team, the Brooklyn Dodgers, is also the first black to become a Hall of Famer. (AP Photo)
1962: Jackie Robinson
- AP
The family of Jackie Robinson from left are his wife, Rachel, who is head psychiatric nurse at a New York hospital; son Jackie, 15; David, 9; Sharon, 12, and Jackie Robinson himself, his hands curled as if around a baseball bat. In the background is the Robinson's home in Stamford, Conn., Feb. 8, 1962. (AP Photo)
1963: Robinson King Abernathy
- Anonymous
African American athletes, boxer Floyd Patterson, left, and former baseball player Jackie Robinson, right, discuss Birmingham race relations with civil rights leaders, Rev. Ralph D. Abernathy, second from left, and Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., in Birmingham, Ala., May 14, 1963. The athletes addressed gatherings at two churches in the area last night. Man at far left is unidentified. (AP Photo)
1963: Robinson pickets in Brooklyn
- AP
Former baseball star Jackie Robinson carries a placard as he joins pickets at the construction site of the Down State Medical Center in Brooklyn, New York City, August 2, 1963. Robinson and members of CORE, the Congress of Racial Equality, have been demonstrating in an effort to stop construction of publicly financed projects until more jobs are given to blacks. (AP Photo)
1966: Jackie Robinson, Nelson Rockefeller
- Anonymous
Former baseball star Jackie Robinson, right, smilingly confers with Gov. Nelson Rockefeller on his new post as a special assistant to the governor on community affairsin Albany, New York on Feb. 8, 1966. Robinson told newsmen he had turned down a job offer by New York Mayor John V. Lindsay because he, Robinson, is a “Rockefeller Republican.” (AP Photo)
1971: Jackie Robinson
- AP
Former Baseball great Jackie Robinson, right, looks over some 2,000 persons assembled on the lawn of his home at Stamford, Connecticut on Sunday, June 27, 1971 before the opening of a Jazz Concert to benefit Daytop Inc., a drug rehabilitation center. The concert was organized by the ex-baseball star’s son, Jackie Jr., a former addict and official at the drug rehabilitation center, who died in an auto accident. Daytop director Kenneth Williams who spoke before the concert, told the crowd: "I want this to be a memorial for young Jack." (AP Photo)
1972: Jackie Robinson funeral
- Anonymous
Some of Jackie Robinson's former Brooklyn Dodger teammates carry his casket from Riverside Church in New York, Oct. 27, 1972, following funeral services. Pallbearers include: Bill Russell, left, former Boston Celtics basketball star; behind him, ex-Dodger pitcher Ralph Branca; former Dodger pitcher Don Newcombe at right. In line at left are: former Dodger catcher Roy Campanella, in wheelchair; Chicago Cubs coach Ernie Banks, fourth from left; and Elston Howard, fifth from left, ex-Yankee catcher. In foreground with white hair is civil rights leader Bayard Rustin. (AP Photo)
2013: Nationals Marlins Baseball
- Wilfredo Lee
Washington Nationals players wearing the number 42 in honor of Jackie Robinson, are shown during the singing of the National Anthem before the start of a baseball game against the Miami Marlins, Monday, April 15, 2013 in Miami. Baseball is celebrating its fifth Jackie Robinson Day — the 66th anniversary of his breaking baseball's racial barrier with the Brooklyn Dodgers. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)
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