We remember Jackie Robinson, who was born in Cairo, Georgia, on this day in 1919 and died October 24, 1972. It was Robinson who broke the color line in 1947 and turned into one of the key players in those Dodgers teams that won the NL pennant in 1947, 1949, 1952, 1953, 1955 and 1956. The Dodgers finally beat the Yankees in the 1955 World Series. Along the way, he won the 1949 National League MVP and selected to The Hall of Fame in 1962.
Before he broke with Brooklyn, Robinson and his teammates spent spring training in Cuba in 1947. It gave many Cuban fans a chance to see the man that would make history a few weeks later.
This is how Cesar Brioso recalls the moment:
The overflow crowd spilled into foul territory where ropes cordoned off fans from the field of play. Beyond the outfield wall, those who failed to gain entrance climbed the light towers for a glimpse of the contest.
The decisive game of the Cuban League season riveted the packed house at Havana’s El Gran Stadium on Feb. 25, 1947, but Cuban fans briefly diverted their attention to acknowledge the presence of a special guest.
After Jackie Robinson was introduced over the public-address system, “he took bows to the wild shouting of 38,000 jabbering fans,” Sam Lacy wrote in the Baltimore Afro-American 75 years ago, pointing out that several members of the Brooklyn Dodgers sitting in the same reserved section “were hardly noticed.”
The Cuban fans anticipated the historic moment. First, they followed major league baseball, Secondly, they knew that Jackie was ready to jump from AAA to the majors. Of course, Jackie was followed by black Cuban baseball players, from Orestes Minoso to many others.