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Hardcover Beyond the Shadow of the Senators: The Untold Story of the Homestead Grays and the Integration of Baseball Book

ISBN: 0071408207

ISBN13: 9780071408202

Beyond the Shadow of the Senators: The Untold Story of the Homestead Grays and the Integration of Baseball

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

""As thorough a history of a Negro league team as can be culled from the available sources... not just the history of a team but the tale of one city in all its social complexity."" "--"The New York... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Symbiotic segregation and a great baseball read.

This is a great, and true-to-life (i.e., "complex") story about the institution of 'Negro' League baseball and the various parties who profited and railed against it.Key people that are introduced and brought to life are:Buck Leonard, Satchel Paige, and Josh Gibson -- three of the greatest ballplayers who ever lived;Clark Griffith -- the pioneering, penurious and controlling owner of the Washington Senators;Sam Lacy -- the ahead-of-his-time, DC-native who tirelessly advocated for the integration of Major League Baseball; as well asCum(berland) Posey -- the shrewd owner of the Homestead Grays -- the dominant team of the loosely confederated Negro Leagues during the late 30's and 40's.Tangential to this story are:the decimation of the post 1933 Senators, mostly due to finances and an inadequate ballpark;the relative prosperity of Washington DC during the years of the depression and WWII and the partial equality of African-American government workers that led to a vibrant culture and ability to spend on entertainment;the move by Posey and his "partner" (many of the Negro League baseball teams were financed by numbers entreprenuers) to Washington from their Pittsburgh home and the welcome of their rental payments and gate pctgs. by Clark Griffith;Judge Landis' death, the increasing awareness of America's incongruity in its fight for freedom and democracy in Europe while maintaining a virtual apartheid culture at home; andthe greed/opportunity of baseball owners to find the best talent at the lowest price which ultimately led to Rickey's "great experiment");This book also fleshes out the background and conflict around Jackie Robinson, who was rightly judged to be a great man and the right vehicle for Rickey's efforst, and the shared opinions that he was a good, but not all-time great Negro baseball player. [Check out how well a 42-yr old Satchel Paige pitched for the World Championship Indians in 1948.]The shifts in attitude between "separate but equal" and complete integration by the various parties reveal primarily self-interest. Judged by the standards of our time, I share many others' great respect for Sam Lacy and his tireless, moral advocacy and feel sorry for the Negro League baseball owners who were mostly left with nothing as they rarely had enforceable contracts that protected their relationship with their players.Clark Griffith was an "innovator" in attracting inexpensive talent from Cuba. Many of these players represented themselves well on the ballfield but would only be acceptable if they were of "Spanish" descent.Utterly inconceivable now, but the norm for over 60 years (since Cap Anson helped institute the "gentleman's agreement" against employment of African Americans in the early 1880's) was to allow a Major or Minor League ballclup to employ pretty much anyone (Swedes, Germans, Irish, Italians, Jews, etc.) anyone, except African-Americans.It has often been discussed that without Jackie Robinson ( & the parts played by Branch Ric

How Can I Sign Up for Season's Tickets?

After reading "Beyond the Shadow of the Senators", I'm ready for season's tickets and let's play ball! While having only heard the names Monarchs, Homestead Grays, Stars and a few other teams, I really knew very little about them. While not a Washingtonian, I have lived in this area for thirty years and missed seeing the Senators by just this much. However, I think the team I really and truely missed seeing was the Homestead Grays. And as I read through the book, one particular player became my favorite, Mr. Buck Leonard. Mr Synder has provided an exceptional and thoroughly well researched book. Yes, it is about the Grays, the Senators, Griffith, Posey, economics, statistics and the integration of baseball, all made wonderfully readable, but Mr. Leonard stands out above them all. He and his teammates are a living, breathing part of the history of Washington, DC. And thank you to Mr Synder for giving them life once again.

Griffith blew his chance at making history

A new book has hit the bookshelves that will be of interest to baseball fans, and to students of the history of baseball and history of black-white relations in urban America. Brad Snyder is author of Beyond the Shadow of the Senators: The Untold History of the Homestead Grays and the Integration of Baseball (2003, Contemporary Books: Chicago, 418 pp.). The book develops several themes in exacting detail (125 pages of footnotes!). First, Snyder explains why the Clark Griffith was not the first baseball club owner to hire black players...missing a huge opportunity as Washington became a black majority city in the 1950s. Clark Griffith and Sam Posey, owner of the Grays, both had a vested interest in maintaining segregated baseball. Critical income to support for his Washington Senators was provided by renting Griffith Stadium to the Homesteads (100% of concessions plus large percent of the gate receipts). Posey did not have the financial means to construct another ballpark in or near D.C., and he knew the Negro leagues would disappear if the major leagues were integrated. Second, the book follows the career of Sam Lacy, an aggressive advocate of integration in the major leagues, writing for the Baltimore Afro-American newspaper. Having grown-up in segregated Washington, and failing to make it as a player in the Negro Leagues, Lacy had plenty of motivation to lead the campaign to integrate the major leagues. Lacy had to live with the irony of having contributed to integration, but at the price of losing the Negro Leagues, the blame for which was not Lacy's alone, but for which he was attacked by some. Lacy is quoted as saying: "While I didn't like to attack an institution [the Negro Leagues], I certainly didn't want to support or stand by idly and see a symbol for frustration." The third theme developed in Snyder's book is the rich baseball legacy of the Homestead Grays, led by Buck Leonard and Josh Gibson. The team was a dynasty during the early and late 1930s in the Negro Leagues. The Grays were able to turn a profit in Washington, which is why they played the majority of their home game in D.C. rather than remain in Pittsburgh. One chapter is devoted to how "Satchel Paige Saves the Grays," by attracting a large attendance to games in which he pitched for the Kansas City Monarchs against the Grays in a number of classic games. Clark Griffith, Sam Lacy, and Buck Leonard are all in Baseball's Hall of Fame. Snyder does an excellent job of describing their intertwined lives while documenting an important era in the history of baseball and the nation. Griffith Stadium was situated in the heart of a thriving black neighborhood in the 1930s and 1940s. One cannot help but wonder how the sad performance of the Washington Senators in the late 1940s through the 1950s might have been altered if Calvin Griffith had hired Buck Leonard, Josh Gibson, and other members of the Homestead Grays who were playing in his ballpark under his watchful e

Beyond a Doubt

Beyond a doubt this is a well documented, interesting to read, important addition to the history of black baseball in America.Snyder recreates the era of parallel universes for black and white Americans when contact between the races was rare. All baseball fans were cheated out of seeing the best players compete because some had darker skins than others. The frustations of ballplayers who knew that they could compete but where denied the opportunity is presented against the background of a segregated America. As a public libray director and an individual baseball book collector I heartily recommend this title.

Homestead Grays - news to even this 4th generation DC guy!

Brad Snyder shows us that early 20th Century African-Americans weren't only progressing in academics at the nearby venerated Howard University; they were also making strides in professional sports by sharing Griffith Stadium, which was practically on Howard U's campus,with the beloved but hapless Washington Senators! That a "negro" team was able to utilize the very same facilities as the Senators in the still very Southern and provincial Washington, DC of the 1930's - 1950's came as a shock to me. DC was the last NFL team to integrate pro football with Bobby Mitchell in the late 1950's; George Preston Marshall was no civil rights activist, and had to be forced to integrate his Redskins. It is, therefore, thrilling to see how Washington, DC played a part in the eventuality of pro sports integration, realized in Jackie Robinson's signing in 1947. Snyder tells an interesting tale that all who study the sociological development of a fully integrated Major League Baseball must read!(Now Brad....send Selig a note to bring us back our team! :}
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