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Hardcover Money Pitcher: Chief Bender and the Tragedy of Indian Assimilation Book

ISBN: 0271028629

ISBN13: 9780271028620

Money Pitcher: Chief Bender and the Tragedy of Indian Assimilation

Charles Albert Bender was one of baseball's most talented pitchers. By the end of his major league career in 1925, he had accrued 212 wins and more than 1,700 strikeouts, and in 1953, he became the first American Indian elected to baseball's Hall of Fame. But as a high-profile Chippewa Indian in a bigoted society, Bender knew firsthand the trauma of racism. In Money Pitcher: Chief Bender and the Tragedy of Indian Assimilation, William C...

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Customer Reviews

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Excellent Book About An Underrated Pitcher

Charles Albert Bender, beter known as "Chief" Bender, was a premier pitcher for the Philadelphia A's in the early 1900s. Possessing a fine fastball, curve, plenty of control, concentration and observation, he won 212 games in the major leagues and earned a spot in the Baseball Hall of Fame. The other half of the story is that he was born on a reservation in Crow Wing County, Minnesota, to a white father and half-Anishinaabe (Chippewa) mother. They later moved to the White Earth Indian reservation in northeast Minnesota, until Charles was sent off to the East to go to school. At this time, the U.S. government's program of assimilation of Native American children into the white world was in full swing, and set off Bender's nearly life-long struggle of an Indian living, working and trying to succeed in a white world. A hundred years ago, those who "looked different" - were from a different ethnic origin - were subjected to racism, slights and insults as a matter of course in everyday life. But Bender succeeded in the white world, though at a terrible price to his health. The author of this book, William Kashatus, has done an excellent job in researching the life of Charles Bender; there are places where the information is sketchy, but due only to a lack of data, such as Bender's early life. The one area that the author has left me in doubt is in his claim that the 1914 World Series may have been "thrown" by some members of the A's, among them Bender. His case did not convince me sufficiently that this happened; the information semmed mostly circumstantial and even that doesn't jibe with Bender's nature. In reading this book, one may get a feel of what the times were like then, in America, for the American Indian being assimilated in society and for the heroic Bender, who endured so much during his time and performed with grace, skill and determination to be known for talents as a pitcher, not just as a Native American trying to get along in white American society.
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