President Honors Baseball’s Negro League During White House Gathering

negro.jpgFormer baseball players in the Negro League, from left to right, Pedro Sierra, Minnie Minoso, and Ron Teasley, talk outside the West Wing of the White House in Washington following their meeting with President Barack Obama, Monday, Aug. 5, 2013.

Monday evening, President Barack Obama honored the historic contributions and achievements made by the Negro League. Meeting in the Blue Room of the White House, the President welcomed former baseball players, scholars, foundation representatives, and historians.

Around a dozen former players from the long-defunct but still culturally significant league were invited to attend the gathering. Mamie Johnson, a pitcher for the Indianapolis Clowns, joined Toni Stone andConnie Morgan as the only women to play for the Negro Leagues during the mid-1950s. Also invited wasLarry Lester, one of the founders of the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum in Kansas City.

Other notables were expected to be in attendance, such as Birmingham Black Barons outfielder Carl Long, who played alongside future Major League Baseball greats such as Willie MaysCurt Flood, and others. Cuban native Minnie “Cuban Comet” Minoso was another invitee, a player who made history in 1951 after being traded from the MLB’s Cleveland Indians to the Chicago White Sox thus becoming that team’s first player of color.

The attendees were moved by the President’s honorable gesture.

“It serves as a reminder of the impact the Negro League had on baseball,” said Pedro Sierra, a star player for the Indianapolis Clowns and the Detroit Stars after the meeting.

Minnie Forbes, the only living female owner of a Negro League baseball team, had similar glowing words. “It’s just wonderful [to] see the President and to know that where we came from – we weren’t able to travel and to sleep in hotels and to eat in restaurants, and now we’re able to come to the White House and see the President,” said Ms. Forbes, who owned the Detroit Stars.

Although the event was certainly joyous, it was marred slightly by the suspension of New York Yankees starAlex Rodriguez‘s suspension for violating the MLB’s drug policy. Sierra, who maintained that Rodriguez was not a centerpiece of discussion at Monday’s event, offered a stern warning to the game’s current stars.

“I never wanted to do anything that would embarrass my family or the game,” he said. “And unfortunately that’s not happened. And I just hope that the younger generation of baseball will think about a better
way to approach the game.”

About Post Author

Comments

From the Web

Skip to content