Sports

After breaking baseball’s color barrier, Jackie Robinson broke barriers in Macon

This Telegraph file photo shows the entrance to Macon’s Luther Williams Field, one of the oldest minor league ballparks in the United States. In 1947, Jackie Robinson played a game here.
This Telegraph file photo shows the entrance to Macon’s Luther Williams Field, one of the oldest minor league ballparks in the United States. In 1947, Jackie Robinson played a game here. The Telegraph

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Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier in baseball in 1947 when he joined the Brooklyn Dodgers, a remarkable and courageous move that is widely celebrated now, 75 years later.

But Robinson didn’t just make history in the Major Leagues: two years later, he broke the color barrier in Georgia as the first Black baseball player to play against white players in the state.

The Cairo, Georgia native, played an exhibition game in Macon on April 7, 1949. The Dodgers beat the Peaches 11-2 in the game attended by more than 6,400 people at Luther Williams Field. In the game, Robinson drove in a run to contribute to the Brooklyn victory.

Beau Cabell/The Telegraph Luther Williams Field gate waits for film makers now to create memories.
Beau Cabell/The Telegraph Luther Williams Field gate waits for film makers now to create memories. Beau Cabell The Telegraph

The audience was segregated, with white people sitting on the first-base side of the stadium and Black people sitting opposite on the third-base side.

The late Bobby Pope, former executive director of the Georgia Sports Hall of Fame, told The Telegraph in 2012 that it was the largest attendance at the stadium until 1964 when Macon native John “Blue Moon” Odom appeared in a game for the Birmingham Barons.

Robinson’s career spanned 10 seasons. He won the Rookie of the Year honors in 1947, the first time the award had been given and was later renamed for Robinson.

He was elected to the Major League Baseball Hall of Fame in 1962, once again breaking a barrier as the first black player enshrined in the hall of fame. He retired with a .311 lifetime batting average, 137 home runs, 734 RBIs, and 197 stolen bases. In 1999, he was selected to the All-Century Team.

Two years before being selected to the All-Century team, Commissioner Bud Selig, retired Robinson No. 42 jersey for use across the league.

His hometown of Cairo has a baseball field named in his honor as well as a 10-mile stretch of Georgia Highway 93.

Robinson died of a heart attack at 53 years old in 1972. He was buried in Brooklyn beside his son, Jack Jr.

Chadwick Boseman, in the role of Jackie Robinson in the Jackie Robinson biopic “42,” plays around with the news photographer between scenes at Luther Williams Field in Macon, GA, on Wednesday, June 20, 2012 in Macon, GA. The historic baseball field was temporarily renamed City Island Park for the film’s production.
Chadwick Boseman, in the role of Jackie Robinson in the Jackie Robinson biopic “42,” plays around with the news photographer between scenes at Luther Williams Field in Macon, GA, on Wednesday, June 20, 2012 in Macon, GA. The historic baseball field was temporarily renamed City Island Park for the film’s production. WOODY MARSHALL wmarshall@macon.com

The game is not Robinson’s only connection to Luther Williams Field. In 2013, Clint Eastwood came to Macon to film movie scenes for the Jackie Robinson biopic “42.” Many of the scenes were shot in Macon, including at Luther Williams Field. Chadwick Boseman, the star of Marvel’s “The Black Panther,” who died in 2020, starred as Robinson in the film.

This story was originally published February 22, 2022 at 7:00 AM.

JB
Justin Baxley
The Telegraph
Justin Baxley is the fan life reporter at The Telegraph and writes stories centered around entertainment, food and sports in the Macon community. Justin joined the Telegraph staff after graduating from Mercer University in May 2017 with a degree in criminal justice and journalism. During his time at Mercer he served as the sports editor for The Cluster.
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Macon Telegraph’s Black History Month coverage

Read the Telegraph’s coverage of Black History month, including fresh reporting and gems from our archives.