“Why is everyone wearing number 42? That number is retired! They can’t do that.”Number 42 was Jackie Robinson’s number.
“It’s Jackie Robinson Day.”
Well that explained it. On April 15, 1997, Major League Baseball made #42 the first and only number to be retired and unwearable by any team in the present and future in honor of Jackie Robinson.
For those of you that don’t know, in 1947, Jackie Robinson became the first African-American to play Major League Baseball when he was signed on to the Brooklyn Dodgers. Esentially, he engineered the integration of professional sports in America by breaking the color barrier in baseball, which was no easy feat. He endured taunts, threats, even deliberate spikings on the ball field. Despite it all, he played the game better than most and helped lead his team to victory. The Dodgers won 94 games during the 1947 season and finished first in their division. In 1962, his first year of eligability, he was elected into the Baseball Hall of Fame.
What many don’t realize is how many people Jackie Robinson affected outside of the sport he loved. In Myron Uhlberg’s book Dad, Jackie, and Me, we hear a fictionalized account of the 1947 baseball season from the perspective of a young boy and his deaf father as they follow the progress of Robinson’s rookie year.
The boy loves baseball and is thrilled when his father brings home tickets to see the Dodgers play at Ebbets Field. This is the first time that the boys father has shown any real interest in baseball and the young boy is somewhat embarrassed of his deaf father.
“When the game started and Jackie ran out on the field, Dad yelled real loud, “Jackiee, Jackiee, Jackiee!” Only it didn’t come out that way. It sounded like, “AH-GHEE, AH-GHEE, AH-GHEE!” Since my dad couldn’t hear, he had no way of knowing what the words should sound like.
Everyone looked at my dad.
I looked at my shoes.”
Uhlberg states in his author’s note that while the story is fiction, it is based in fact.
“During Jackie’s first year as a Dodger, my father took me to many games. He told me to watch carefully how the opposing team would single Jackie out for unfair treatment, how they would actively discriminate against him on the field just because his skin was brown. ‘Just you watch,’ he said. ‘Jackie will show them that his skin color has nothing to do with how he plays baseball. He will show them all that he is as good as they are.”
Dad, Jackie, and Me was illustrated by Colin Bootman and won the 2006 ALA Schneider Family Book Award and was a 2006 International Reading Association Teachers’ Choice. Myron has also authored three other picture books with Peachtree and a memoir, Hands of My Father, with Bantam.
Other Baseball books from Peachtree:
- Sliding into Home by Dori Hillestad Butler
- Play Ball Like the Pros: Tips for Kids from 20 Big League Stars by Steven Krasner
- Play Ball Like the Hall of Famers: The inside scoop from 19 Baseball Greats by Steven Krasner
- Profiles in Sports Courage by Ken Rappoport
- Baseball Books in the Fred Bowen Sports Story and All-Star Sports Story Series: