Pre-integration players
Major League Baseball was segregated from 1887 until 1946. The integration of Major League Baseball happened at the beginning of the 1947 MLB season when Jackie Robinson played his first game for the Brooklyn Dodgers. By the 1950s, enough black talent had integrated into the formerly “white” leagues (both major and minor) that the Negro leagues themselves had become a minor league circuit.
Below is a list of 52 players who played for major Negro league teams up to 1950 and eventually saw playing time for a Major League team. Of these, eight have been inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame and two of them (Greason and Mays) are still alive.
| † | Elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame |
- Chuck Harmon played under alias of Charlie Fine for the Clowns so as not to violate his college basketball eligibility.
- Charlie Peete and his family died in a plane crash in 1957 when he was 27.
Post-integration players
An additional 35 or so players played on a Negro league team after 1950. A select few were All-Stars and one (Aaron) was inducted into the Hall of Fame.
- Charlie Neal
- Hank Aaron
- George Altman
- Maury Wills
- Donn Clendenon
- John Wyatt
- Blue Moon Odom
- Paul Casanova
Baseball’s “FORGOTTEN” legacy: The fascinating story of the Negro Leagues.
Hank Aaron on his time in the Negro Leagues: ‘It gave me opportunity’
Henry “Hank” Aaron was born in Mobile, Alabama, in 1934. In February 1952 he turned 18 and joined the Indianapolis Clowns of the Negro Leagues. He played outstandingly for the Clowns, at one point leading the Negro American League in batting average, runs, hits, doubles, home runs, runs batted in and total bases. He drew the notice of major league scouts, and was signed in June 1952 to the Boston Braves’ minor-league team, the Eau Claire Bears. He rose quickly through the minors, and in 1954 was called up to the major league roster for the Braves. Aaron played with the Braves for 20 seasons, from 1954 to 1974, and had one of the greatest major league careers in history, eventually being inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame.
In August 2020, Aaron wrote about his Negro Leagues experience for the foreword of the upcoming book Comeback Season: My Unlikely Story of Friendship with the Greatest Living Negro League Baseball Players, by Cam Perron with Nick Chiles, which will publish March 30.
Let me start by saying if it hadn’t been for the Indianapolis Clowns offering me a chance to play in the Negro Leagues, I don’t know what would have happened to me. I have no idea what I would have done. They gave me the opportunity to keep playing a sport I wanted to play more than anything in the world.
My dad had played a little baseball, but he never went further than playing on a local team. My uncles also played a little on local teams. Up until I joined the Clowns in 1952, at age eighteen, I had only been playing on local teams as well. When the Clowns gave me the opportunity to show what I could do, I told myself: Don’t let this chance pass you by!
When I was growing up in Mobile, Alabama, I taught myself how to hit by swinging at bottle caps with a broomstick. When you don’t have a lot, you take it upon yourself to learn how to do things, to discover what you are capable of. But I never thought I was developing some kind of special talent by learning how to hit bottle caps. It’s just what we had available. My friend Cornelius Giles, who is no longer with us, would pitch the bottle caps to me. Or I would toss them up myself. We would do this all day long.
I’ve heard people say that the bottle caps gave me the eye to later hit a baseball so well, but I don’t know if that’s true. I feel like God was the one who gave me the eye to do some of the things in baseball I wound up doing. In addition to that, I took it upon myself to learn how to play the game the way it’s supposed to be played. I told myself: No matter what happens, you have to be the best you can possibly be.
The first professional baseball game I saw was when the Clowns came to Mobile when I was fourteen, in 1948. They were playing against little scrap teams that were put together from players in Mobile. I was excited by what I saw on the field, but I also had an important realization that day. I knew I could play on the same level as those guys. I could compete on a professional level.
The atmosphere at that game was so much fun; the Black community was so excited. We had no other forms of entertainment — to us, this was baseball at its height. This was our major league. I saw kids on the field that day who easily could have put on a Major League Baseball uniform and played in the white league — though I wasn’t thinking about the white league at the time. [Jackie Robinson had debuted with the Brooklyn Dodgers only a year earlier.] I just enjoyed watching them play.
I was seventeen years old in November 1951 when I heard from the Clowns that they wanted me to play with them the next year, after I turned eighteen in February. They sent me a contract for $200 a month. I thought I was in a dream. I couldn’t believe I would get an opportunity to play in the Negro Leagues — and they would actually pay me. It was the greatest thing that had ever happened to me. Two hundred dollars seemed like an awful lot of money — I felt like I was robbing the bank. I had certainly never seen that much money. When I was growing up in Mobile, a nickel was a lot of money to me. But to be honest, I would have played in the Negro Leagues for free; I just wanted to play baseball.
When I left Mobile and showed up to spring training in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, I didn’t know whether I would even make the team and get a uniform. It was a lot colder in North Carolina and I didn’t even have a jacket or warm clothes. All I was thinking was that I had to show them I could play.
When I walked out on the field for my first game wearing a Clowns uniform, I felt like I was something special. I was getting a chance to do the thing I had been wanting to do my entire life. I still wasn’t thinking about the major league, about playing in the white leagues. I was just thinking about showing that I was capable of playing in the Negro Leagues, against that level of competition. If somebody had told me at the time that this was the highest I would ever go in baseball, I would have been fine with that. After all, we had no other choice at the time but to think that this was the highest we would go, and that we just had to do the best we could. We didn’t know whether we would have the opportunity to play in the major league.
I was lucky; they discovered that I could really hit the ball. God had put His hands on me. He had showed me the direction. I was so happy — I had $2 a day for meal money; I could wash my clothes every day, which was something I appreciated since I didn’t have anything else to put on. God showed me the way. I continued to have success.
Many years after my playing career was over and I had become an executive for the Braves, I heard that Major League Baseball was going to provide a pension to former Negro Leaguers, and I thought it was one of the greatest things that ever happened to the Negro Leagues. I was pleased that Major League Baseball was going to make sure things were made right. I didn’t have anything to do with it, but I was very happy when they passed it.
I was impressed when I learned of the work that Cam Perron is doing on behalf of former Negro League players, getting them what they deserve. I know how very, very important his work has been to them. They didn’t make much money when they were playing. Having an opportunity to receive a pension was one of the greatest things that could happen to them. There’s no question Cam should be applauded. For too many of the players, there was nothing there for them before.
Negro League baseball has been so important to my life. I won’t ever forget the way I felt when I walked on the field for the Clowns — like I was already in the major league. There was nothing else I wanted to be doing. And the Negro Leagues gave me the opportunity to go on to play Major League Baseball. Those months I spent on the Clowns helped me tremendously — not only teaching me how to play the game itself but also showing me that I belonged at that level. I’ll never forget that.
Buck O’Neil
| Buck O’Neil | |
|---|---|
| First baseman | |
| Born: November 13, 1911 Carrabelle, Florida |
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| Died: October 6, 2006 (aged 94) Kansas City, Missouri |
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Batted: Right
Threw: Right
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| debut | |
| 1937, for the Memphis Red Sox | |
| Last appearance | |
| 1955, for the Kansas City Monarchs | |
| Negro American League statistics | |
| Batting average | .258 |
| Home runs | 9 |
| Runs batted in | 175 |
| Teams | |
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| Career highlights and awards | |
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John Jordan “Buck” O’Neil Jr. (November 13, 1911 – October 6, 2006) was a first baseman and manager in the Negro American League, mostly with the Kansas City Monarchs. After his playing days, he worked as a scout and became the first African American coach in Major League Baseball.[1] In his later years he became a popular and renowned speaker and interview subject, helping to renew widespread interest in the Negro leagues, and played a major role in establishing the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum in Kansas City, Missouri.
O’Neil’s life was documented in Joe Posnanski‘s award-winning 2007 book The Soul of Baseball.
O’Neil was born in Carrabelle, Florida, to John Jordan O’Neil (1873–1954) and Louella Campbell (maiden; 1884–1945). O’Neil was initially denied the opportunity to attend high school owing to racial segregation. At the time, Florida had only four high schools specifically for African Americans. However, after working a summer in a celery field with his father, O’Neil left home to live with relatives and attend Edward Waters College in Jacksonville, where he completed high school and two years of college courses.
Playing career
He left Florida in 1934 for several years of semi-professional “barnstorming” experiences (playing interracial exhibition games). The effort paid off, and in 1937, O’Neil signed with the Memphis Red Sox for their first year of play in the newly formed Negro American League. His contract was sold to the Monarchs the following year.
O’Neil had a career batting average of .288 between 1937 and 1950, including four .300-plus seasons at the plate, as well as five seasons in which he did not top .260. In 1946, the first baseman led the NAL with a .353 batting average and followed that in 1947 with a .350 mark in 16 games. He also posted averages of .345 in 1940 and .330 in 1949. He played in three East-West All-Star Games in three different seasons and two Negro World Series.
O’Neil’s baseball career was interrupted for two years (1944 and 1945) during World War II when he joined the U.S. Navy after the close of the 1943 season. He served his enlistment in a naval construction battalion in New Jersey. He returned to the Monarchs at the start of the 1946 season.
O’Neil was named manager of the Monarchs in 1948 after Frank Duncan‘s retirement, and continued to play first base as well as a regular through 1951, dropping to part-time status afterward. He managed the Monarchs for eight seasons from 1948 through 1955 during the declining years of the Negro leagues, winning two league titles and a shared title in which no playoff was held during that period. His two undisputed pennants were won in 1953 and 1955, when the league had shrunk to fewer than six teams.
Negro leagues career statistics
O’Neil was known to have played full-time in 1951 and as a reserve and pinch-hitter as late as 1955, but Negro leagues statistics for the period 1951 and after are considered unreliable, and rapidly dropping below major league quality.
| Year | Team | Age | G | AB | R | H | 2B | 3B | HR | RBI | SB | BB | BA | OBP | SLG |
| 1937 | Memphis | 25 | 9 | 34 | 5 | 10 | 1 | 4 | 0 | 4 | 0 | 0 | .294 | .294 | .559 |
| 1938 | Kansas City | 26 | 39 | 127 | 25 | 33 | 7 | 3 | 3 | 19 | 11 | 16 | .260 | .343 | .433 |
| 1939 | Kansas City | 27 | 46 | 155 | 19 | 28 | 5 | 4 | 1 | 22 | 3 | 14 | .181 | .249 | .284 |
| 1940 | Kansas City | 28 | 31 | 114 | 19 | 35 | 7 | 3 | 1 | 30 | 5 | 6 | .307 | .342 | .447 |
| 1941 | Kansas City | 29 | 32 | 129 | 18 | 30 | 5 | 2 | 0 | 11 | 6 | 7 | .233 | .272 | .302 |
| 1942 | Kansas City | 30 | 46 | 178 | 27 | 47 | 8 | 1 | 1 | 22 | 4 | 11 | .264 | .307 | .337 |
| 1943 | Kansas City | 31 | 39 | 144 | 21 | 42 | 4 | 0 | 1 | 17 | 4 | 8 | .292 | .333 | .340 |
| 1944-45 | Naval service | ||||||||||||||
| 1946 | Kansas City | 34 | 27 | 95 | 14 | 27 | 2 | 2 | 0 | 11 | 1 | 14 | .284 | .376 | .347 |
| 1947 | Kansas City | 35 | 36 | 127 | 27 | 34 | 6 | 1 | 2 | 15 | 9 | 13 | .268 | .340 | .378 |
| 1948 | Kansas City | 36 | 19 | 69 | 7 | 18 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 10 | 2 | 5 | .261 | .311 | .275 |
| 1949 | Kansas City | 37 | 45 | 109 | 17 | 36 | 4 | 0 | 1 | 14 | 6 | 0 | .330 | .330 | .394 |
| 1950 | Kansas City | 38 | 31 | 83 | 14 | 21 | 5 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 5 | 11 | .253 | .340 | .398 |
| 1951 | Kansas City | 39 | 42 | 134 | — | 44 | — | — | 3 | 26 | — | — | .328 | ~.328 | .396 |
| 1952 | Kansas City | 40 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
| 1953 | Kansas City | 41 | 15 | 21 | 5 | 10 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2 | — | .476 | ~.476 | .476 |
| 1954 | Kansas City | 42 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
| 1955 | Kansas City | 43 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
| Total | 12 seasons (through 1950) |
400 | 1364 | 213 | 361 | 55 | 22 | 11 | 176 | 56 | 105 | .288 | .317 | .361 | |
| 2.469 Seasons 162-gm avg |
162 | 552 | 86 | 146 | 22 | 9 | 4 | 71 | 23 | 43 | .288 | .317 | .361 | ||
Off the field
When Tom Baird sold the Monarchs at the end of the 1955 season, O’Neil resigned as manager and became a scout for the Chicago Cubs, and is credited for signing Hall of Fame player Lou Brock to his first professional baseball contract. O’Neil is sometimes incorrectly credited with also having signed Hall of Famer Ernie Banks to his first contract; Banks was originally scouted and signed to the Monarchs by Cool Papa Bell, then manager of the Monarchs’ barnstorming B team in 1949. He played briefly for the Monarchs in 1950 and 1953, his play interrupted by Army duty. O’Neil was Banks’ manager during those stints, and Banks was signed to play for the Cubs more than two years before O’Neil joined them as a scout. He was named the first black coach in the major leagues by the Cubs in 1962, although he was not assigned in-game base coaching duties, nor was he included in the Cubs’ “College of Coaches” system, and was never allowed to manage the team during that time. After many years with the Cubs, O’Neil became a Kansas City Royals scout in 1988, and was named “Midwest Scout of the Year” in 1998.
O’Neil gained national prominence with his compelling descriptions of the Negro leagues as part of Ken Burns‘ 1994 PBS documentary on baseball. Afterwards, he became the subject of countless national interviews, including appearances on the Late Show with David Letterman and The Late Late Show with Tom Snyder.
In 1990, O’Neil led the effort to establish the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum (NLBM) in Kansas City, and served as its honorary board chairman until his death. In 1996, O’Neil became the recipient of an Honorary Doctor of Business Administration degree from the University of Missouri – Kansas City in Kansas City, Missouri.
In February 2002, at the end of the NLBM’s Legacy Awards annual banquet, O’Neil received an induction ring from the baseball scouts Hall of Fame in St. Louis.
O’Neil and all-star Ichiro Suzuki developed a relationship, with Ichiro attending the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum with O’Neil and seeking O’Neil’s knowledge of the game when the Seattle Mariners would have road games in Kansas City. “With Buck, I felt something big. The way he carried himself, you can see and tell and feel he loved this game.”
A busy final year
On May 13, 2006, he received an honorary doctorate in education from Missouri Western State University where he also gave the commencement speech.
O’Neil was a member of the 18-member Baseball Hall of Fame Veterans Committee from 1981 to 2000 and played an important role in the induction of six Negro league players from 1995 to 2001 during the time the Hall had a policy of inducting one Negro league PLAYER per year. O’Neil was nominated to a special Hall ballot for Negro league players, managers, and executives in 2006, but received fewer than the necessary nine votes (out of twelve) to gain admission; however, 17 other Negro league figures were selected.
God’s been good to me. They didn’t think Buck was good enough to be in the Hall of Fame. That’s the way they thought about it and that’s the way it is, so we’re going to live with that. Now, if I’m a Hall of Famer for you, that’s all right with me. Just keep loving old Buck. Don’t weep for Buck. No, man, be happy, be thankful.
On July 29, 2006, O’Neil spoke at the induction ceremony for the Negro league players at the Baseball Hall of Fame.
Still playing after all these years
Just before the Hall of Fame ceremonies, O’Neil signed a contract with the Kansas City T-Bones on July 17 to allow him to play in the Northern League All-Star Game. Before the game, O’Neil was “traded” to the Fargo-Moorhead RedHawks and was listed as the starting shortstop, although after drawing an intentional walk, he was replaced before actually playing in the field. At the end of the inning, another “trade” was announced that brought O’Neil back to the Kansas City team, allowing him to lead off the bottom of the inning as well (drawing another intentional walk).
The T-Bones originally claimed that O’Neil, at age 94 years, 8 months, and 5 days, would be by far the oldest person to appear in a professional baseball game (surpassing 83-year-old Jim Eriotes who had struck out in another Northern League game just a week earlier). However, that claim was in error, as the Schaumburg Flyers of the Northern League had signed Ted “Double Duty” Radcliffe to a one-game contract and allowed him to face one batter on June 19, 1999 when he was 96 years old. While O’Neil was the second-oldest pro player, the claim was amended that he would be the oldest person to make a plate appearance in a professional baseball game.
The Kansas City T-Bones retired his number on May 26, 2006. In 2021, the franchise changed their name to the Kansas City Monarchs.
Death and legacy
On August 5, 2006, O’Neil was admitted to a Kansas City hospital after complaining that he did not feel well. He was admitted for fatigue and was released three days later only to be re-admitted on September 17. On September 28, Kansas City media reported O’Neil’s condition had worsened. On October 6, O’Neil died at the age of 94 due to heart failure and bone marrow cancer.
During the ESPN opening day broadcast of the 2007 Kansas City Royals, on April 2, 2007, Joe Morgan announced the Royals would honor O’Neil by placing a fan in the Buck O’Neil Legacy Seat in Kauffman Stadium each game who best exemplifies O’Neil’s spirit. The seat itself has been replaced by a red seat amidst the all-blue seats behind home plate in Section 101, Row C, Seat 1. Due to the renovations and section renumbering in 2009 the seat number is now Section 127, Row C, Seat 9, and the seat bottom is now padded. The first person to sit in “Buck’s seat” was Buck O’Neil’s brother, Warren G. O’Neil (1917–2013), who also played in the Negro American League.
Presidential Medal of Freedom
On December 7, 2006, O’Neil was posthumously awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President George W. Bush; the award was presented to his brother, Warren, on his behalf on December 15. He was chosen due to his “excellence and determination both on and off the baseball field”, according to the White House news release. He joins other baseball notables such as Roberto Clemente, Joe DiMaggio, Willie Mays, and Jackie Robinson in receiving the United States’ highest civilian honor. On November 13, 2012 the family of Buck O’Neil donated his Presidential Medal of Freedom to the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum in honor of what would have been O’Neil’s 101st birthday. The medal will be showcased in a special area of the NLBM dedicated to O’Neil.
Beacon of Life Award
On March 31, 2007—the day of Major League Baseball’s first annual Civil Rights Game—O’Neil was posthumously awarded MLB’s first annual Beacon of Life Award at the inaugural MLB Beacon Awards luncheon.
Lifetime Achievement Award
On October 24, 2007, O’Neil was posthumously given a Lifetime Achievement Award named after him. He had fallen short in the Hall of Fame vote in 2006; however, he was honored in 2007 with a new award given by the Hall of Fame, to be named after him.
In 2008 a lifesize statue of O’Neil was placed on display inside the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum on 18th and Vine in Kansas City, and the Buck O’Neil Lifetime Achievement Award will be presented no more than every three years.
At the Hall of Fame induction ceremony on July 27, 2008, Joe Morgan gave a dedication speech for the award and talked about O’Neil’s life, repeatedly citing the title of O’Neil’s autobiography, I Was Right on Time.
Other honors
- Buck O’Neil Run/Walk
- “John Jordan ‘Buck’ O’Neil” exhibit (in the Ted Williams Museum and Hitters Hall of Fame)
- Shrine of the Eternals: O’Neil was inducted into the Baseball Reliquary‘s Shrine of the Eternals in 2008.
- Hall of Famous Missourians: In February 2012 O’Neil was inducted to the Hall, located in the Missouri state capitol building in Jefferson City. A bronze bust of O’Neil will be on permanent display by the sculptor E. Spencer Schubert.
- Buck O’Neil Bridge Kansas City, Missouri
- Right on Time Café onboard the USS Kansas City (LCS-22)[47]
- In the Get Fuzzy comic strip, Bucky the Siamese cat is named in honor of O’Neil.
BUC O’NEAL, THE TRUE CEO, AND, CHIEF MARKETING OFFICER OF THE NEGRO LEAGUE HISTORY TELLING PLATFORM
Born: November 13, 1911, in Carabelle, Florida John “Buck” O’Neil’s life in baseball notes the quintessential experience of the Negro leagues. The extensive travel, connection to Latin America, All-Star teams, championship victories, leadership on and off the field, pioneering coaching and scouting, and ambassadorship of the game after his career, mark him as an iconic and influential figure in baseball history.He left the celery fields of Florida in 1934, armed with natural ability, big hands and an eager spirit, to embark on a professional career as player and team leader for the next 30 years. After semi-professional “barnstorming” experiences with the Miami Giants, New York Tigers, Shreveport Acme Giants, and Zulu Cannibal Giants, O’Neil signed with the Memphis Red Sox in 1937. He was soon recruited by the well-established Kansas City Monarchs to play first base, beginning a dominant period of success for the team. From 1938-42, the Monarchs won consecutive Negro American League pennants. In 1942, his bat earned him an East-West All-Star game selection, the first of three, and that same year he led the Monarchs to victory over the Homestead Grays in the Negro Leagues World Series. O’Neil served in the U.S. Navy from 1943-45, returning to the Negro leagues, now transitioning to the integration of baseball in 1946. The Monarchs pushed forward with success, as O’Neil took over as player/manager under new owner T.Y. Baird in 1948. His consistent hitting and baseball knowledge served him and the Monarchs well, as he lead the Monarchs to the 1950 Negro American League western division pennant. O’Neil was also selected to manage the Western team at the annual All-Star Classic for four consecutive years, from 1951-54. In addition, O’Neil starred on winter league teams in Almendares, Cuba and Orbegon, Mexico. Yet, one of his greatest experiences may have been as one of the stars of the Satchel Paige All-Stars in 1946, touring the nation with a hand selected team to challenge major league players. He managed the Monarchs until 1955 when his career took an important turn. O’Neil became a scout for the Chicago Cubs, helping to shepherd the integration of black baseball players from the Negro leagues and Black colleges to the major leagues. Among his successful projects were future Hall of Fame players Ernie Banks and Lou Brock. In 1962, O’Neil made history by becoming the first African-American coach in Major League Baseball, with the Chicago Cubs. O’Neil left the Cubs as a scout in 1988, but many more great accomplishments awaited him. He returned to Kansas City and helped lead the effort to establish the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum, established in 1990. He served on the National Baseball Hall of Fame’s Committee on Veterans, helping ensure the induction of several Negro Leagues players. O’Neil also continues to touch thousands of people each year through promotion of baseball history, public speaking, and educational endeavors. |
During his presidency, Kendrick has forged a new chapter for the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum that led to Major League Baseball, in an announcement last December, recognizing the feats, statistics and accomplishments of yesteryear. Without this museum and the proper acknowledgment, the history of baseball is incomplete. And without Kendrick, there’s a chance the baseball world wouldn’t have arrived at this reckoning point.
“Every American should engage the history of Black baseball to understand the long story of the way baseball was seen as a point of entry into an integrated American life,” said Adrian Burgos, a University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign professor who studies sports history.
And as both America and baseball confront their history regarding race, the museum becomes a beacon.
“This museum is a civil rights museum. It is a social justice museum. It’s just seen through the lens of baseball,” Kendrick said.
For Kendrick, the story of the Negro Leagues is the quintessential American success story. He said that story has never been more relevant than it is today as the nation picks at the painful scars of the past.
“You won’t let me play? I’ll go create my own. That,” he said, “is such the American spirit.”
That spirit also drove Kendrick from humble beginnings of rural Georgia to the Midwest and a life as this history’s keeper.
A segregated pastime
Baseball is often referred to as “America’s Pastime,” which makes its period of racial exclusion particularly American.
Developed in the aftermath of the Civil War, baseball included mixed rosters with Black, Latino and white people on military, college and even company teams across the mid-Atlantic and Northeast regions. Jim Crow laws ushered in the whites-only era in which MLB began.
The “Negro Leagues” can trace its roots back to three independent Black teams joining to form the “Cuban Giants” – they picked up the nickname because they toured in Cuba in 1885. The Giants spawned teams that operated without an official structure until Rube Foster, the owner of the Chicago American Giants, called a meeting in 1920 at the Kansas City YMCA, a brick building still standing on The Paseo, around the corner from the museum. Today, the left exterior of the building features murals dedicated to O’Neil and the Monarchs, and it is the future site of the Buck O’Neil Education and Research Center.
Foster and other Midwest owners formed the Negro National League, the first organized league that existed in variations until about 1960 (historians argue about the exact year) in cities from Birmingham, Alabama, to Pittsburgh to Newark, New Jersey.
Many people know the story of Jackie Robinson breaking the color barrier with the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947 – part of what catalyzed the civil rights movement – and know his professional career started with the Kansas City Monarchs alongside the legendary pitcher Satchel Paige. Some people know that Hank Aaron, the onetime home run king, played for three months with the Indianapolis Clowns. Yet only the most fervent baseball historian is familiar with the legendary speed of James “Cool Papa” Bell – said to be so fast that he could turn off a light and be in bed before the room got dark.
© Earl Shugars, AP Brooklyn Dodgers manager Leo Durocher and Montreal Royals first baseman Jackie Robinson chat in the Havana dugout during an exhibition game on March 31, 1947. Robinson became the first Black man to play in major league baseball, with the Dodgers. They probably don’t know Charles “Bullet” Rogan was a two-way star –pitching and hitting – during the same time period as Babe Ruth or that Baseball Hall of Famer and center fielder Oscar Charleston should be considered a top five player of all time. There is the little-known fact that Latinos who could not pass as white, and even those who could, started in the Negro Leagues. So did major league legends like Minnie Miñoso, a 13-time All-Star from Cuba who played with the New York Cubans and eventually with the Chicago White Sox, and Martín Dihigo, a fellow Cuban who never made it to the majors but was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1977 by the Negro League Committee.
Three women played in the Negro Leagues. The first woman inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame, Effa Manley, owned the Newark Eagles.
© AP Effa Manley, left, who co-owned the Newark Eagles of the Negro National League looks over a scrapbook with one of her former players, Don Newcombe, at her home in Los Angeles on August 7, 1973. In 2006, Manley became the first woman elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame among 17 people from the Negro Leagues and pre-Negro Leagues. © AP Milwaukee Braves slugger Hank Aaron kneels in the outfield before a game, June 1957. “The majority of us went through our own formal educations without knowing one of the most significant chapters, not just in baseball history but in American history,” Kendrick said, “and that is the history of the Negro Leagues.”
Kendrick estimates there are more than 100 living Negro Leaguers who played well after the integration of the majors in the late 1950s. One of those players, Pedro Sierra – a right-handed pitcher from Cuba who joined the Clowns two seasons after Aaron – said the number is closer to 30.
Regardless of how many are left, the day none remains approaches, making people like Kendrick essential.
“We used to call Buck the voice of the Negro Leagues,” Sierra, 83, said. “Bob has kind of taken his place. So I call him the echo.”
Following in the steps of a legend
Thanks to some late-life fame gained through Ken Burns’ iconic nine-part (one for every inning) documentary “Baseball” in 1994, the modern baseball fan became acquainted with Buck O’Neil.
“He brought these individuals, these stories that he talked about,” Kendrick said, “he brought them to life.”
Kendrick likes to say O’Neil had newfound celebrity status as a result of his compelling narration of the Negro Leagues portion of the documentary.
“America fell in love with Buck O’Neil,” Kendrick said. “It literally set off a new career for him.”
O’Neil would enjoy that fame for 12 more years, which he spent gallivanting around the U.S. preaching the gospel of the Negro Leagues and the virtues of his new museum to anyone willing to listen.
“Guess who was along for the ride? Old Bob,” Kendrick said with his trademark laugh.
Three months prior to O’Neil’s passing in 2006, Congress distinguished the museum as “America’s National Negro Leagues Baseball Museum.”
O’Neil became more than a friend to Kendrick, despite the five-decade age difference between the two men. He was a mentor, a confidante. The baseball stories brought them together, but the shared time – traveling, at the museum, or on the golf course – bonded them.
“It didn’t matter how many times he had told a story. But if he’s telling it to you, he was going to tell it like the first time he ever told that story. He wasn’t gonna cheat you,” Kendrick said.
One of Kendrick’s favorite stories to tell centers on the time O’Neil hit for the cycle – single, double, triple, home run in the same game – on Easter Sunday 1943. As he had a celebratory dinner in a Memphis, Tennessee, hotel lobby that evening, O’Neil approached the first woman he saw. Ora Lee Owen was O’Neil’s wife for 51 years until she died in 1997.
Sometimes, as O’Neil regaled him with another story from the first half of the 20th century, Kendrick would think he was on the receiving end so he could one day serve as the conduit to the past, to the stories that make the Negro Leagues so important.
“I honestly believe that he guides my footsteps,” he said, “that he really is kind of this angel looking over my shoulder.”
Before the cross-country road-tripping, during one of their first chats, Kendrick asked O’Neil why the museum was important. O’Neil answered succinctly:
“So that we would be remembered.”
These days, he shares O’Neil’s stories with pride, hoping museumgoers will say, “‘Oh, Bob didn’t cheat us.’ He gave us every ounce of energy that he had,” Kendrick said.
Inducted into the Missouri Sports Hall of Fame in 2014, Kendrick’s own story of humble beginnings starts in Crawfordville, Georgia. He’s quick to inform that the town of 500 is 80 miles east of Atlanta, 50 miles west of Augusta. He has fond memories of watching his mother churn fresh ice cream during this “carefree environment” growing up as the youngest of six boys.
“I didn’t know I was poor until I got to college,” he said.
Around age 11 or 12, his family installed indoor plumbing. “We had everything we needed,” he said.
Attending Howard University in Washington, D.C., had been his plan, but a partial basketball scholarship brought him to Park College in Parkville, Missouri (now Park University), in the fall of 1980.
“In the information they sent me they made it seem like it was really close to Kansas City,” he said with a laugh.
Parkville is 11 miles from the museum, and Kendrick never left the area once he arrived.
He bought a winter jacket for the first time and played on the school’s team for two years. The 3-point line hadn’t been adopted in the collegiate ranks yet, and Kendrick jokes that maybe his career would have been prolonged if it had been around.
A broken foot at the start of his junior season prompted him to focus solely on his studies, and he earned a communications degree in 1985.
For his first job out of college, in the composing room of the Star, he donned a denim-blue apron. Equipped with an X-Acto knife, Kendrick would receive editors’ hand-drawn layouts of the pages. He cut the type, pasted it and created the pages that ultimately became the plates for that edition of the newspaper’s printing presses. The job taught him about pressure and deadlines. He joined the paper’s promotions group, which operated as the Star’s in-house advertising agency, two years later.
As a copywriter, he led the advertising efforts for space donated by the paper to nonprofit groups. And in 1993, he drew the assignment of popularizing a museum about Black baseball players that opened on 18th and Vine.
‘No one gave it any chance of succeeding’
When the Monarchs played at Municipal Stadium, not far from where the museum now sits, businesses thrived, and the jazz of Charlie Parker and Count Basie played inside clubs like Street’s Blue Room.
“It was the epicenter for Black life in Kansas City,” he said. “Wherever you had successful Black baseball, you typically had thriving Black economies. 18th and Vine was no exception.”
But when Kendrick arrived at the cross street nearly three decades ago, the neighborhood “had been left to die,” he said. Vacant storefronts and half-caved-in buildings took up whole blocks. O’Neil and other ex-Negro Leaguers took turns paying the rent to keep the space.
“No one gave it any chance of succeeding,” Kendrick said.
Twenty-eight years later, Kendrick is the one leading the museum – in a much different form than the one-room venture it started out as across the street from the current edifice.
On this scalding, sweaty August afternoon, too toasty for his customary suit, Kendrick is as cool as a tall glass of iced tea in a crisp cream-colored short-sleeve button-down shirt, white pants and light brown shoes.
Some of the unopened boxes that fill his office, he said, are from when he moved in. The constant deluge of memorabilia only adds to the clutter.
On any given day, visitors could be roaming the museum’s corridors and suddenly hear Kendrick’s voice. For those who don’t recognize him, he keeps his identity secret until the end of the tour. Sometimes he’ll point out the T-shirt in the gift shop with a caricature of himself and the words “Chief Storytelling Officer.” That’s becoming harder these days, between his social media presence and the growing popularity of the museum.
“Buck was the greatest storyteller of all time,” said Jessie Murphy, the museum’s operations manager. “Mr. Kendrick is right up there with him.”
Kendrick worked his way into the presidency after years behind the scenes on the board. He spent 13 months away from the museum as the director of the National Sports Center for the Disabled before being asked to return in 2011, this time as president.
“Bob is a good-hearted person,” Murphy said. “He has created many avenues for this museum. In fact, when we were going down, he picked it up and it’s been rising up ever since.”
A 100-year birthday celebration for the late O’Neil marked Kendrick’s first year back. Kansas City hosted the 2012 All-Star Game, bringing the spotlight to the city, and the Royals’ success in 2014 and ’15 kept it there, helping the museum flourish with an influx of visitors. In between, Kendrick hosted a Hollywood-style “42” premiere with Chadwick Boseman, who played Robinson, and Harrison Ford conducted media interviews on the release date from the museum’s famous “Field of Legends.”
“I’m not saying this just because he’s here,” said Cathie Moss, the museum’s event coordinator and occasional tour guide herself. “I don’t think this museum would be on the same level or footing it is today had (Kendrick) not come back when he did.”
The museum has been profitable for years and is on solid financial footing now – a $20 million turnaround for the organization, Kendrick said. Tax records confirmed this.
Kendrick and curator Raymond Doswell, who is responsible for the museum’s layout and content, helped museum attendance grow year-over-year “exponentially.” They hoped to attract 100,000 visitors in 2020 before the pandemic hit. More than 2 million visitors have passed through the glass doors since the museum building opened in 1997.
© Evert Nelson, Topeka Capital-Journal Bob Kendrick, president of the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum in Kansas City, walks through a portion of the museum showcasing eras in baseball that feature prominent Black players on Oct. 5, 2021. The 10,000-square-foot space houses decades worth of baseball artifacts. Photos with insightful descriptions line the walls, walking visitors through a timeline of Negro Leagues history in a quiet atmosphere – unless Kendrick’s voice is booming during another impromptu tour. Thirteen life-size, bronze statues situated around a baseball diamond make up the Field of Legends, the final stop of the tour.
“Breaking Barriers,” the seventh traveling exhibit, will debut next year in conjunction with the 75th anniversary of Robinson’s feat and honors the player to break each organization’s color barrier until 1959.
One year and one day after the museum closed for three months because of the pandemic, a vaccination site opened on the premises – an example of the public service function the museum carries, Kendrick said.
“We still operate in the heart of an African American community, and a lot of people who live in this community are underserved,” Kendrick said.
Through a partnership with MLB’s Kansas City Royals and the local Boys & Girls Club, a state-of-the-art baseball complex sits one block behind the museum.
The focus, however, remains on the baseball players from decades ago.
“Through Bob’s storytelling and his gregarious personality and Raymond’s commitment to staying true to the story and telling it and sharing it through the collection, through the exhibits, through the communities, you really see the best of the Negro Leagues,” said Burgos, the Illinois professor who wrote “Cuban Star: How One Negro League Owner Changed the Face of Baseball,” about the Afro-Cuban-American Alejandro “Alex” Pompez.
Keeper of the legends
The museum allowed Kendrick to meet his baseball hero: Aaron.
Kendrick recalls being 12 and running around his parents’ living room in joy the April night Aaron broke Ruth’s home run record in 1974. Taking Aaron on a tour of the museum will always be the highlight of his career.
“(He’s) the only person I’ve ever been star-struck around,” Kendrick said.
His tour with Aaron ended with them and Aaron’s wife, Billye Aaron, sitting around a plate of ribs doused in original sauce at the revered local food joint Gates BBQ. The couple jokingly asked Kendrick if he had any ribs on him every time they saw each other until Aaron’s death in January.
“Memories mean a whole lot to me,” Kendrick said. “This museum is filled with memories.”
Memories also fueled one of Kendrick’s latest ideas, “My Baseball Memory,” which launched Oct. 6 – the 15-year anniversary of O’Neil’s death. Former Black MLB players Frank White and Joe Carter sat on a panel to help launch the campaign, designed to raise Alzheimer’s awareness in the Black community. Fans were encouraged to share their most-cherished memories related to baseball on social media accompanied by the hashtag #MyBaseballMemory.
Kendrick has jumped headfirst into the challenge of making the museum relevant for both younger and older generations, including those who use a variety of online platforms. His 20-episode podcast series, “Black Diamonds,” includes conversations about Negro Leagues stars and teams with historians and other baseball luminaries.
He might be prone to retweeting mostly everything he’s tagged in, but his Twitter account also supplies his 45,000 followers timelines with facts, figures and stories of the Negro Leagues and their legends. He sees it all as a tool to connect the museum with the younger generation, who will one day become responsible for financially supporting the 501(c)3 nonprofit.
When the coronavirus pandemic dashed the grand plans to celebrate the 100th anniversary of Foster’s creation of the Negro Leagues that Kendrick had coordinated with Major League Baseball for 2020, he adjusted. The “Tip Your Cap” campaign was born, and it kicked off with four living U.S. presidents – Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama – giving their support to the museum with short video messages and literally tipping their baseball caps on social media to honor the men and women who were denied the chance to play in the majors.
“My Baseball Memory” and “Tip Your Cap” are examples of ideas that Kendrick wakes up with in the middle of the night. He jots them down immediately. The museum is never far from his mind.
Like a baseball manager, Kendrick feels he receives too much credit for the museum’s success. He, obviously, hands it all to his old friend.
“I talk to Buck almost every day. There’s not a single day that I don’t talk to Buck. He don’t always talk back to me,” Kendrick said. “It just seems like everything we try to do, it seems to work. And I ain’t that smart.”
In previous generations, Burgos – the Illinois professor – argued it was men like Kendrick and Doswell who would have been Negro Leagues leaders, either guiding or owning teams or chronicling it like famous Black journalist Wendell Smith, who followed Robinson in 1946 and 1947.
“This is why so many of us love Buck O’Neil,” Burgos said. “Because he was the legacy. And these men are carrying that legacy forward.”
Kendrick’s goal is to leave the museum on more stable ground compared with when he returned. Improving life for those who come next is a duty of the human condition, he reasons.
“One day, my granddaughter will bring her children here and say ‘your great-grandfather had a hand in this,’” Kendrick said. “None of us are going to get rich doing this.”
They are rich in so many other ways, Kendrick said.
Rich in memories. Rich in passion. Powered by the stories of those who are enshrined here and the people who have made that mission of remembrance – and equality – their life’s work.



