As a sports fan, I thoroughly
enjoyed reading the novel “Angry Black White Boy”. First and foremost, I
personally didn’t know that Fleet Walker was actually the first
African-American to break the color line in major league baseball. For the
longest time I assumed it was Jackie Robinson as that is what most people say.
I looked into this a bit more and apparently there was another former
slave William Edward White, who actually played a single game for five years
before Walker debuted for the Blue Stockings. Still though most baseball aficionados
consider Walker to be the first openly black player to play a full season.
I was not surprised when reading
about all the racism and murder attempts that Walker had to go through when
traveling around the country playing in various stadiums. In the history of
baseball, certain stadiums like Fenway park seem to be much worse than others.
The small segment titled “race” at the beginning of part 3 was eye opening for
me. I didn’t realize that entire mobs like the Klu Klux Klan would attend games
and wait until till after to attack. It made me wonder if this lifestyle was
worth it for people like Walker who have to always be on the move in order to
avoid being killed or hurt. In the opening section of Part 3 on page 267,
Walker jumps onto a random cargo train so that he is never seen again in
Georgia. He has no idea where he is headed but has to do this so that he isn’t killed.
I can’t even imagine the guilt that Walker must feel when he realizes he friend
Red Donner sacrificed his life so that Walker can escape and keep playing baseball.
These first black athletes were definitely heroes for dealing with this sort of
stuff while keeping up on the field but it’s important to not forget those who sacrificed
their lives to make this happen.
As Mr. Mitchell said, even
in today’s day and age there is still a lot of taunting and racist things that
are said to baseball players in the major league. I think baseball lends itself
more to this sort of stuff, as opposed to a basketball or football, as baseball
games are more of an experience where fans are out chanting and singing and
experiencing the stadium atmosphere while watching the game. In recent news, After the
Baltimore Orioles beat the Boston Red Sox in Fenway Park on May 2, Orioles
All-Star Adam Jones said he endured a barrage of racist slurs and
actions as he was manning his position in center field. He claims that a
fan threw a bag of peanuts at him and called him the N-word a handful of times.