Amazon.com Review
A remarkable--if forgotten--figure in baseball history, Sol White played both infield and outfield with storied success for organized teams in both integrated and "Colored" leagues all over the East Coast and Midwest in the 1880s and 1890s. Yet it's what he did off the field--compile this absorbing and detailed history of blacks in early baseball, first published in 1907--that cemented his importance to the game. His record--vividly written and well illustrated with contemporary photos--preserves the feats of the forgotten men like White himself, George Stovey, Home Run Johnson, Charles Grant, Kid Carter, and Rube Foster, who were short only on Major League opportunity, not talent.
What makes this such a revealing document, archival necessity, and historical curiosity is how accepted the idea of a separate baseball universe was almost from baseball's organized start, and how hard White worked to make sure its accomplishments wouldn't just disappear unrecorded; the purpose of his History was to celebrate, advertise, and raise money for this separate universe. It's not a sociology text, though it will provide a grand slam of sociology for contemporary readers, nor is it an angry screed in search of a soapbox, but its resignation is hard to miss: "The colored ballplayer," writes White, "should always look before he leaps. He should remember that, although possessing the ability in every particular of the white ball player, he is not in a position to demand the same salary as his white brother, as the difference in the receipts of their respective games are decidedly in favor of the latter."
In a long, probing introductory essay, Negro League historian Jerry Malloy provides important context to the content of White's work. And while White's History stands on its own, Malloy adds an intriguing array of supporting documents, including some of White's later observations on the game; an 1892 account from the Cleveland Gazette identifying the prejudice of Cap Anson, the Hall of Famer most responsible for establishing the game's color line; and a column from the April 11, 1891, issue of Sporting Life that begins with the already shameful realization that, "Probably in no other business in America is the color line so finely drawn as in base ball. An African who attempts to put on a uniform and go in among a lot of white players is taking his life in his hands." --Jeff Silverman
From Publishers Weekly
In 1907 White, a successful ballplayer from 1887 to 1909 and manager from 1902 to 1912, wrote a book on the history of black baseball since 1885. Only four copies of that volume are now believed to exist, and it is reproduced here with the original photos and ads, and supplemented by an addendum that White wrote on the 1907 season, reminiscences he contributed to newspapers in 1930 and additional documents, mostly newspaper articles and columns, from other writers. The saddest note in White's work is the sense of loss when the national pastime, which had been integrated in the 1870s and early 1880s, substituted Jim Crow for the 14th Amendment. There are also high spots like the equipping of the Page Fence Giants of Adrian, Mich., with their own private railroad coach so they could avoid segregated hotel accommodations. Albeit only a footnote to history, White's compendium as compiled by Malloy, a specialist on the Negro leagues, provides valuable firsthand testimony of black baseball's universe. Photos.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.