Posted on Sep 25, 2020
Fifty-nine-year-old Satchel Paige pitches three innings
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BLACK DIAMONDS: AN ORAL HISTORY OF THE NEGRO LEAGUES, Program 1 of 6. Important figures in the world of Black baseball from 1920-1950 give their thoughts on ...
Thank you my friend SGT (Join to see) for making us aware that September 25, 1965, 60 year old Leroy 'Satchel" Paige of the Kansas City Athletics pitched 3 scoreless innings.
Black Diamonds: Satchel Paige
BLACK DIAMONDS: AN ORAL HISTORY OF THE NEGRO LEAGUES, Program 1 of 6. Important figures in the world of Black baseball from 1920-1950 give their thoughts on the quality of play, barnstorming, prejudice and the white Major Leagues. The interviewer is Stephen Banker, and this program focuses on Satchel Paige (pictured above).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mK1iWx6JJ68
Images:
1. 1953 Topps card #220 Leroy Robert Satchell Paige - St Louis Browns
2. Cleveland Indians pitcher Satchel Paige resting
3. 1949 Bowman #224 Leroy Satchel Paige, Rookie Card, Cleveland Indians
4. Satchel Paige and Bob Feller, teammates on the 1948 World Series champion Cleveland Indians...
Biographies:
1. baseballhall.org/hall-of-famers/paige-satche
2. historicmissourians.shsmo.org/historicmissourians/name/p/paige
1. Background from {[https://baseballhall.org/hall-of-famers/paige-satchel]}
The numbers – at least the big league ones – do not do justice to his legend.
The stories, however, keep alive the memory of a man who became bigger than the game. Leroy “Satchel” Paige was bigger than mere numbers.
Apocryphal stories surround Paige, who was born July 7, 1906 in Mobile, Ala. He began his professional career in the Negro Leagues in the 1920s after being discharged from reform school in Alabama. The lanky 6-foot-3 right-hander quickly became the biggest drawing card in Negro baseball, able to overpower batters with a buggy-whipped fastball.
Paige, a showman at heart, bounced from team-to-team in search of the best paycheck – often pitching hundreds of games a year between regular Negro Leagues assignments and barnstorming opportunities. During the 1930s, Paige’s stints with Negro National League powerhouse Pittsburgh Crawfords were interrupted by seasons with teams in North Dakota and the Dominican Republic.
In the late 1930s, Paige developed arm problems for the first time. Kansas City Monarchs owner J.L. Wilkinson signed Paige to his “B” team, giving Paige time to heal. Within a year, Paige’s shoulder had recovered and his fastball returned. As he aged, the control he once used to dazzle fans now became his primary weapon as a pitcher.
“He could throw the ball right by your knees all day,” said Cool Papa Bell.
At the age of 42, Paige made his big league debut when Bill Veeck signed him to a contract with the Indians on July 7, 1948. Two days later, Paige made his debut for a Cleveland club involved in one of the tightest pennant races in American League history.
That summer and fall, Paige went 6-1 with three complete games and a save and a 2.48 earned-run average. Cleveland won the AL pennant in a one-game playoff against Boston, then captured the World Series title in six games against the Braves. Paige became the first African-American pitcher to pitch in the World Series when he worked two-thirds of an inning in Game 5.
Paige pitched for the Indians again in 1949, then spent three seasons with the St. Louis Browns from 1951-53, earning two All-Star Game selections. He then returned to life in the minors and barnstorming, resurfacing in the majors at the age of 59 in a one-game stint with the Athletics on Sept. 25, 1965. He pitched three shutout innings.
Paige was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1971 as the first electee of the Committee on Negro Baseball Leagues. He passed away on June 8, 1982.
“Age is a question of mind over matter,” Paige said. “If you don’t mind, it doesn’t matter.”
Background from {[https://historicmissourians.shsmo.org/historicmissourians/name/p/paige/]}
Satchel Paige (1906 - 1982)
Introduction
Map of Missouri with Kansas City starred
Kansas City, Missouri
Satchel Paige was a famous African American baseball pitcher who helped break down racial barriers in professional sports. His incredible speed, skill, and showmanship made him a national baseball hero. He pitched in the Negro Leagues before joining the major leagues in 1948. In 1971 Paige became the first player from the Negro Leagues elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame.
divider
Early Years & Education
1910 Census1910 Census
Leroy “Satchel” Paige was born July 7, 1906, in Mobile, Alabama. He was the seventh child of twelve born to John and Lula Coleman Paige. Satchel’s father was a gardner and his mother worked as a domestic servant. Because John Paige was often unemployed, the family lived in poverty. In his autobiography, Paige remembered, “We played in the dirt because we didn’t have toys. We threw rocks. There wasn’t anything else to throw.”
Mobile, Alabama
As Satchel grew older, he helped support his family. He collected empty bottles for resale, delivered ice, and worked as a baggage porter at Mobile’s Louisville & Nashville’s rail depot.
On one occasion when Satchel was loaded down with bags, another porter told him, “You look like a walking satchel tree.” It was then, Satchel later recalled, “LeRoy Paige became no more and Satchel Paige took over.”
Satchel rarely attended school. Instead, he skipped class to play baseball and fish in Mobile Bay. Satchel soon developed a reputation as the best school-age pitcher in Mobile’s black section, but he could not stay out of trouble.
Alabama Reform School
In 1918 twelve-year-old Satchel was convicted of shoplifting and was sentenced to five years in the Alabama Reform School for Juvenile Negro Lawbreakers. Satchel attended class, worked on the school farm, joined the school choir, and became a member of the drum and bugle corps.
He honed his skills as a baseball player under the direction of Coach Edward Byrd. Coach Byrd showed Satchel how to use his physical skill and strength to become a powerful and proficient right-handed pitcher. Most importantly, Byrd taught Satchel that he could not depend on his physical talent alone—he would also have to outwit his opponents. By studying a batter’s stance, the placement of his feet, and the position of his bat, Satchel could determine the player’s weaknesses at the plate.
Satchel was paroled on December 31, 1923, with “an excellent record.” He later said, “Those five and a half years there did something for me—they made a man out of me. If I’d been left on the streets of Mobile to wander with those kids I’d been running around with, I’d of ended up as a big bum, a crook. You might say I traded five years of freedom to learn how to pitch.”
1935 Pittsburgh Crawfords
After baseball became segregated in 1889, blacks were prohibited from playing in the major leagues. In response, black baseball players formed their own semi-professional and professional baseball leagues that were collectively referred to as the “Negro Leagues.”
Paige returned home and joined the black semi-professional Mobile Tigers. It was then, he said, “I gave up kid’s baseball—baseball just for fun—and started baseball as a career.” At six foot three inches tall, the lanky right-handed pitcher quickly developed a reputation as a formidable opponent.
In 1924, playing for the Tigers, Paige won an estimated thirty games with only one loss. In 1926 he joined the professional Chattanooga Black Lookouts for two successful seasons. Paige then spent the next several years going from team to team in search of a more lucrative paycheck.
Among the Negro League teams he played for between 1927 and 1947 were the Birmingham Black Barons, Baltimore Black Sox, Cleveland Cubs, Pittsburgh Crawfords, Kansas City Monarchs, New York Black Yankees, and Memphis Red Sox.
Al Lopez Field
When not playing with a team, Paige and other black players formed freelance barnstorming teams that toured the country playing other teams in exhibition games to make extra money. Paige spent long hours on the road and rarely saw his wife when barnstorming across the country. Life on the road was not easy for black players and they regularly endured racist taunts from spectators. Due to segregation, they were not allowed to stay at hotels where whites lodged or dine at restaurants used by whites. Paige refused to play in towns where he could not get a hotel room or a meal.
Despite the prevailing racism of the era, Paige attracted white spectators with his dazzling pitching skills. He could throw a variety of pitches with accuracy and speed that few could match. He gave his pitches colorful names such as “jump ball, bee ball, screw ball, woobly ball, whipsy-dipsy-do, a hurry-up ball, a nothin’ ball, and a bat dodger.”
Paige used his arsenal of different pitches to confuse batters. He might sidearm the ball across the plate, follow with a fastball, and then throw his signature “hesitation pitch” in which he would hesitate during his wind-up, often messing up the batter’s timing.
Kansas City Monarchs
In 1938, while playing baseball in Mexico, Paige injured his pitching arm. At the age of thirty-two, he feared his career was over. J.L. Wilkinson, owner of the Kansas City Monarchs, signed Paige to play first base for his second-string team, the Kansas City Travelers. Although many believed his days on the pitcher’s mound were finished, Paige miraculously recovered the following year, and joined the Kansas City Monarchs.
Family Life
On October 26, 1934, Paige married Janet Howard. He married Lucy “Luz” Maria Figueroa in 1940 while playing ball in Puerto Rico. Because he had not divorced his first wife, Paige’s marriage to Figueroa was not legal. He divorced his first wife in 1943. Paige later married Lahoma Brown and together the couple had seven children.
In 1947, Jackie Robinson became the first African American to play major league baseball in the twentieth century. In his autobiography, Paige declared, “I’d been the guy who’d started all that big talk about letting us in the big time. I’d been the one who’d opened up the major league parks to colored teams. I’d been the one who the white boys wanted to barnstorm against…It still was me that ought to have been first.” Paige, at age forty-one, was viewed by many to be too old to play in the major leagues.
One year after Jackie Robinson joined the Brooklyn Dodgers, Paige signed with the Cleveland Indians. At forty-two years old, he was the oldest rookie to play in the major leagues. Paige’s pitching helped the Cleveland Indians beat the Boston Braves to win the 1948 World Series. He was the first African American athlete to play in a World Series.
Paige stayed with the Indians for one more season and then played for the St. Louis Browns for three years. He played his final season in the major leagues in 1965 with the Kansas City Athletics. In order to qualify for his Major League Baseball pension, Paige briefly joined the Atlanta Braves in 1968 as a pitching coach.
In 1971 Paige became the first player from the Negro Leagues elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York.
Death & Legacy
LeRoy “Satchel” Paige died of a heart attack on June 8, 1982, in Kansas City, Missouri. He is buried in Forest Hill Memorial Park Cemetery in Kansas City, Missouri.
Because much of his forty-three year career was spent in the Negro Leagues where record keeping was spotty, it is difficult to document Satchel Paige’s lifetime career statistics. It is clear, however, that Paige won the respect of his peers—both white and black—during his time in baseball. Today he is widely recognized as one of the greatest pitchers in baseball history.
Legendary Boston Red Sox slugger Ted Williams claimed, “Paige was the greatest pitcher in baseball.” Famed New York Yankee Joe DiMaggio said Satchel Paige was the “best and fastest pitcher I’ve ever faced.” Celebrated St. Louis Cardinal pitcher Dizzy Dean remarked, “He’s a better pitcher than I ever hope to be.” Homestead Grays first baseman and Hall of Famer Buck Leonard declared, “He threw fire.”
Paige’s showmanship, athleticism, and personality attracted both white and black audiences. He proved that black athletes could compete with and beat their white counterparts, helping pave the way for fellow African Americans to join Major League Baseball.
Text and research by Kimberly Harper
References and Resources
For more information about Satchel Paige's life and career, see the following resources:
Society Resources
The following is a selected list of books, articles, and manuscripts about Satchel Paige in the research centers of The State Historical Society of Missouri. The Society’s call numbers follow the citations in brackets. All links will open in a new tab.
Articles from the Newspaper Collection
“A Giant is Returned to Earth.” Kansas City Star. June 13, 1982. pp. A1, A18.
“The Life and Times of Satchel Paige.” Kansas City Times. June 9, 1982. pp. D1-2.
“We Lost Satchel.” Kansas City Star. June 9, 1982. pp. A1, A12.
Books and Articles
Bruce, Janet. The Kansas City Monarchs: Champions of Black Baseball. Lawrence: University of Kansas Press, 1985. [REF H128.131 B83]
Christensen, Lawrence O., William E. Foley, Gary R. Kremer, and Kenneth H. Winn, eds. Dictionary of Missouri Biography. Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 1999. pp. 591-593. [REF F508 D561]
Heapy, Leslie A., ed. Satchel Paige and Company: Essays on the Kansas City Monarchs, Their Greatest Star, and the Negro Leagues. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company, 2007. [REF F508.1 P152he]
Holway, John B. Josh and Satch: The Life and Times of Josh Gibson and Satchel Paige. New York: Carroll & Graf Publishers, 1992.[REF F508.1 P152ho 1992]
Paige, Satchel. Maybe I’ll Pitch Forever. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1993. [REF F508.1 P 152 1993]
Shirley, David. Satchel Paige. New York: Chelsea House, 1993. [REF F508.1 P152sh]
Spivey, Donald. “If You Were Only White”: The Life of Leroy “Satchel” Paige. Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 2012. [REF F508.1 P152sp]
Tye, Larry. Satchel: The Life and Times of an American Legend. New York: Random House, 2009. [REF F508.1 P152t]
Manuscript Collection
Kansas City Monarchs Oral History Collection, 1978-1981 (KC0047)
The Kansas City Monarchs baseball team was a charter member of the Negro National League which was established in 1920. The Monarchs were active from 1920 until the integration of baseball in the 1950’s. In 1978 Janet Bruce and Catherine T. Rocha applied for and received a grant from the Friends of the Library at the University of Missouri-Kansas City to conduct a series of oral history interviews with surviving members of the Kansas City Monarchs.
In addition to the oral history interviews on cassette tapes, the collection includes correspondence and reports related to grants which Janet Bruce and Catherine T. Rocha held while gathering their eighteen interviews with persons who played with or were associated with the Kansas City Monarchs."
FYI COL Mikel J. Burroughs LTC (Join to see) Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D. Maj William W. 'Bill' Price PO3 Phyllis Maynard SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL MSG Felipe De Leon Brown MSgt Robert "Rock" Aldi SMSgt Lawrence McCarter GySgt Thomas Vick SSG Stephen Rogerson SSG Robert Mark Odom SPC Margaret Higgins SPC Matthew Lamb SPC Nancy Greene SGT Denny Espinosa SPC Michael Duricko, Ph.D PO2 (Join to see)
Black Diamonds: Satchel Paige
BLACK DIAMONDS: AN ORAL HISTORY OF THE NEGRO LEAGUES, Program 1 of 6. Important figures in the world of Black baseball from 1920-1950 give their thoughts on the quality of play, barnstorming, prejudice and the white Major Leagues. The interviewer is Stephen Banker, and this program focuses on Satchel Paige (pictured above).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mK1iWx6JJ68
Images:
1. 1953 Topps card #220 Leroy Robert Satchell Paige - St Louis Browns
2. Cleveland Indians pitcher Satchel Paige resting
3. 1949 Bowman #224 Leroy Satchel Paige, Rookie Card, Cleveland Indians
4. Satchel Paige and Bob Feller, teammates on the 1948 World Series champion Cleveland Indians...
Biographies:
1. baseballhall.org/hall-of-famers/paige-satche
2. historicmissourians.shsmo.org/historicmissourians/name/p/paige
1. Background from {[https://baseballhall.org/hall-of-famers/paige-satchel]}
The numbers – at least the big league ones – do not do justice to his legend.
The stories, however, keep alive the memory of a man who became bigger than the game. Leroy “Satchel” Paige was bigger than mere numbers.
Apocryphal stories surround Paige, who was born July 7, 1906 in Mobile, Ala. He began his professional career in the Negro Leagues in the 1920s after being discharged from reform school in Alabama. The lanky 6-foot-3 right-hander quickly became the biggest drawing card in Negro baseball, able to overpower batters with a buggy-whipped fastball.
Paige, a showman at heart, bounced from team-to-team in search of the best paycheck – often pitching hundreds of games a year between regular Negro Leagues assignments and barnstorming opportunities. During the 1930s, Paige’s stints with Negro National League powerhouse Pittsburgh Crawfords were interrupted by seasons with teams in North Dakota and the Dominican Republic.
In the late 1930s, Paige developed arm problems for the first time. Kansas City Monarchs owner J.L. Wilkinson signed Paige to his “B” team, giving Paige time to heal. Within a year, Paige’s shoulder had recovered and his fastball returned. As he aged, the control he once used to dazzle fans now became his primary weapon as a pitcher.
“He could throw the ball right by your knees all day,” said Cool Papa Bell.
At the age of 42, Paige made his big league debut when Bill Veeck signed him to a contract with the Indians on July 7, 1948. Two days later, Paige made his debut for a Cleveland club involved in one of the tightest pennant races in American League history.
That summer and fall, Paige went 6-1 with three complete games and a save and a 2.48 earned-run average. Cleveland won the AL pennant in a one-game playoff against Boston, then captured the World Series title in six games against the Braves. Paige became the first African-American pitcher to pitch in the World Series when he worked two-thirds of an inning in Game 5.
Paige pitched for the Indians again in 1949, then spent three seasons with the St. Louis Browns from 1951-53, earning two All-Star Game selections. He then returned to life in the minors and barnstorming, resurfacing in the majors at the age of 59 in a one-game stint with the Athletics on Sept. 25, 1965. He pitched three shutout innings.
Paige was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1971 as the first electee of the Committee on Negro Baseball Leagues. He passed away on June 8, 1982.
“Age is a question of mind over matter,” Paige said. “If you don’t mind, it doesn’t matter.”
Background from {[https://historicmissourians.shsmo.org/historicmissourians/name/p/paige/]}
Satchel Paige (1906 - 1982)
Introduction
Map of Missouri with Kansas City starred
Kansas City, Missouri
Satchel Paige was a famous African American baseball pitcher who helped break down racial barriers in professional sports. His incredible speed, skill, and showmanship made him a national baseball hero. He pitched in the Negro Leagues before joining the major leagues in 1948. In 1971 Paige became the first player from the Negro Leagues elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame.
divider
Early Years & Education
1910 Census1910 Census
Leroy “Satchel” Paige was born July 7, 1906, in Mobile, Alabama. He was the seventh child of twelve born to John and Lula Coleman Paige. Satchel’s father was a gardner and his mother worked as a domestic servant. Because John Paige was often unemployed, the family lived in poverty. In his autobiography, Paige remembered, “We played in the dirt because we didn’t have toys. We threw rocks. There wasn’t anything else to throw.”
Mobile, Alabama
As Satchel grew older, he helped support his family. He collected empty bottles for resale, delivered ice, and worked as a baggage porter at Mobile’s Louisville & Nashville’s rail depot.
On one occasion when Satchel was loaded down with bags, another porter told him, “You look like a walking satchel tree.” It was then, Satchel later recalled, “LeRoy Paige became no more and Satchel Paige took over.”
Satchel rarely attended school. Instead, he skipped class to play baseball and fish in Mobile Bay. Satchel soon developed a reputation as the best school-age pitcher in Mobile’s black section, but he could not stay out of trouble.
Alabama Reform School
In 1918 twelve-year-old Satchel was convicted of shoplifting and was sentenced to five years in the Alabama Reform School for Juvenile Negro Lawbreakers. Satchel attended class, worked on the school farm, joined the school choir, and became a member of the drum and bugle corps.
He honed his skills as a baseball player under the direction of Coach Edward Byrd. Coach Byrd showed Satchel how to use his physical skill and strength to become a powerful and proficient right-handed pitcher. Most importantly, Byrd taught Satchel that he could not depend on his physical talent alone—he would also have to outwit his opponents. By studying a batter’s stance, the placement of his feet, and the position of his bat, Satchel could determine the player’s weaknesses at the plate.
Satchel was paroled on December 31, 1923, with “an excellent record.” He later said, “Those five and a half years there did something for me—they made a man out of me. If I’d been left on the streets of Mobile to wander with those kids I’d been running around with, I’d of ended up as a big bum, a crook. You might say I traded five years of freedom to learn how to pitch.”
1935 Pittsburgh Crawfords
After baseball became segregated in 1889, blacks were prohibited from playing in the major leagues. In response, black baseball players formed their own semi-professional and professional baseball leagues that were collectively referred to as the “Negro Leagues.”
Paige returned home and joined the black semi-professional Mobile Tigers. It was then, he said, “I gave up kid’s baseball—baseball just for fun—and started baseball as a career.” At six foot three inches tall, the lanky right-handed pitcher quickly developed a reputation as a formidable opponent.
In 1924, playing for the Tigers, Paige won an estimated thirty games with only one loss. In 1926 he joined the professional Chattanooga Black Lookouts for two successful seasons. Paige then spent the next several years going from team to team in search of a more lucrative paycheck.
Among the Negro League teams he played for between 1927 and 1947 were the Birmingham Black Barons, Baltimore Black Sox, Cleveland Cubs, Pittsburgh Crawfords, Kansas City Monarchs, New York Black Yankees, and Memphis Red Sox.
Al Lopez Field
When not playing with a team, Paige and other black players formed freelance barnstorming teams that toured the country playing other teams in exhibition games to make extra money. Paige spent long hours on the road and rarely saw his wife when barnstorming across the country. Life on the road was not easy for black players and they regularly endured racist taunts from spectators. Due to segregation, they were not allowed to stay at hotels where whites lodged or dine at restaurants used by whites. Paige refused to play in towns where he could not get a hotel room or a meal.
Despite the prevailing racism of the era, Paige attracted white spectators with his dazzling pitching skills. He could throw a variety of pitches with accuracy and speed that few could match. He gave his pitches colorful names such as “jump ball, bee ball, screw ball, woobly ball, whipsy-dipsy-do, a hurry-up ball, a nothin’ ball, and a bat dodger.”
Paige used his arsenal of different pitches to confuse batters. He might sidearm the ball across the plate, follow with a fastball, and then throw his signature “hesitation pitch” in which he would hesitate during his wind-up, often messing up the batter’s timing.
Kansas City Monarchs
In 1938, while playing baseball in Mexico, Paige injured his pitching arm. At the age of thirty-two, he feared his career was over. J.L. Wilkinson, owner of the Kansas City Monarchs, signed Paige to play first base for his second-string team, the Kansas City Travelers. Although many believed his days on the pitcher’s mound were finished, Paige miraculously recovered the following year, and joined the Kansas City Monarchs.
Family Life
On October 26, 1934, Paige married Janet Howard. He married Lucy “Luz” Maria Figueroa in 1940 while playing ball in Puerto Rico. Because he had not divorced his first wife, Paige’s marriage to Figueroa was not legal. He divorced his first wife in 1943. Paige later married Lahoma Brown and together the couple had seven children.
In 1947, Jackie Robinson became the first African American to play major league baseball in the twentieth century. In his autobiography, Paige declared, “I’d been the guy who’d started all that big talk about letting us in the big time. I’d been the one who’d opened up the major league parks to colored teams. I’d been the one who the white boys wanted to barnstorm against…It still was me that ought to have been first.” Paige, at age forty-one, was viewed by many to be too old to play in the major leagues.
One year after Jackie Robinson joined the Brooklyn Dodgers, Paige signed with the Cleveland Indians. At forty-two years old, he was the oldest rookie to play in the major leagues. Paige’s pitching helped the Cleveland Indians beat the Boston Braves to win the 1948 World Series. He was the first African American athlete to play in a World Series.
Paige stayed with the Indians for one more season and then played for the St. Louis Browns for three years. He played his final season in the major leagues in 1965 with the Kansas City Athletics. In order to qualify for his Major League Baseball pension, Paige briefly joined the Atlanta Braves in 1968 as a pitching coach.
In 1971 Paige became the first player from the Negro Leagues elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York.
Death & Legacy
LeRoy “Satchel” Paige died of a heart attack on June 8, 1982, in Kansas City, Missouri. He is buried in Forest Hill Memorial Park Cemetery in Kansas City, Missouri.
Because much of his forty-three year career was spent in the Negro Leagues where record keeping was spotty, it is difficult to document Satchel Paige’s lifetime career statistics. It is clear, however, that Paige won the respect of his peers—both white and black—during his time in baseball. Today he is widely recognized as one of the greatest pitchers in baseball history.
Legendary Boston Red Sox slugger Ted Williams claimed, “Paige was the greatest pitcher in baseball.” Famed New York Yankee Joe DiMaggio said Satchel Paige was the “best and fastest pitcher I’ve ever faced.” Celebrated St. Louis Cardinal pitcher Dizzy Dean remarked, “He’s a better pitcher than I ever hope to be.” Homestead Grays first baseman and Hall of Famer Buck Leonard declared, “He threw fire.”
Paige’s showmanship, athleticism, and personality attracted both white and black audiences. He proved that black athletes could compete with and beat their white counterparts, helping pave the way for fellow African Americans to join Major League Baseball.
Text and research by Kimberly Harper
References and Resources
For more information about Satchel Paige's life and career, see the following resources:
Society Resources
The following is a selected list of books, articles, and manuscripts about Satchel Paige in the research centers of The State Historical Society of Missouri. The Society’s call numbers follow the citations in brackets. All links will open in a new tab.
Articles from the Newspaper Collection
“A Giant is Returned to Earth.” Kansas City Star. June 13, 1982. pp. A1, A18.
“The Life and Times of Satchel Paige.” Kansas City Times. June 9, 1982. pp. D1-2.
“We Lost Satchel.” Kansas City Star. June 9, 1982. pp. A1, A12.
Books and Articles
Bruce, Janet. The Kansas City Monarchs: Champions of Black Baseball. Lawrence: University of Kansas Press, 1985. [REF H128.131 B83]
Christensen, Lawrence O., William E. Foley, Gary R. Kremer, and Kenneth H. Winn, eds. Dictionary of Missouri Biography. Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 1999. pp. 591-593. [REF F508 D561]
Heapy, Leslie A., ed. Satchel Paige and Company: Essays on the Kansas City Monarchs, Their Greatest Star, and the Negro Leagues. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company, 2007. [REF F508.1 P152he]
Holway, John B. Josh and Satch: The Life and Times of Josh Gibson and Satchel Paige. New York: Carroll & Graf Publishers, 1992.[REF F508.1 P152ho 1992]
Paige, Satchel. Maybe I’ll Pitch Forever. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1993. [REF F508.1 P 152 1993]
Shirley, David. Satchel Paige. New York: Chelsea House, 1993. [REF F508.1 P152sh]
Spivey, Donald. “If You Were Only White”: The Life of Leroy “Satchel” Paige. Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 2012. [REF F508.1 P152sp]
Tye, Larry. Satchel: The Life and Times of an American Legend. New York: Random House, 2009. [REF F508.1 P152t]
Manuscript Collection
Kansas City Monarchs Oral History Collection, 1978-1981 (KC0047)
The Kansas City Monarchs baseball team was a charter member of the Negro National League which was established in 1920. The Monarchs were active from 1920 until the integration of baseball in the 1950’s. In 1978 Janet Bruce and Catherine T. Rocha applied for and received a grant from the Friends of the Library at the University of Missouri-Kansas City to conduct a series of oral history interviews with surviving members of the Kansas City Monarchs.
In addition to the oral history interviews on cassette tapes, the collection includes correspondence and reports related to grants which Janet Bruce and Catherine T. Rocha held while gathering their eighteen interviews with persons who played with or were associated with the Kansas City Monarchs."
FYI COL Mikel J. Burroughs LTC (Join to see) Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D. Maj William W. 'Bill' Price PO3 Phyllis Maynard SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL MSG Felipe De Leon Brown MSgt Robert "Rock" Aldi SMSgt Lawrence McCarter GySgt Thomas Vick SSG Stephen Rogerson SSG Robert Mark Odom SPC Margaret Higgins SPC Matthew Lamb SPC Nancy Greene SGT Denny Espinosa SPC Michael Duricko, Ph.D PO2 (Join to see)
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LTC Stephen F.
Baseball's OLDEST PLAYER EVER! (The Satchel Paige Story)
In this video we discuss the oldest player in MLB history Satchel Paige, from the his time in Negro Leagues to the MLB. Download Amino and join me in the Gra...
Baseball's OLDEST PLAYER EVER! (The Satchel Paige Story)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r374MnoX0ZQ
Images:
1. HOF Weekend 1974 Hank Aaron w Leroy Satchel Paige and Garr
2. September 25th 1965: Forty years after making his professional pitching debut in the Negro Leagues, a 59-year-old Satchel Paige is served coffee in a rocking chair in the Athletics bullpen between innings of his scoreless 3-inning outing against the Red Sox.
3. 1953 Topps card #220 Leroy Robert Satchell Paige St Louis Browns
FYI SPC Nancy GreeneSSG Franklin BriantSgt Kelli Mays CW5 Jack CardwellTSgt George Rodriguez SPC Matthew Lamb SSG (Join to see) PO2 (Join to see)MSG (Join to see)SGT Gregory Lawritson SGT John " Mac " McConnell PO1 William "Chip" Nagel CWO3 Dennis M. SFC William Farrell SSG Donald H "Don" BatesSP5 Jeannie CarleSPC Chris Bayner-CwikCapt Rich BuckleyCW4 G.L. SmithSPC Russ Bolton
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r374MnoX0ZQ
Images:
1. HOF Weekend 1974 Hank Aaron w Leroy Satchel Paige and Garr
2. September 25th 1965: Forty years after making his professional pitching debut in the Negro Leagues, a 59-year-old Satchel Paige is served coffee in a rocking chair in the Athletics bullpen between innings of his scoreless 3-inning outing against the Red Sox.
3. 1953 Topps card #220 Leroy Robert Satchell Paige St Louis Browns
FYI SPC Nancy GreeneSSG Franklin BriantSgt Kelli Mays CW5 Jack CardwellTSgt George Rodriguez SPC Matthew Lamb SSG (Join to see) PO2 (Join to see)MSG (Join to see)SGT Gregory Lawritson SGT John " Mac " McConnell PO1 William "Chip" Nagel CWO3 Dennis M. SFC William Farrell SSG Donald H "Don" BatesSP5 Jeannie CarleSPC Chris Bayner-CwikCapt Rich BuckleyCW4 G.L. SmithSPC Russ Bolton
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Major League Baseball continued to discriminate against him by acting as though his Negro League accomplishment didn't count.
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SMSgt Lawrence McCarter
Baseball itself lost by that discrimination, the Negro league was all major League caliber players. Some unofficial games major league player had unsanctioned games vs the Negro league player the Negro League players were not on on the same level in skill but actually won a number of those games. His entire record of professional Baseball should have been reflected. He is of course a member of the Baseball Hall of fame in Cooperstown which is a well deserved and earned honor !
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