Jackie Robinson: Breaking the Color Line in Baseball

From the Series Crabtree Groundbreaker Biographies
  • Interest Level: Grade 5 - Grade 9
  • Reading Level: Grade 6

At a time when much of the United States was still racially segregated, Jackie Robinson smashed the color barrier to become the first African-American player in Major League Baseball. Born in 1919 to a family of sharecroppers, Robinson excelled in sports throughout his school years. After serving briefly in the army during WWII, he briefly played ball in the Negro Leagues. At about the same time, a handful of all-white Major League teams paid lip service to trying out black players. But it was when Robinson played his first game for the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947 that he became a part of what would be called "The Noble Experiment." Outspoken in the past when it came to racial injustice, Robinson endured racist jeers from fans and players, and even death threats, with dignity and composure. His historic feat of crossing baseball's "color line" became a symbol in the American civil rights movement in the decades that followed.

Format Your Price Add
978-0-7787-1244-2
$12.95
978-1-4271-1571-3
$31.00
Interest Level Grade 5 - Grade 9
Reading Level Grade 6
Age Range 10 - 14
Dewey 796.35
Lexile 1140L
ATOS Reading Level 7.9
Guided Reading Level W
Subjects Biographies, Black History, History
Genres Nonfiction
Publisher Crabtree Publishing
Imprint Crabtree Classics
Copyright 2014
Number of Pages 112
Dimensions 7.25 x 9.25
Graphics Full-color photographs, Historical photographs
BISACS JNF007100, JNF007050, JNF054010
Rights Included WORLD
Language English

Author: Matt Simmons

Full-color photographs, Historical photographs