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Baseball Under Siege: The Yankees, the Cardinals, and a Doctor's Battle to Integrate Spring Training
Barnes and Noble
Baseball Under Siege: The Yankees, the Cardinals, and a Doctor's Battle to Integrate Spring Training
Current price: $6.95
Barnes and Noble
Baseball Under Siege: The Yankees, the Cardinals, and a Doctor's Battle to Integrate Spring Training
Current price: $6.95
Size: OS
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In 1961, when the
New York Yankees
and the
St. Louis Cardinals
arrived in St. Petersburg, Florida, for spring training, neither team had any idea that a feisty physician was about to turn its world upside down. To Major League Baseball, Dr. Ralph Wimbish was just a black homeowner able to house the team's African American ball players, who were segregated from their white teammates-except on the diamond-during spring training. The laws in Florida, like the rest of the South, were dictated by Jim Crow. Major League Baseball had no plans to upend it. Dr. Wimbish had other ideas. Drawing on personal interviews, newspaper accounts, archival documents, and memoirs, Adam Henig has written a story that
New York Post
sports columnist Mike Vacarro and
Tampa Bay Times'
Jon Wilson called
"a must read!"
A book for baseball enthusiasts that goes beyond the game,
Baseball Under Siege
(formerly titled
Under One Roof
) is an unforgettable tale of a little-known civil rights activist who risked it all to achieve racial justice in his city, in his state, and in America's favorite pastime.
New York Yankees
and the
St. Louis Cardinals
arrived in St. Petersburg, Florida, for spring training, neither team had any idea that a feisty physician was about to turn its world upside down. To Major League Baseball, Dr. Ralph Wimbish was just a black homeowner able to house the team's African American ball players, who were segregated from their white teammates-except on the diamond-during spring training. The laws in Florida, like the rest of the South, were dictated by Jim Crow. Major League Baseball had no plans to upend it. Dr. Wimbish had other ideas. Drawing on personal interviews, newspaper accounts, archival documents, and memoirs, Adam Henig has written a story that
New York Post
sports columnist Mike Vacarro and
Tampa Bay Times'
Jon Wilson called
"a must read!"
A book for baseball enthusiasts that goes beyond the game,
Baseball Under Siege
(formerly titled
Under One Roof
) is an unforgettable tale of a little-known civil rights activist who risked it all to achieve racial justice in his city, in his state, and in America's favorite pastime.