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You know, when
you’re the first
at anything,
there’s going to
be problems.
And I guess it
really doesn’t
matter what it
is that you’re
first at. Some
people will hate
you. Others
will love you.
And there will
be that big
bunch of folks
who just kind of
sit back and
watch carefully
to see what you
are all about.
I
guess that was
probably true
with Charles
Lindbergh. He
was hailed as
the first person
the fly the
Atlantic Ocean
nonstop. But
news reports
tell us that a
bunch of people
thought it was
wrong to do it.
And another
bunch just
didn’t believe
it at all.
That
also happened
when Neil
Armstrong first
stepped foot on
the moon. The
day he took off,
there were
people at Cape
Canaveral
protesting the
launch. And
still today,
there are people
who believe that
the entire space
program is a
government plot,
and we never
have flown into
space.
Columbus faced
it when he found
the new world.
People scoffed
at Newton and
laughed at
Darwin. It’s
always a tough
road to be
first. Like it
was for the
first player in
the major
leagues that was
different.
You
know, he wasn’t
a white player.
No, he was
black. Things
were a little
different back
then as I’m sure
you know. He
couldn’t always
stay in the same
hotels or eat in
the same
restaurants with
the other
players on the
team. As a
matter of fact
he seldom
could. He often
had to ride in a
separate part of
the train when
they traveled.
And
according to
him, he actually
ran into more of
that kind of
discrimination
in the North,
more than he did
in the South.
He wasn’t sure
why. He thought
that people in
the North would
be more
understanding
and liberal
about those
attitudes.
After all,
that’s why they
fought the Civil
War. The North
won and freed
the slaves. Or
so he thought.
But no.
According to Bud
the
discrimination
was far worse in
the North than
when he played
in the South.
Who’s Bud, you
ask? Oh, that
would be Bud
Fowler, the
first black ball
player to ever
play in the
major leagues.
Confused? I
don’t blame you
the way our news
media writes
history. But,
It’s a Little
Known Fact
that Bud Fowler
was the first
black player to
ever play on an
American League
team out of
Chicago, and he
did that almost
40 years before
Jackie Robinson
first stepped
foot on a ball
diamond. But,
in order to do
play, Bud had to
pass himself off
as an Indian.
It’s a shame we
know better now,
though, and he
still doesn’t
get the credit. |