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The Error Collector's Blog

24 Feb 2022

The Jackie Robinson and Negro Leagues Commemorative Coins

Young Numismatists Exchange | The Error Collector

In March 1946, Jackie Robinson was traveling from California to Florida, hoping to become the first African American baseball player to break segregation laws in Florida. That spring, Branch Rickey, the general manager of the Brooklyn Dodgers, decided he was going to lift the color bar. The color bar was a system of written and unwritten rules, which kept baseball players separated by race. He decided to let Jackie Robinson become the first person to play integrated baseball in Florida. On March 17, 1946, Jackie Robinson stepped onto City Island Ballpark in Daytona, in an exhibition game against the Dodgers. It was the first time a black player played for a minor league team against a major league team since the color bar was implemented in baseball in the 1880’s. This made Daytona Beach the very first city in Florida to allow integrated baseball when segregation laws were enforced. It was ahistorical moment that paved the way for other baseball teams in Florida to allow integrated baseball. It served as a spark for the civil rights movement. Martin Luther King Jr. said, “Jackie Robinson made my success possible, without him, I would never have been able to do what I did.”

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17 Feb 2022

James Earle Fraser

Young Numismatists Exchange | The Error Collector

James Earle Fraser was born in Winona, Minnesota on November 4, 1876. He was the son of Thomas and Cora Fraser. Thomas Fraser was a railroad engineer. When James Earle Fraser was 1 year old, he moved with his family to Dakota territory where he saw Indians and frontiersmen which would later appear in his carvings. Sioux children taught him how to carve arrowheads. He began to carve sculptures in a quarry near where he lived. When he was 15, he began to study at the Art Institute of Chicago. Two years later James completed his first version of “End of the Trail”. It was his most famous statue. His prize-winning exhibit in the American Art Association Exhibition in Paris in 1898 brought him to the attention of the famous American sculptor, Augustus Saint-Gaudens, with whom he worked for two years. In 1907 to 1911 he taught at art students league in New York city.

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