NEGRO BASEBALL LEAGUE - PRINTED ART SIGNED CO-SIGNED BY: BUCK (JOHN) O'NEIL, LESTER LOCKETT, JOE BARNES, TED "DOUBLE DUTY" RADCLIFFE, JOSH JOHNSON, CASEY JONES, BOBBY ROBINSON, R. MICHAEL ARMSTRONG - HFSID 275242
Sale Price $450.00
Reg. $500.00
NEGRO LEAGUE LEGENDS
Seven great players from the era of segregated baseball sign a numbered
19½x15½ print.
Printed Art signed: "Lester Lockett", "Joe Barnes",
"Double Duty [Ted Radcliffe]", "Buck O'Neill", "Casey
Jones", "Bobby Robinson" and "Josh Johnson".
B/w with brown hue, 19½x15½. Also signed by the artist: "R. Michael
Armstrong". Limited edition numbered in pencil "AP 220 of 375", and
dated "7/95". Barred from self-styled Major League Baseball by an
unwritten color rule, African-American athletes organized their own professional
leagues, beginning with the Negro National League in 1920. Negro league teams,
which held their own All-Star games and World Series, fared well in exhibition
games against their white counterparts. Negro League ball declined after Jackie
Robinson broke the color barrier in 1947, the last Negro American League game
being played in 1960. LESTER LOCKETT a slugging third baseman and
outfielder, played from 1937-1955, much of the time for the Chicago American
Giants. He played in four East-West All-Star Games and in two World Series (for
the Birmingham Black Barons). JOE BARNES played for the Memphis Red Sox
and the Kansas City Monarchs, interrupting his baseball career for military
service in World War II. TED "DOUBLE DUTY" RADCLIFFE earned his nickname
when he played as catcher and a pitcher in two consecutive games in the 1932
Negro League World Series. BUCK O'NEIL, a talented first baseman who led
the Negro National League in hitting in 1946, managed the Kansas City Monarchs
to five pennants and two championships between 1948 and 1955. The first black
coach hired in the Major Leagues (by the Cubs in 1962), he had a prominent role
as a spokesman in Ken Burns' documentary history of baseball. He was awarded the
Presidential Medal of Freedom posthumously in 2006. CLINTON "CASEY" JONES,
who caught for the Memphis Red Sox and Cincinnati Crescents (1940-1955) was
the Negro American League MVP in 1950 and a 2-time All-Star.Catcher
JOSH JOHNSON, nicknamed "Brute," shown in the uniform of the Homestead
Grays, starred for four Negro League teams in the 1930s and 1940s. BOBBY
ROBINSON, active 1925-1942, was known as "the human vacuum cleaner" for his
legendary fielding skills. In addition to O'Neil, Radcliffe, Jones and Robinson
have passed away since they signed this artwork. Lockett suffers from
Alzheimer's. Groups of Negro League veterans are becoming increasingly
rare. Fine condition.
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