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Introduction This presentation will discuss a few issues and attitudes of Americans surrounding baseball during World War II Thousands of American enlisted into the military in the days after the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor in Hawaii
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Instructions When you are finished with each line, just click the mouse to advance to the next line or slide.
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All-American Girls Professional
Ted Williams Ted Williams All-American Girls Professional Baseball The Green Light Letter Replacement Players Baseball and 9/11/01
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In 1942 Williams enlisted in the Navy as a Pilot
Ted Williams stopped his baseball career to fight for the USA in World War II He was described as the best fighter pilot in the Navy "He mastered intricate problems in fifteen minutes which took the average cadet an hour and half of the other cadets there were college grads.“ – teammate and fellow Cadet Johnny Pesky
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Ted Williams was twice voted as the Most Valuable Player in the American League
Williams won Baseball’s Triple Crown (home runs, batting average, and runs batted in) in 1942 and 1947 after returning from the war Stan Musial, Joe DiMaggio, Warren Spahn, Yogi Berra, Pee Wee Reese, Phil Rizzutto, Bob Feller and Hank Greenberg were some All-Stars among many other players who enlisted in the Armed Forces and fight in the war.
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Quiz What are the three categories for baseball’s triple crown?
Triple Crown of Baseball Home Runs, Runs Batted In (RBI), Batting Average
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Signing up for military service
What does the word “enlisted” mean? Enlisted: Signing up for military service
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Opinion Question Why do you think Ted Williams and so many other baseball players chose to stop their baseball careers to enlist in the war? Quote: “We were losing the war,” said Hall of Fame pitcher, Bob Feller. “We needed heroes.” Feller enlisted the day after the attack on Pearl Harbor.
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All-American Girls Professional Baseball League
Ted Williams All-American Girls Professional Baseball The Green Light Letter Replacement Players Baseball and 9/11/01
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The All-American Girls Professional Baseball League started in 1943 when most of the men were fighting in the war William Wrigley founded the AAGPBL because it was assumed that Major League Baseball would be suspended during the war. Despite the fact that the MLB continued during the war, the AAGPBL gained in popularity every year until the war ended. The league folded in 1954.
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The Rockford Peaches were the most successful AAGPBL League started in 1943 when most of the men were fighting in the war, winning championships in 1945, 1948, 1949, 1950 The players wore dresses and high socks, which did not protect their legs when sliding into bases The players were instructed “to look like ladies and play like men.”
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Quiz True of False: The All-American Girls Professional Baseball League when World War II ended. False
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Filler question , filler questions..?
World War II
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The Green Light Letter Ted Williams Women’s Professional Baseball
Replacement Players
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On January 14, 1942, Major League Baseball Commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis wrote a letter to President Franklin D. Roosevelt regarding the continuation of baseball during the war, called the Green Light Letter.
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President Roosevelt responds "I honestly feel that it would be best for the country to keep baseball going. There will be fewer people unemployed and everybody will work longer hours and harder than ever before. And that means that they ought to have a chance for recreation and for taking their minds off their work even more than before."
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Attending baseball games was a community-building event
Attending baseball games was a community-building event. Fans turned out in large numbers during the war Many baseball games featured fund-raising events which went towards supporting the war.
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Quiz Question for consideration: What reasons would you have kept baseball going in a time of world war?
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Replacement Players and the Negro League
Ted Williams Women’s Professional Baseball The Green Light Letter Replacement Players and the Negro League
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All told, over 500 major league and more than 2,000 minor league baseball players went into the armed forces. Rather than integrate the Negro Leagues in with Major League Baseball, owners decided to sign replacement white players who were not able to fight nor good enough to play at the Major League level.
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Pete Gray lost his right arm in an accident, but was an outfielder for the St. Louis Browns Gray bat and fielded one-handed. Despite the fact that many skilled African-American baseball players were playing in the Negro League, players like Gray were used in the Major Leagues.
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Questions for consideration
Why do you think that the men who owned Major League teams didn’t get players from the Negro Leagues?
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Sources American Veterans Center
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End Slide
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