Negro Leagues Baseball Museum – Todd Fertig Writes https://toddfertigwrites.com Mon, 18 Feb 2019 04:33:15 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 145297769 Posnanski talk culminates Soul of Baseball community read https://toddfertigwrites.com/posnanski-talk-culminates-soul-of-baseball-community-read/ Mon, 18 Feb 2019 04:33:04 +0000 http://toddfertigwrites.com/?p=1269 Joe Posnanski, author of The Soul of Baseball, spoke to a large crowd at the Topeka & Shawnee County Public Library today, culminating the library’s program encouraging the community to read the book.

Bob Kendrick, President of the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum in Kansas City, accompanied Posnanski to reminisce about Buck O’Neil and the writing of the book. They shared some great stories and a few interesting insights, the most interesting being about the vote that excluded O’Neil from the Baseball Hall of Fame.

Both Posnanski and Kendrick said they believe another vote may come, possibly within the next few years, that would this time enshrine O’Neil into Cooperstown. They didn’t elaborate on where they are getting this information, but they weren’t afraid to say they believe this will happen.

They shared about how they heard of O’Neil’s passing, and about their responsibilities immediately following. They were both called upon to perform official tasks, which required that they hold back their personal emotions for a few hours. They said holding it together was difficult, but that each cried later at the loss of their friend.

I was blessed to meet Mr. Posnanski and to ask him a little about his writing. I plan to try to read some of his other books, including his most recent look at the life and legacy of Harry Houdini. The event also brought together many baseball researchers, writers and enthusiasts from the area, making it a great for me for that reason as well.

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The Soul of Baseball conjures images of the Kansas City Jazz District https://toddfertigwrites.com/the-soul-of-baseball-conjures-images-of-the-kansas-city-jazz-district/ Wed, 09 Jan 2019 16:32:28 +0000 http://toddfertigwrites.com/?p=1216 One of the interesting unexpected benefits of my study of Negro League baseball the past several years has been my introduction to the Jazz District in Kansas City. Located not at the legendary 12th Street and Vine (which doesn’t exist) mentioned in the old song, but rather contained within a couple of blocks around 18th and Vine, are the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum, the American Jazz Museum, the Gem Theater, and several restaurants and music clubs.

I get the feeling there wasn’t a lot going on there when I was growing up during the 1970s and 1980s. But a revitalization effort and the birth of the baseball museum in the 1990s have made it a must-see in the city.

But as great a place as it is to visit as a tourist now, you get the clear indication that it’s nothing compared to what it once was. In The Soul of Baseball, about Kansas Citian Buck O’Neil, Joe Posnanski says so. Much as the historian in me treasures relics from the past, the jazz and baseball fan can’t escape the sense of emptiness that comes from thinking what this area must have been like at its most glorious peak. When you consider how hard it is to interest celebrities in the Midwest in this day and age, it’s nearly unfathomable that Ella Fitzgerald and Count Basie and Joe Louis and Satchel Paige might all be found hanging out at one time in this vibrant hub.

It was just block or so from this epicenter that the Negro National League was formed in 1920, at the Paseo YMCA, which still stands and bears a giant mural of Buck O’Neil on the side.

I’m sure it was sad to O’Neil to see a place so important to blacks in Kansas City undergo such a decline. I know it’s sad to me, but I’m so glad that I can at least try to imagine what it once was. If you haven’t ever been, take a day to go visit the museums, get some food and take in some music. Then try to imagine a throng of people including Duke Ellington, Charlie Parker and Josh Gibson hanging out on the streets and in the clubs.

The Topeka & Shawnee County Public Library is sponsoring a community read of The Soul of Baseball. Pick up a copy and look for events to discuss the book together. If you don’t live in Topeka, write any comments about O’Neil and the book you would like in this blog.

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