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which had been a source of pride and a cultural rallying place in black commu- nities

Jac kie r o binson li v ed those lines ten years later, coming to fifa 15 coins bat with two metaphorical strikes – call them racial prejudice and the weight of tradition – against him. History has testified to his character and endurance in securing a place in Major League baseball. Yet as Robinson and the black players who followed him into white baseball succeeded, black fans were abandoning the Negro Leagues, which had been a source of pride and a cultural rallying place in black commu- nities. During their struggle to survive in the early 1950s, the Leagues resorted to many types of marketing strategies. Which is how, six years after Robinson’s history-making appearance, a skinny second baseman broke the gender line in the Negro Leagues. In 1953, the Indianapolis Clowns signed second baseman Toni – that’s Toni with an I – Stone for $12,000. (In 1947, Jackie Robinson’s first contract in Brooklyn was $5,000, the minimum Major League salary).1 And when the Kansas City Monarchs signed Stone away for the 1954 season, the Clowns signed two more women: Connie Morgan, who replaced Stone at second base, and a utility fielder/right-handed pitcher of Bobby Shantzian stature (5’4”, 120 pounds) named Mamie “Peanut” Johnson. Of this sorority of three, only Johnson survives.

I met Johnson during Labor Day weekend 1999 at a women’s amateur baseball tournament in Bethesda, Maryland, where she had been invited to coach first base, and I followed up with a lengthier interview at the Ne- gro Leagues Gift Shop in Mitchellville, Maryland, where she then worked. The Biographical Encyclopedia of the Negro Leagues reports that Johnson played one year with the Clowns, compiling a 10–1 record. Other sources, however, give her a three-year career, with a record of 11–3 in 1953 and 12–4 in 1955. Eric Enders, of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum, points out that Negro Leagues records for these years are incomplete and that it’s quite possible she did play three years. Johnson herself claims three years. At any rate, some fans view Mamie “Peanut” Johnson’s career as an interesting footnote to the waning years of the Negro Leagues. Yet the stories of such players who fought for a place on the game’s margins add richness and texture to baseball history and insights into the culture of the times. To place Johnson’s career in context, some background on black women’s baseball is helpful.

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