The Chicago American Giants - Butler County Schools Chicago...American Giants The Chicago by Ellen...

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Scott Foresman Reading Street 5.1.4 ISBN 0-328-13511-9 ì<(sk$m)=bdfbba< +^-Ä-U-Ä-U Genre Comprehension Skills and Strategy Text Features Expository nonfiction • Sequence of Events • Generalize • Ask Questions • Captions • Map • Time Line • Glossary Suggested levels for Guided Reading, DRA, Lexile, ® and Reading Recovery are provided in the Pearson Scott Foresman Leveling Guide. American Giants The Chicago by Ellen B. Cutler

Transcript of The Chicago American Giants - Butler County Schools Chicago...American Giants The Chicago by Ellen...

  • American Giants The Chicago

    by Ellen B. Cutler

    Scott Foresman Reading Street 5.1.4

    ISBN 0-328-13511-9

  • 1. Using a graphic organizer like the one below, place the following sequence of events in the correct order: Rube Foster and others form the Negro National League; Professional African American teams begin forming; Jackie Robinson plays his first game as a Brooklyn Dodger; The Baseball Hall of Fame is established; The Eastern Colored League is formed.

    2. Pretend that you are on a field trip to the Baseball Hall of Fame. What questions about the Negro leagues would you have for the people who run the museum?

    3. Three of this books vocabulary words are compound words, or words made up of two smaller words. Which ones are they? Use them in sentences.

    4. How did the time line on pages 18 and 19 help you to understand both the history of baseball and the history of African Americans playing the sport?

    Reader Response

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    American Giants The Chicago

    by Ellen B. Cutler

    Editorial Offices: Glenview, Illinois Parsippany, New Jersey New York, New YorkSales Offices: Needham, Massachusetts Duluth, Georgia Glenview, Illinois

    Coppell, Texas Ontario, California Mesa, Arizona

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  • Every effort has been made to secure permission and provide appropriate credit for photographic material. The publisher deeply regrets any omission and pledges to correct errors called to its attention in subsequent editions.

    Unless otherwise acknowledged, all photographs are the property of Scott Foresman, a division of Pearson Education.

    Photo locators denoted as follows: Top (T), Center (C), Bottom (B), Left (L), Right (R), Background (Bkgd)

    Opener: Getty Images; 1 National Baseball Hall of Fame; 3 Corbis; 4 Corbis; 5 Corbis; 6 National Baseball Hall of Fame; 7 National Baseball Hall of Fame; 8 National Baseball Hall of Fame; 9 National Baseball Hall of Fame; 10 National Baseball Hall of Fame; 11 (L) National Baseball Hall of Fame, (R) National Baseball Hall of Fame; 13 (Bkgd) National Baseball Hall of Fame, (C) Corbis; 14 Getty Images; 15 Corbis; 16 Corbis; 17 Associated Press, Getty Images; 18 National Baseball Hall of Fame

    ISBN: 0-328-13511-9

    Copyright Pearson Education, Inc.

    All Rights Reserved. Printed in the United States of America. This publication is protected by Copyright, and permission should be obtained from the publisher prior to any prohibited reproduction, storage in a retrieval system, or transmission in any form by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or likewise. For information regarding permission(s), write to: Permissions Department, Scott Foresman, 1900 East Lake Avenue, Glenview, Illinois 60025.

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    3

    Batter up!A player from the Chicago American Giants

    stepped to the plate. He was ready to take a pitch. His hands were wrapped around the narrow neck of the bat. His feet were planted apart and firm on the ground. He fixed his eyes on the pitcher. Behind him, the catcher gave the sign for a fastball.

    The crowd settled into the rickety stands made from old boards. A few voices could be heard over the creaking of seats. They were mocking the visitors and yelling words of praise to their hometown team.

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  • 4

    Strike em out! they called to the pitcher. That batter cant hit the broad side of a barn!

    The Giants talked quietly among themselves. They paid no attention to the words coming from the stands. They werent worried. The man they called Home Run was at bat.

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    5

    The pitcher began his windup. His arms came in. His knee rose up. The ball whipped toward home plate in a straight line.

    WHACK!The batter drove the fastball high into the sky. It

    fell to the ground beyond the bases. It rolled into the deep grass at the edge of the outfield.

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  • 6

    Before 1947 barnstorming was a way of life for most African American players. Barnstorming is traveling from one small town to another. It could be a hard life. Good barnstorming teams attracted large crowds however. Teams such as the Indianapolis ABCs, New Yorks Lincoln Giants, and the Hildale Daisies from Darby, Pennsylvania, were well-known barnstormers. Their opponents included college teams, amateurs, and other barnstormers.

    Rube Foster and the Chicago American Giants

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    The first season for the Chicago American Giants started in 1911.

    The Giants manager was Andrew Rube Foster. He had played baseball for more than twenty years. He was a pitcher famous for his screwball. It was a tricky pitch that was hard for batters to hit. At seventeen Foster had joined a Texas team called the Waco Yellow Jackets.

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  • 8

    Rube Foster knew a lot about the game. He had a good head for business. Most of all, he had confidence in the future of African American baseball. Foster and a group of team owners and managers created the Negro National League (NNL) in 1920. The owners and managers decided that Rube Foster would be the leagues first president. This father of Negro baseball was named to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1981.

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    The Chicago American Giants became one of the best teams in the NNL. They barnstormed America in a private railroad car. They were stars in the African American community. African American newspapers were filled with stories about them. Their home field was a five-thousand-seat park on Chicagos south side.

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  • 10

    Foster had put together a great team for the 1911 season. It was hard to spot a weakness at any of the positions. A few of the team members were among the best players in baseball.

    Grant Home Run Johnson had played under Foster before. He played in the infield when Foster managed the Philadelphia Giants. He worked at both shortstop and second base.

    Home Run was a hitter who could blast the ball over the fence. This is how he got his nickname. He was well liked by the other players. He had been a baseball star for nearly thirty years when he finally retired.

    Home Run Johnson

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    11

    Willie Foster was Rube Fosters half-brother. He was also a star pitcher for the Chicago American Giants for more than a decade. Foster helped the Giants win the Colored World Series in 1926 and 1927. He is considered by many to have been the best left-handed pitcher to ever play in the Negro leagues.

    After retiring, Willie Foster became a coach at Alcorn State College. He was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1996.

    Willie Foster

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  • 12

    One of the greatest players to ever take the field for the Chicago American Giants was John Henry Pop Lloyd. In his later years, Lloyd became a team manager. He was able to give young players a feeling of confidence.

    Pop Lloyd started out as a catcher. Later he played shortstop and then first base. Lloyd was tall, thin, and fast. He ran so smoothly that people were tricked. They thought he was was not running very fast, but he was! Pop Lloyd played baseball for at least twelve different teams. He was asked why he changed teams so often. He said, Where the money was, thats where I played.

    Lloyd was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1977. Some people have called him the greatest baseball player of all time.

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    Pop Lloyd

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  • 14

    Other African American baseball leagues were founded throughout the 1920s and 1930s. The leading teams from different African American leagues met for World Series championships. During the 1930s there were East-West All-Star Games as well. In the winter months many of the players traveled south to play baseball. They went to Mexico, Cuba, and the Dominican Republic.

    Cuba

    Dominican RepublicMexico

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    15

    Year after year, the Chicago American Giants were one of the best teams of the Negro leagues. They won titles in 1920, 1921, and 1922. In 1926 and 1927 they won the Colored World Series.

    After the end of the NNL in 1931, the Chicago American Giants played for the Negro Southern League. Then they played for the Negro American League. Over the years the Giants changed their name. They remained one of the greatest teams in the Negro leagues. In 1952 the American Giants, as they were called at that time, played their last game.

    Center fielder Art Pennington, left fielder Herman Andrews, and third baseman Alex Radcliffe of the Chicago American Giants.

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  • 16

    The game of baseball provides a unique look into American culture. The integration of baseball was a symbol for the changes in American society.

    From 1887 until 1947, African Americans and whites played baseball on separate teams and in separate leagues. Then Jackie Robinson was brought in from the Kansas City Monarchs of the Negro American League to play for the Brooklyn Dodgers. Other major league teams were later integrated.

    The Negro National League that Rube Foster helped found in 1920 closed its doors in 1931. The Negro American League, begun in 1937, played its final games in 1960.

    The Brooklyn Dodgers signing of Jackie Robinson (shown with Bob Morgan) began the integration of major league baseball.

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    Nine former players from the Negro leagues and early African American teams were elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame during the 1970s. This was done in order to recognize these great men in baseball. Since then, many other African Americans have been elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame.

    Cool Papa Bell (left) and Josh Gibson (right), were among the first Negro league players inducted to the Baseball Hall of Fame.

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  • 18

    1820s and 1830s: A game similar to baseball develops in America, gaining widespread popularity.

    1845: The Knickerbocker Club of New York publishes the first set of rules for the game of baseball.

    1871: The first professional league, the National Association of Professional Baseball Players, is formed.

    1880s: Professional African American teams begin forming.

    1907: Pitcher Andrew Rube Foster begins a career as a player/manager with the Leland Giants.

    1911: Rube Foster forms the Chicago American Giants with partner John Schorling.

    1924: The NNL and ECL play their first World Series.

    1936: The Baseball Hall of Fame is established.

    1820

    1870

    1900

    1924

    African Americans and Baseball in America

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    19

    1862: The Union Grounds, the first fully enclosed baseball park, is built in Brooklyn, New York.

    1869: The first professional team, the Cincinnati Red Stockings, is formed.

    1885: New Yorks Cuban Giants become the first African American baseball players to receive salaries.

    1887: The International League bans teams with white players from signing contracts with African American players.

    1920: Rube Foster and others form the Negro National League (NNL).

    1923: The Eastern Colored League (ECL) is founded.

    1947: Jackie Robinson plays his first game as a Brooklyn Dodger on April 15.

    1960: The Negro American League, the last of the Negro leagues, ends.

    1870

    1900

    1924

    1960

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  • 20

    Glossaryconfidence n. firm belief in yourself.

    fastball n. pitch thrown at a high speed.

    mocking v. laughing at; making fun of.

    outfield n. the part of a baseball field beyond the diamond or infield.

    unique adj. having no like or equal; being the only one of its kind.

    weakness n. a weak point; slight fault.

    windup n. a swinging movement of the arms while twisting the body just before pitching the ball.

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    1. Using a graphic organizer like the one below, place the following sequence of events in the correct order: Rube Foster and others form the Negro National League; Professional African American teams begin forming; Jackie Robinson plays his first game as a Brooklyn Dodger; The Baseball Hall of Fame is established; The Eastern Colored League is formed.

    2. Pretend that you are on a field trip to the Baseball Hall of Fame. What questions about the Negro leagues would you have for the people who run the museum?

    3. Three of this books vocabulary words are compound words, or words made up of two smaller words. Which ones are they? Use them in sentences.

    4. How did the time line on pages 18 and 19 help you to understand both the history of baseball and the history of African Americans playing the sport?

    Reader Response

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