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Few reliable records or news reports survive about players in the Negro Leagues. Through dogged detective work, award-winning author and journalist Larry Tye has tracked down the truth about this majestic and enigmatic pitcher, interviewing more than two hundred Negro Leaguers and Major Leaguers, talking to family and friends who had never told their stories before, and retracing Paige’s steps across the continent. Here is the stirring account of the child born to an Alabama washerwoman with twelve young mouths to feed, the boy who earned the nickname “Satchel” from his enterprising work as a railroad porter, the young man who took up baseball on the streets and in reform school, inventing his trademark hesitation pitch while throwing bricks at rival gang members.
Tye shows Paige barnstorming across America and growing into the superstar hurler of the Negro Leagues, a marvel who set records so eye-popping they seemed like misprints, spent as much money as he made, and left tickets for “Mrs. Paige” that were picked up by a different woman at each game. In unprecedented detail, Tye reveals how Paige, hurt and angry when Jackie Robinson beat him to the Majors, emerged at the age of forty-two to help propel the Cleveland Indians to the World Series. He threw his last pitch from a big-league mound at an improbable fifty-nine. (“Age is a case of mind over matter,” he said. “If you don’t mind, it don’t matter.”)
More than a fascinating account of a baseball odyssey, Satchel rewrites our history of the integration of the sport, with Satchel Paige in a starring role. This is a powerful portrait of an American hero who employed a shuffling stereotype to disarm critics and racists, floated comical legends about himself–including about his own age–to deflect inquiry and remain elusive, and in the process methodically built his own myth. “Don’t look back,” he famously said. “Something might be gaining on you.” Separating the truth from the legend, Satchel is a remarkable accomplishment, as large as this larger-than-life man.
Satchel Paige (c.1906-1975) was quite rightfully a legend and quite understandably he liked to keep it that way. By the time the Negro League pitching great outlasted major league's racial ban, he was already 42; certainly no other Rookie of the Year had ever accumulated so much worldly wisdom. As Larry Tye's authoritative biography demonstrates, Paige was no man's fool, even when media tried to present him as a bumbling Stepin Fetchit or compliant Uncle Tom. When Satchel finally retired in the mid-1960s, he had earned a place for himself in baseball and American history. Now in paperback.
He was born Leroy Robert Page on July 7, 1906, in Mobile, Alabama. The "i" materialized in his surname sometime around the time his father died, and the moniker Satchel was, variously, a tribute to his feet or to his prowess in handling suitcases or stealing them -- or something. He was sent to the Alabama Reform School for Juvenile Negro Lawbreakers at age 12; and it was there, under the tutelage of coach Edward Byrd, that he developed his legendary pitching form: Leg cocked to the heavens, right arm trailing miles behind before it looped forward, endlessly, shooting "fire and smoke over the pan to make even the heaviest of the invading clouters look like shuffleboard players." Released from reform school as a 6' 3", 140-pound 17-year-old, he signed on with the semi-pro Mobile Tigers, moving on to the professional Chattanooga White Sox and, later, the New Orleans Black Pelicans. In 1927 he finally made it to the Birmingham Black Barons, his first team in the black majors, whence he jumped on and off for the next four years. Blazing fast from the beginning, he was "wild as a march hen" until he came under the guidance of Mobile manager Alex Herman. After that, as he said, "It got so I could nip frosting off a cake with my fast ball." By 1933, with almost a dozen teams to his hydra-headed record, he had developed a curve ball and entered his heyday, playing for two of the Negro leagues' greatest teams, the Pittsburg Crawfords and, eventually, the Kansas City Monarchs. Jumping contracts and playing all year round, often with white players, he pitched across the nation, from Bismarck, North Dakota to Florida, from California to New England, as well as stints in Venezuela and the Caribbean, including a win-or-be-shot season in the Dominican Republic for dictator Rafael Trujillo's pet team. Despite a frightening period during which he suffered from a desperately sore arm, he could have been the dominant pitcher in all baseball.
But, no. Instead he was attended by the constant refrain: "If only you were white." The trials of black baseball players make up a continuous and melancholy strand in this biography. Enduring routine racial insults in the North and outright segregation and even vigilantism in the South, the players also had to put up with the brutal travelling conditions, shabby uniforms, dilapidated equipment, and uncertain paychecks that were attendant upon working for cash-strapped club owners.
For all that, Satchel Paige, showman, master of the mound, and perhaps the most celebrated black ballplayer in America, made a great deal of money. He spent with abandon, living high and, as it happens, often letting his teammates down at will, showing up late, dogging it on the field. Nonetheless, he, and many others, believed he should be the man to break baseball's color bar; indeed, he had already played a good deal with major-league greats in winter ball. But as much as his age ("Methuselah was my batboy," he liked to say), it was his flashiness and insouciance, his wild life and plurality of wives, and his lack of team spirit that made him precisely the sort of player that teetotaling, tight-fisted Branch Rickey did not want to put in a Brooklyn Dodgers uniform. Jackie Robinson was his man: buttoned-down, buttoned-up, college-educated, and a military veteran. Rickey plucked Robinson from the Monarchs without paying the team's owner a dime. When, in 1948, Paige finally got the nod, it was from Cleveland Indians owner Bill Veeck, a fellow showman and -- in contrast to Rickey -- a square-dealer who paid $15,000 to the Monarchs for their flamboyant, if aging, crowd magnet.
Tye lays out Paige's life and times and long career in workmanlike prose, bringing it down to his death in a heat wave in Kansas City in 1982. He sets the record straight on a number of particulars, not only with respect to Paige's many assertions of derring-do -- tales that grew in altitude over the years -- but also in what the great aphorist actually said and what was manufactured for him, the latter including his well-known rules for staying young. Most important, the book adds depth to an important chapter in baseball history. For decades, the story of black players was streamlined and simplified, defined against the white major leagues and located exclusively in this country's history of racial inequality. It was portrayed chiefly as a long, arduous trek to integrating the game, with Jackie Robinson's first season as a Dodger serving as the natural finale. Meanwhile, the black leagues tended to be characterized as expedient substitutes for the real deal, rather than institutions in their own right. In recent years, however, the story has considerably expanded and deepened with excellent books appearing on blackball, its players and owners and the milieu they fostered. Satchel is a fine contribution to this shelf, further developing what Tye calls the "tragic and epic" history of black baseball, as well as showing how central the integration of the game was to the struggle for black civil rights in the country as a whole. Above all it fleshes out the part played in both, blackball and integration, by the "Million-Dollar String Bean," Satchel Paige. --Katherine A. Powers
Katherine A. Powers writes the literary column "A Reading Life" for the Boston Sunday Globe and lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Excerpted from Satchel by Larry Tye Copyright © 2009 by Larry Tye. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Preface vii
Chronology xv
Author's Note xvii
l Coming Alive 3
2 Blackball 26
3 The Glory Trail 53
4 The Game in Black and White 77
5 South of the Border 108
6 Kansas City, Here I Come 136
7 Master of the Manor 158
8 Baseball's Great Experiment 180
9 An Opening at Last 204
10 Crafting a Legend 11
11 Maybe I'll Pitch Forever 267
Acknowledgments 299
Appendix: Satchel by the Numbers 301
Notes 305
Bibliography 343
Index 379
1. Satchel Paige’s age was a matter of perpetual mystery. Every time he was asked he offered a different answer, depending on who was asking and when. Why was it so difficult to pin down a straightforward matter like his birth date? And why do you think Satchel sometimes tried to make himself forever young, like Peter Pan, and other times as old as Methuselah?
2. Satchel grew up in Mobile in the early 1900s, long after the failure of the Reconstruction era, which promised a New South after the Civil War ended slavery. It was the era of Jim Crow and Uncle Tom. Who were Jim Crow and Uncle Tom? What do they tell us about what life in Mobile was like for a young boy like Satchel Paige?
3. Satchel Paige entered the world as Leroy Robert Paige. How did he come to be called “Satchel?” The roots of his nickname, like everything in his life, have several possible explanations. Why didn’t he clear up the mystery with a simple answer?
4. The Alabama Reform School for Juvenile Negro Law-Breakers is where Satchel discovered just how overpowering a pitcher he could be, and just how much he loved the game of baseball. What landed Satchel in the reformatory? Did it matter that the school was based on the black self-help philosophy of Booker T. Washington and run by the Federation of Colored Women’s Clubs? What lessons did Satchel take away from his five years in reform school?
5. Some people say that Satchel was the greatest pitcher ever to toss a baseball, a claim backed up with statistics like his pitching 2,500 games, winning two thousand of them, and recording fifty no-hitters. Why is it so difficult to separate truth from legend in the daysof the Negro Leagues? What evidence is there that the claims about Satchel were the truth? What evidence that they were legend? Why was there separate Negro Leagues in the first place, and was baseball in America always racially segregated?
6. Satchel was a showman as well as a star, calling in his fielders, pitching over matchbooks he placed on home plate, and dazzling fans with his aphorisms along with his antics. Why did he feel it necessary to perform like that? Did he ever slip, as critics say, into the role of the Uncle Tom?
7. Satchel was a great friend to and competitor of the “black Babe Ruth,” Josh Gibson. What was their relationship like? How were they different? Were those differences a matter of personality–or of divergent responses to being a baseball star in a racially divided universe?
8. Satchel barnstormed across America, pitching night after night in mining towns and farming ones, from springtime through summer, fall, and winter. Why did he pitch so often, while white big leaguers threw just every third or fourth day and took off most of the fall and all winter? What did he learn about himself and about America by barnstorming?
9. Baseball owners historically exercised an imperial control over their players, buying and selling them as they would property, holding on to them for life if they so chose. That was true in the Negro Leagues as in the Majors. How did Satchel’s jumping from team to team affect that feudal system? How, if at all, did Satchel’s unprecedented salaries, and his throwing off owners’ shackles, affect his fellow ballplayers?
10. If Satchel was so special, why did Branch Rickey pass him over for his Kansas City Monarchs teammate Jackie Robinson as the man who would break the color barrier in baseball? And, having been passed over, what role if any can Satchel claim in having integrated America’s pastime?
11. Why do we know so little about Satchel today? What is the real legacy of Satchel Paige?
1. Satchel Paige’s age was a matter of perpetual mystery. Every time he was asked he offered a different answer, depending on who was asking and when. Why was it so difficult to pin down a straightforward matter like his birth date? And why do you think Satchel sometimes tried to make himself forever young, like Peter Pan, and other times as old as Methuselah?
2. Satchel grew up in Mobile in the early 1900s, long after the failure of the Reconstruction era, which promised a New South after the Civil War ended slavery. It was the era of Jim Crow and Uncle Tom. Who were Jim Crow and Uncle Tom? What do they tell us about what life in Mobile was like for a young boy like Satchel Paige?
3. Satchel Paige entered the world as Leroy Robert Paige. How did he come to be called “Satchel?” The roots of his nickname, like everything in his life, have several possible explanations. Why didn’t he clear up the mystery with a simple answer?
4. The Alabama Reform School for Juvenile Negro Law-Breakers is where Satchel discovered just how overpowering a pitcher he could be, and just how much he loved the game of baseball. What landed Satchel in the reformatory? Did it matter that the school was based on the black self-help philosophy of Booker T. Washington and run by the Federation of Colored Women’s Clubs? What lessons did Satchel take away from his five years in reform school?
5. Some people say that Satchel was the greatest pitcher ever to toss a baseball, a claim backed up with statistics like his pitching 2,500 games, winning two thousand of them, and recording fifty no-hitters. Why is it so difficult to separate truth from legend in the days ofthe Negro Leagues? What evidence is there that the claims about Satchel were the truth? What evidence that they were legend? Why was there separate Negro Leagues in the first place, and was baseball in America always racially segregated?
6. Satchel was a showman as well as a star, calling in his fielders, pitching over matchbooks he placed on home plate, and dazzling fans with his aphorisms along with his antics. Why did he feel it necessary to perform like that? Did he ever slip, as critics say, into the role of the Uncle Tom?
7. Satchel was a great friend to and competitor of the “black Babe Ruth,” Josh Gibson. What was their relationship like? How were they different? Were those differences a matter of personality–or of divergent responses to being a baseball star in a racially divided universe?
8. Satchel barnstormed across America, pitching night after night in mining towns and farming ones, from springtime through summer, fall, and winter. Why did he pitch so often, while white big leaguers threw just every third or fourth day and took off most of the fall and all winter? What did he learn about himself and about America by barnstorming?
9. Baseball owners historically exercised an imperial control over their players, buying and selling them as they would property, holding on to them for life if they so chose. That was true in the Negro Leagues as in the Majors. How did Satchel’s jumping from team to team affect that feudal system? How, if at all, did Satchel’s unprecedented salaries, and his throwing off owners’ shackles, affect his fellow ballplayers?
10. If Satchel was so special, why did Branch Rickey pass him over for his Kansas City Monarchs teammate Jackie Robinson as the man who would break the color barrier in baseball? And, having been passed over, what role if any can Satchel claim in having integrated America’s pastime?
11. Why do we know so little about Satchel today? What is the real legacy of Satchel Paige?
easy read, well done, very enjoyable...great book for those who enjoy or want to learn about baseball in the old days.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted June 29, 2010
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This was one of the best reads I've had in the summer of 2010. The history of Satchel and other prominent Negro Leaguers is captured here with excellent detail. Great game description, storytelling, and word-painting by Tye. If you want to learn more about Negro League Baseball and details of Satchel off the field as well - this book is for you and for any baseball history buff for that matter. Go get it!
ABSOLUTELY RECOMMENDED! Terrific read!
Anonymous
Posted September 19, 2009
I was interested in Satchel Paige and did learn more about him, but the book leaves much to be desired. Rather than telling a well presented and strictly chronological story, the chapters are loosely chronological and some of the chapters read like independent essays about different aspects of Satchel Paige's life. The result is a story that is poorly told and loosely organized. The prose style is fair at best. It's like the rough draft of a potentially better book. I'm surprised the editors published it without revision.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted August 29, 2009
Must read for all baseball fans; to know the past is important to understand today's sport.
0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.DeFran
Posted August 22, 2009
Excellently researched. Interesting, informative and fun.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Satchel tells the story of one of baseball's great players. It follows him from his boyhood through the Negro League, and his barnstorming years in Cuba and other Latin American countries. It tells of his long-delayed entry into the major leagues, where he helped Bill Veeck's Cleveland Indians win the pennant in 1948.
Among the great players in baseball history very few lived lives so colorful and interesting to warrant a full biography. Satchel Paige is one of them. The author gives great insight into this larger-than-life figure.
Satchel is a must read for all baseball fans.
Anonymous
Posted August 10, 2009
Extremely well done; very informative and well written. Whether or not you are a baseball fan, you will love this book.
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Posted August 10, 2009
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Satchell: The Life and Times of an American Legend portrays one of the greatest baseball talents in history, who was forced by Major League baseball's segregation to work in relative obscurity during his prime performance years. In Paige's early 40s, Bill Veeck game him the opportunity to pitch for the Cleveland Indians, whom he helped lead to a World Series championship in 1948. The book also provides a sad, but not bitter, picture of Jim Crow and widespread discrimination against blacks in the North as well. This is an excellent book for baseball fans, but not only for baseball fans. You will like it if you are interested in American history for the fist half of the 20th century, and especially African-Americans' struggle for justice and equality. It will help you understand people as diverse as Martin Luther King, Jr. and LBJ to Barack Obama and the Reverend Jeremiah Wright.
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Posted August 4, 2009
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I bought this book for my dad as a Fathers' Day present. Baseball has always been a commonality between us, and this insight into one of the greatest players to ever play the game was outstanding. I had read the book and chose to give it to my father, and he truly liked it. My dad had the chance to actually see this enigmatic character play when he was a kid, and this book added a different perspective to the history of baseball, the US and the sad part that was segregation. Paige was incredible, and this book put him as a historical character in the midst of some strange times, when baseball was a different game as dictated by different social and economic factors
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Overview
He is that rare American icon who has never been captured in a biography worthy of him. Now, at last, here is the superbly researched, spellbindingly told story of athlete, showman, philosopher, and boundary breaker Leroy “Satchel” Paige.Few reliable records or news reports survive about players in the Negro Leagues. Through dogged detective work, award-winning author and journalist Larry Tye has tracked down the truth about this majestic and enigmatic pitcher, interviewing more than two hundred Negro Leaguers and Major Leaguers, talking to family and friends who had never told their stories before, and retracing Paige’s steps across the continent. Here is the stirring account of the ...