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The Integration That Erased Us: What We Lost With the Fall of the Negro Leagues

When Jackie Robinson broke Major League Baseball’s color barrier in 1947, it was a monumental moment in American history. But too often we only celebrate the triumph and forget to count the cost.


Jackie’s signing wasn’t just about fairness — it was also about business. Branch Rickey, president of the Brooklyn Dodgers, wasn’t blind to the rising power of the Black economy. The Negro Leagues had created their own thriving market — Black athletes, Black coaches, Black owners, and millions of Black fans pouring money into Black-owned teams and businesses. Rickey didn’t integrate baseball; he extracted value from Black talent and folded it into a white-owned system, while leaving the rest behind.


Integration came without inclusion. While the doors of the majors opened for a handful of Black players, Black team owners, managers, and the league itself were shut out — erased from the narrative and the economy.


The Negro Leagues weren’t just sports. They were a source of Black pride, power, and profit — an example of what we could build when we were locked out. In losing them, we lost more than a game. We lost infrastructure, opportunity, and control.


As we honor Robinson’s courage, we must also reckon with the cost. The question for us now is: how do we integrate without erasing? How do we build ecosystems we control — and preserve them when opportunity comes knocking?


Because progress should not mean the death of Black ownership.


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