The Atlantic

How the Negro Leagues Shaped Modern Baseball

A new documentary examines the afterlife of Black baseball’s golden eras, and what was lost with their demise.
The Newark Eagles in dugout in 1936, from "The League," a Magnolia Pictures release
Source: Yale Archive / Courtesy of Magnolia Pictures

Updated at 8:49 a.m. ET on July 12, 2023

In July 1918, shortly after American troops won their first major battle of World War I, in northern France, W. E. B. Du Bois published in , the NAACP-affiliated magazine as a “record of the darker races.” Du Bois, who that African Americans’ support for militarism abroad might lead to more democratic treatment at home, urged readers to “forget our special grievances and close our ranks shoulder to shoulder with our own white fellow citizens.” But rather than ushering in the era of racial harmony that Du Bois imagined, the end of World War I saw a vicious backlash to wartime integration efforts: The next year, Black servicemen and civilians alike faced extraordinary racist violence . As Gerald Early, a professor of English and African and African American studies at Washington University in St. Louis, explains in the new documentary , “It convinced a lot of Black people all the more that we need to close ranks in another kind of way—to

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