Dodgers fans know and love their home in Chavez Ravine, which is among the oldest stadiums in baseball and one of the sport’s “true cathedrals,” but the team’s former home in Brooklyn played an ...
The Nov. 1, 1945 issue of The Sporting News devoted nearly three full pages to the delicate matter of “John Roosevelt (Jackie) Robinson, age 26, Negro,” signing a contract with the Brooklyn Dodgers’ ...
From Brooklyn to Los Angeles, there's a lot of shortstop greatness in this storied franchise's history.
Brooklyn Borough Historian Ron Schweiger, a former president of the Brooklyn College Alumni Association and a past president of the Society of Old Brooklynites, will be the keynote speaker as the ...
John Donald (Spider) Jorgensen was a Brooklyn Dodger who sacrificed the heart of his career for his country. When ballplayers refuse vaccines to help make their country safer, Jorgensen was a ...
It was only a month since Speedster Enos Slaughter of the St. Louis Cardinals, galloping into first base, had spiked First Baseman Jackie Robinson. Jackie, the first avowed Negro in the history of big ...
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - OCTOBER 09: A view of the Los Angeles Dodgers logo and postseason banners before the game between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Philadelphia Phillies in game four of the ...
May 28, 1957: National League owners vote unanimously to approve the Brooklyn Dodgers’ move to Los Angeles. Oct. 8, 1957: Walter O’Malley makes it official, announces the move to L.A. May 8, 1959: The ...
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