MLB, MLBPA make second $1M donation to Negro Leagues Museum

Major League Baseball commissioner Robert Manfred, left, MLB Players Association Executive Director, Tony Clark, second from left, and Bob Kendrick, right, president of the Negro League Baseball Museum, unveil a symbolic check during ceremonies in Kansas City, Mo., Wednesday, June 21, 2017. Major League Baseball and its players' union presented a $1 million grant to the museum to help with operating costs, expansion plans and educational opportunities. (Jill Toyoshiba/The Kansas City Star via AP)

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Major League Baseball celebrated the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Negro National League by joining with the Major League Baseball Players Association to announce their second joint $1 million donation to the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum.

"It commemorates baseball history, and it’s a tribute to African-American entrepreneurship in the culture that existed at the time," baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred said Thursday.

The privately financed museum was founded in 1990 and moved into its current facility in 1994. The Negro National League, the first Negro major league, was founded by eight entrepreneurs at the Paseo YMCA in the eastern part of Kansas City.

Part of the donation will be used to help renovate the YMCA building that will house the Buck O’Neil Education and Research Center. The museum had spent more than $100,000 on the renovation when the building was damaged in 2018.

"Unfortunately, someone vandalized the building, derailing a lot of work that had gone on in this building," said Bob Kendrick, the museum’s executive director. "It was important for us to come back into this space. We didn’t want the haters to have the last laugh."

Negro Leagues operated from 1920 through 1951, four years after Jackie Robinson broke the MLB colour barrier.

"It’s not just about the money," Manfred said. "A number of our teams are playing special tribute throughout the year. There will be features on all our platforms about the Negro Leagues. Maybe most important is the educational effort that is going to take place in our youth programs."

The event kicked off a yearlong celebration called "A Game-Changing Century." All big league teams will wear a patch honouring the history of the Negro Leagues on June 27.

"The history of the Negro Leagues is bigger than baseball," new Kansas City Royals owner John Sherman said. "When I walk through the museum I think of the courage of those people. Their story of resiliency is about change that still hasn’t reached the finish line."

Frank White, an eight-time Gold Glove winner who played for the Royals from 1973-90, grew up in the neighbourhood and joined the YMCA in that building. He learned from players who started in the Negro Leagues, such as Hank Aaron, Willie Mays, Ernie Banks, Satchel Paige, Monte Irvin and Don Newcombe.

"I can’t tell you how many basketball games I played here," said White, now the executive of Jackson County in Missouri. "It’s neat to see this building, and this area, coming back."

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