Jackie Robinson Speech by President Bill Clinton

On April 15, 1997, President Bill Clinton gave the following "Jackie Robinson speech" to fans at Shea Stadium following the fifth inning of the New York Mets versus Los Angeles Dodgers game.

"We have achieved equality on the playing field, but we need to establish equality in the boardrooms of baseball, and throughout corporate America." - President Bill Clinton
President William Jefferson Clinton

Commemmorative Jackie Robinson Patch

"Jackie Robinson Speech"

Thank you very much. Ladies and gentlemen, Mrs. Robinson, members of the Robinson family: It is hard to believe that fifty years ago at Ebbets Field a twenty-eight-year-old rookie changed the face of baseball and the face of America forever. Jackie Robinson scored the go-ahead run that day, and we've all been trying to catch up ever since.

Today, I think every American should say a special word of thanks to Jackie Robinson and to Branch Rickey and to members of the Dodger team who made him one of their own and proved that America is a bigger, stronger, richer country when we all work together and give everybody a chance. And today I think we should remember that Jackie Robinson's legacy did not end with baseball, for afterward he spent the rest of his life trying to open other doors and keep them open for all kinds of people. He knew that education, not sports, was the key to success in life for nearly everyone. And he took that message to young people wherever he went.

I congratulate Rachel Robinson for continuing that mission through the work of the Jackie Robinson Foundation, which has given hundreds of young people a chance to build the life of their dreams.

I can't help thinking that if Jackie Robinson were here with us tonight, he would say that we have done a lot of good in the last fifty years, but we can do better. We have achieved equality on the playing field, but we need to establish equality in the boardrooms of baseball, and throughout corporate America. And we need to make sure that, even as we celebrate his brilliant successor, Tiger Woods' victory in the Masters, we need even more of our young people from all walks of life to get their masters' degrees and help to make more of their lives in this country.

And he would remind us - look around this stadium tonight - that as we sit side by side at baseball games, we must make sure that we walk out of these stadiums together. We must stand for something more magnificent even than a grand slam home run. We ought to have a grand slam society, a good society where all of us have a chance to work together for a better tomorrow for our children. Let that be the true legacy of Jackie Robinson's wonderful, remarkable career and life.

Jackie Robinson Speech by President Bill Clinton


April 15, 1997, was the first instance in Major League history where a player's uniform number — Jackie Robinson's forty-two (42) — was retired by every team simultaneously.

When Jackie Robinson won the Rookie of the Year Award in 1947 he also was the runner-up to Bing Crosby in a United States national popularity poll.

In 1948, Jackie Robinson replaced Eddie Stanky at second base. In 1949 Robinson won the Most Valuable Player Award while playing second base and became the first black recipient of the award and only the second BBWAA National League second baseman to win.