Negro Leagues Baseball Museum

Kansas City MO

Major League Baseball was segregated for most of the first half of the 20th century, and during the time when African-Americans were not allowed to play in the big leagues, they did have their own baseball leagues. This museum honors those players who should have been able to play with the likes of Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig, but were not allowed. Kansas City was a major hub for Negro Leagues baseball.
The biggest star of the Negro Leagues was unquestionably Satchel Paige. He was a great pitcher, and quite a character too.
Replica of Satchel Paige’s uniform.
Hotel lobby.
Typical “Sleeping Room” in black hotels in the 1940s.
1946 was the year that the possibility of blacks in the big leagues started to become a reality.
Jackie Robinson became the first black major league player in 1947 for the Brooklyn Dodgers.
Josh Gibson was considered the Babe Ruth of the Negro Leagues.
Jackie Robinson birthplace marker, on loan to the museum from Cairo GA.
Uniforms of the Negro League teams.
Pretty cool sculptures set up like an All-star game, with the greatest Negro Leagues players in position.
Satchel Paige
Cool Papa Bell
Oscar Charleston
Leon Gray
Buck Leonard
John Henry Lloyd
Judy Johnson
Ray Dandridge
Batting: Martin Dihigo
Catching: Josh Gibson
Umpire: Bob Motley
Manager (behind the fence): Buck O’Neil