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===Integration era=== [[Kenesaw Mountain Landis|Judge Kenesaw M. Landis]], the first [[Commissioner of Baseball]], was an intractable opponent of integrating the white majors. During his quarter-century tenure, he blocked all attempts at integrating the game. A popular story has it that in {{Baseball year|1943}}, [[Bill Veeck]] planned to buy the moribund [[Philadelphia Phillies]] and stock them with Negro league stars. However, when Landis got wind of his plans,<ref name="Moore">{{cite book|last=Moore|first=Joseph Thomas|title=Pride and Prejudice: The Biography of Larry Doby|location=New York|publisher=Praeger Publishers|year=1988|isbn=0275929841|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LjfGgiauBfcC&q=larry+doby+joe+gordon&pg=PA51|page=40}}</ref> he and National League president [[Ford C. Frick|Ford Frick]] scuttled it in favor of another bid by [[William D. Cox]]. After Landis's death in 1944, [[Happy Chandler]] was named his successor. Chandler was open to integrating the game, even at the risk of losing his job as Commissioner. He later said in his biography that he could not, in good conscience, tell black players they could not play baseball with whites when they had fought for their country [although they had fought in segregated units]. In March 1945, the white majors created the [[Major League Committee on Baseball Integration]]. Its members included [[Joseph P. Rainey]], [[Larry MacPhail]] and [[Branch Rickey]]. Because MacPhail, who was an outspoken critic of integration, kept stalling, the committee never met. Under the guise of starting an all-black league, Rickey sent scouts all around the United States, Mexico and [[Puerto Rico]], looking for the perfect candidate to break the color line. His list was eventually narrowed down to three: [[Roy Campanella]], [[Don Newcombe]] and [[Jackie Robinson]]. On August 28, 1945, Jackie Robinson met with Rickey in Brooklyn, where Rickey gave Robinson a "test" by berating him and shouting racial epithets that Robinson would hear from day one in the white game. Having passed the test,{{how|date=April 2016}} Robinson signed the contract which stipulated that from then on, Robinson had no "written or moral obligations"{{sfn|Ribowsky|1995|p=279}} to any other club. By the inclusion of this clause, precedent was set that would raze the Negro leagues as a functional commercial enterprise. To throw off the press and keep his intentions hidden, Rickey got heavily involved in [[Gus Greenlee]]'s newest foray into black baseball, the [[United States League]]. Greenlee started the league in 1945 as a way to get back at the owners of the Negro National League teams for throwing him out. Rickey saw the opportunity as a way to convince people that he was interested in cleaning up blackball, not integrating it. In midsummer 1945, Rickey, almost ready with his Robinson plan, pulled out of the league. The league folded after the end of the 1946 season. Pressured by civil rights groups, the [[Fair Employment Practices Act]] was passed by the [[New York State Legislature]] in 1945. This followed the passing of the [[Quinn-Ives Act]] banning discrimination in hiring. At the same time, [[Mayor of New York City|NYC Mayor]] [[Fiorello La Guardia|La Guardia]] formed the [[Mayor's Commission on Baseball]] to study integration of the major leagues. All this led to Rickey announcing the signing of Robinson much earlier than he would have liked. On October 23, 1945, [[Montreal Royals]] president [[Hector Racine]] announced that, "We are signing this boy."{{sfn|Ribowsky|1995|p=279}} Early in 1946, Rickey signed four more black players, Campanella, Newcombe, [[John Wright (baseball)|John Wright]] and [[Roy Partlow]], this time with much less fanfare. After the integration of the major leagues in 1947, marked by the appearance of [[Jackie Robinson]] with the [[Brooklyn Dodgers]] that April, interest in Negro league baseball waned. Black players who were regarded as prospects were signed by major league teams, often without regard for any contracts that might have been signed with Negro league clubs. Negro league owners who complained about this practice were in a [[no-win situation]]: They could not protect their own interests without seeming to interfere with the advancement of players to the majors. By 1948, the Dodgers, along with Veeck's [[Cleveland Indians]], had integrated. The Negro leagues also "integrated" around the same time, as [[Eddie Klep]] pitched for the [[Cleveland Buckeyes]] during the 1946 season, becoming the first white American to play in the Negro leagues. These moves came despite strong opposition from the owners; Rickey was the only one of the 16 owners to support integrating the sport in January 1947. Chandler's decision to overrule them may have been a factor in his ouster in 1951 in favor of [[Ford C. Frick]].
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