24 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, April 20, 1999 A black baseball player before his time, Moses Fleetwood Walker's attempt to break the sport's color barrier was just ... A Fleeting mbition Maybe Moses and Caroline Walker had a peek into the future when they named their third son back in 1857. Moses Fleetwood Walker. Moses: The Biblical leader who brought his people to the promised land, a man of faith who rebelled against the establishment for what he knew was right. Fleetwood: quick as lightning, strong and hard as hickory, the perfect nick- name for an athlete - and no sport lends itself to nicknames quite like baseball - given to him before he was old enough to walk. During his lifetime, Walker, an African American, would try first to be the Moses of black baseball, bringing his people to the Promised Land known as the Major Leagues, then the Moses of the black race, offering a solution to America's race problem. He would have his share of successes - he was Michigan's first black athlete and was the first ofjust two black Major Leaguers before Jackie Robinson - and more than his share of failures. But when all was said and done, Walker would end his life a bitter and disillusioned man, unsure of himself and his place in the society that created him. "The only practical and permanent solution of the present and future race troubles in the United States is entire separation by Emigration of the Negro from America," Walker wrote in 1908. "Even forced Emigration would be bet- ter for all than the continued present rela- tions of the races." EARLY INNINGS Moses Fleetwood Walker was barely a child when baseball spread across the country. It was the early 1860s and the Civil War was tearing the country in two. And the soldiers played baseball. Prior to the war, baseball was con- fined to the New York area, near the Elysian Fields, where the earliest-known baseball game took place. When the war broke out, New York- area soldiers taught the game to others in their platoons. Soon, baseball games were one of the most common sights in camps of both Union and Confederate soldiers. And as the war spread across the nation, so did baseball. tor to say that he didn't want blacks in his department, as Fielding Yost would do at the end of the 19th Century and through the first quarter of the 20th. The players wanted Walker - they didn't care that he was black - so all he had to do was transfer, and Michigan would have its first black athlete. Transferring was commonplace among athletes at the time. There were no rules governing eligibility yet - the NCAA was nonexistent - and athletes would frequently transfer several times. But did Walker want to transfer? There is no question that he liked Oberlin, and he valued the experience he was getting. More than 20 years later, in an Oberlin alumni survey, there was a question asking what he felt about his Oberlin experience. His response? One word, underlined - "excellent." So what would convince Walker to abandon Oberlin, without a degree, for Michigan? The answer appears to be pretty sim- ple - Walker fell in love. Despite being known as a liberal college, Oberlin had strict rules governing male-female rela- tionships. The summer before Walker enroled in the Michigan law school, his girl- friend, Arabella Taylor, became preg- nant. At Oberlin, an out-of-wedlock pregnancy would surely be frowned upon. So Walker and Taylor decided to move to Michigan. Upon arriving in Ann Arbor, Walker ran into a major problem. After starting to take classes, the University's President James Angell ordered him to stop. Apparently, Walker cheated at Oberlin. His papers from Oberlin said that he "at one time did not state the exact facts or did not wholly keep his promise respecting his preparation for a certain examination." Angell sent a letter to his Oberlin counterpart, James Harris Fairchild, ask- ing for an assessment of "the general character of the young man ..." Whether or not Angell's letter was racially-motivated is unknown - the only mention of Walker's skin color in the letter was the word 'colored' in parentheses after Walker's name. Regardless, Walker was in limbo. Shortly after receiving Angell's letter, BY JOSH KLEINBAUM l DAILY SPORTS EDITOR At Oberlin, his grades dropped and his absences increased each successive year. Baseball took up all of his time. There is no reason to think that Walker's focus was any different at Michigan. He was not interested in pur- suing a career in law; he wanted to be a professional baseball player. 'A WONDER' For the Michigan baseball team, Walker was the missing link, the final piece of the puzzle that would make Michigan great. At least, that's what the players thought, and they wanted the whole campus to know it. They did not want the whole campus to know that Walker was black. In late 1881 and early 1882, before the baseball season began, Packard wrote 1882. "It will present to us a chance of seeing games in which there is some- thing at stake, namely, the reputation of our University which ought to be of uni- versal interest" In the past, baseball games were just nine men playing nine other men. Now, with the formation of the league, the nine men represented the University. Including Walker, a black man. Michigan won the first Western Baseball League title, and Walker was much the reason why. He was strong at the plate and even stronger behind it, despite the fact that, typical of catchers then, he didn't even use a glove, let alone a face mask and chest protector. Every article in The Chronicle on the baseball team that season raved about Walker's skill. sworn to mob Walker if he comes on the ground in a suit, the letter said. "We hope you will listen to our words of warning, so that there will be no trouble; but if you do not there certainly will be. We only write this to prevent much bloodshed, as you alone can prevent." Whether there really was a lynch mob is unknown. Walker suffered an injury before the trip to Richmond and did not travel with the team. In 1887, Walker was playing for a Newark team in the International League, along with the great black pitch- er George Stovey, when they were sched- uled to play the Chicago White Stockings of the National League. The White Stockings were managed by Cap Anson, a famed player, manager - and racist. Anson demanded that the two blacks not play, and the Newark team complied. That same day, at an International sneak past the well-heeled manners and handsome face and ignite the temper, he lost a treasured and cultivated ally. "Anger reduced Fleet Walker's charac- ter to ashes?' 0 >f z . ~- Al A CHANGE OF HEART After the trial, Walker returned to Steubenville and reunited with his broth- er, Weldy. The two opened a hotel, then owned and managed several movie the- aters. Fleet used his motion picture knowledge and patented a handful of inventions having to do with the motion picture industry. By this point in his life, Walker had developed a strong view on race rela- tions in America. He felt that blacks could not be successful in America, that racism was an inherent and unavoidable human trait. Well before Marcus Garvey made the idea famous, Walker argued for the separation of the races. After a life- time of attempting integration, he decid- ed blacks should emigrate to Africa and start a new nation. In 1902, Walker started the first of two ventures to spread his ideas. With Weldy at his side, he published a black-issues oriented newspaper called The Equator. No copies of the paper survived time. His second project was "Our Home Colony," a 47-page book in which Walker outlined his idea of separation of the races. "The Negro race will be a menace and the source of discontent as long as it remains in large numbers in the United States;" Walker wrote. "The time is growing very near when the whites of the United States must either settle this problem by deportation, or else be will- ing to accept a reign of terror such as the world has never seen in a civilized coun- try. Walker died on May 11, 1924 of pneu- monia at the age of 67. He left behind an amazing and sometimes disturbing lega- cy. He was the first black Michigan a-h- lete and the first black major league baseball player. But he faced hatred and racism throughout his life, spawning a hatred of the society that he lived in. Walker tried to be the Moses of black baseball. Instead, Jackie Robinsoin accomplished that feat 23 years after Walker's death. Moses Fleetwood Walker was driven by an ambition to integrate baseball, but his experiences and failures convinced him that integration was anything but the answer. Racis-m in Louisville e Phnoto courtesy of Bentley Historical Library In this photo of the 1882 Michigan baseball team, Moses Fleetwood Walker is seated in the front row, third from the right. Walker's friend and teammate Arthur Packard is seated next to Walker, to his right. One town it hit was Steubenville, Fairchild got one from Walker's friend two articles that appeared in The "Many doubts had been expressed Ohio, on the Ohio river in the eastern and pitcher, Arthur Packard, his fellow Chronicle, the student newspaper at the previous to the game, as to the strength part of the state. Built on manufacturing transfer. time, about the baseball team. In both, he of our nine, but they are now all dissipat- and coal mining, Steubenville was Walker "is almost hopeless and thor- said that Michigan's baseball team would ed. Walker, as catcher, did some of the known for being racially tolerant. That's oughly downhearted," Packard wrote. be good, and it was because of Walker. finest work behind the bat that has ever why the elder Moses Walker moved his "This affair has had a very deep effect on He did not mention the catcher's skin been witnessed in Ann Arbor" the paper family there from Mount Pleasant, Ohio, Mr. Walker and I know he will be very color. wrote on April 29, 1883, after a loss to a in 1860. grateful if you will do something for "All the steps have been taken to Detroit professional team. As in many towns in the late 1860s him." secure such a nine and we firmly believe "Walker's catching cannot be too and early '70s, Steubenville's youth Normally, a letter from a student that we will have one in the spring that highly commended, and the general ver- played a lot of baseball. It was there shouldn't carry too much weight with a will do honor to our University,' Packard dict is, that the man is a wonder" the Walkeriirst played the game that would university president when making a wrote in The Chronicle on Dec. 17, paper wrote on May 27, 1882, after a take over his life. character assessment. But Packard was- 1881. "The weak point in our nine has victory over Wisconsin. "... With two In 1877, Walker enrolled in Oberlin n't any student. His father, Jasper for some years been in our catcher. This men out and two on bases, Walker came College, one of the first integrated col- Packard, was a noted Civil War general will no longer be the case. We will have to the bat. With two strikes called and the leges in the country. The college's and United States Congressman, some- one in the spring who is second to no crowd in great suspense, the 'wonder' African American enrollment was thing that likely weighed on Fairchild's amateur catcher in the country. By many struck the ball square in the face for the between 5 and 10 percent, a figure larg- mind when he replied to Angell. he is considered the equal of most most beautiful home run seen on the er than many universities today and near- There is no record of Fairchild's of the League catchers." grounds this year." ly unheard of in the 1870s. It had been a response, but Walker did enroll in A month later, Michigan, The Chronicle frequently said that the major stop on the Underground Railroad classes. Whether or not he along with Northwestern, fans took well to Walker, and there is no and had been admitting black students attended them is a differ- Wisconsin and Racine, documented evidence of any racism in since 1834. ent matter. formed the Western Ann Arbor. After his home run against David Zang, author of "Fleet Walker's Baseball League, the sec- Wisconsin, The Chronicle said that Divided Heart: The Life of Baseball's \+ ond-ever collegiate ath- Walker was greeted by "tumultuous First Black Major Leaguer;" wrote that * letic league and the applause." the racially tolerant atmosphere at predecessor to the Big But the paper only referred to Walker's Oberlin "may have led Fleet"Ten. color once the entire season. toward a false sense of "That this is a possibilities." tstep in the right THE PROMISED LAND During his direction no one Walker left Michigan after the 1882 fresh--will deny,' The season to begin a seven-year odyssey m a n _Ch r o n icle through professional baseball. His broth- y e a r wrote on er, Weldy, transferred from Oberlin to Walker.Jan. 21, Michigan and played on Michigan's nine caught for in the 1883 season. an Oberlin " Walker signed with the Toledo Blue team that Stockings in 1883, a team in the played local Northwestern League. The next year, the townsmen. In Blue Stockings joined the American 1880, he starred Association, the precursor to the on a junior class American League and considered a team that beat the major league. Walker officially became senior class. In the the first black major league baseball spring of 1881, Oberlin player, 35 years before Jackie Robinson College reversed a previ- was born. ous ban on playing teams d Weldy would join his brother on the from other schools, and Blue Stockings during the 1884 sea- Walker, along with his broth- son, getting limited at-bats. After er Weldy, a freshman, was on that season, the team folded due to the first 'Oberlin nine,'as teams financial difficulties, and no were called then. major league team would pick up either Walker. Moses and A BLACK WOLVERINE Weldy Walker were the only For Oberlin's last game of the sea- two black major leaguers son, Michigan's team came down from before Robinson. Ann Arbor. The Michigan team was But Walker didn't give struggling, and its biggest weakness was up his baseball career, behind the plate. Michigan's catchers or his dream of play- were so bad that the team frequently - ing major league hired players to play the position. In the ball. He floated game, Oberlin defeated Michigan, 9-2. between four teams during According to the diary of Harlan the next five years - all of them Burkett, a pitcher on Walker's Oberlin integrated. team, the Michigan players were so And he was met by racism nearly impressed with Walker, a junior, and Below: everywhere he went. r l . A .4.... D.'sr..Ialeni nB w. In September of 1884, when Walker League owners meeting, the owners voted 6-4 - the four dissenting votes were the four teams with black players - for the exclusion of all future con- tracts with black players. This set a precedent for all levels of organized baseball. Jim Crow was in full effect. By 1888, Walker's frustration with the white baseball establishment was start- ing to show. Having been forced out of the International League, he was playing with the Syracuse Stars of the International Association. In the third game of a three-game series at Toronto, Walker took the day off. Toronto manager Charlie Cushman asked Walker, who was sitting on the bench in street clothes, to leave the park. The details are sketchy, and why Cushman ordered Walker to leave is unknown, but the two exchanged words. As Walker left the park, he also exchanged words with the Toronto fans. Behind the stands, some fans sur- rounded Walker. According to Sporting Life, a sports-oriented newspaper sym- pathetic towards black athletes, Walker "flourished a loaded revolver and talked of putting a hole in someone in the crowd" He was arrested, his gun was impounded and he paid a fine. He was back in the lineup the next night. "Fleet Walker's good-natured public demeanor was fraying," Zang wrote, "a process begun with his slide from the exhilarating heights of major league baseball." Walker was cut by the Stars after the 1889 season and retired, staying in Syracuse. In April, 1891, Walker was walking home from a bar when he was accosted by a group of white men. Words were exchanged, Walker drew a knife and a man, Patrick Murray, was killed. "Walker drew a knife and made a stroke at his assailant;' Sporting Life wrote. "The knife entered Murray's groin, inflicting a fatal wound. Murray's friends started after Walker with shouts of 'Kill him! Kill him!' He escaped but was captured by the police, and is locked up." Walker was tried for second degree murder. A number of his friends testified on his behalf, saying that he wasn't drunk, but rather dizzied from being hit in the head. Walker claimed self defense. During the trial, the public supported Walker, who was popular with the Stars and considered charming and intelligent. When Walker was acquitted, Sporting Life wrote that "immediately a shout of approval, accompanied by clapping of hands and stamping of feet, rose from the spectators" Despite the acquittal, Zang saw the Before Walker arrived in Ann Arbor, in August of 1881, he encountered his first documented case of racism in baseball. Playing for a team in Cleveland, Walker travelled to Louisville for a game against the Louisville Eclipse. The Eclipse's player's were none too happy to be playing against a black. The Louisville manager decided that Walker couldn't play. "In vain the Clevelands protested that he was their regular catcher, and that his withdrawal would weaken the nine," the Louisville Courier-Journal wrote on August 22, 1881. "The preju- dice of the Eclipse was either too strong, or they feared Walker, who has earned the reputation of being the best amateur catcher in the Union." Cleveland substituted a man named West, but he couldn't han- dle the difficult position. "In the second inning ... West said he could not face the balls with his hands so badly bruised, and refused to fill the position," the Courier-Journal wrote. The crowd's reaction was a peculiar one. The fans wanted Walker to play, but were racist at the same time. The Courier- Journal said they "at once set up a cry in good nature for 'the nig- ger.' At that point, the Eclipse's manager invited Walker to play. But after making "several bril- liant throws and fine catches" while warming up, two Eclipse players walked off the field and refused to play unless Walker did- n't. Walker returned to the bench, and the Eclipse won the game. The Louisville incident was the first of many racist ones Walker would encounter in baseball. But, * I