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Mystery: Decades-Old Bible Belonging to Legend Who Brought Jackie Robinson Into the Major Leagues Found in Calif. Library
Well here’s something cool: A Catholic Bible signed by the 1953 Pittsburgh Pirates belonging to legendary baseball executive Branch Rickey was found last week in a library in California, the Sacramento Bee reports.
For those unfamiliar with his name, Rickey is famous for pioneering the modern-day minor league farm system. However, he’s probably best known for the role he played in ending one of baseball’s most shameful chapters — he signed Jackie Robinson, major league baseball’s first African-American.
“The Bible had been sitting in my shop for months waiting to get repaired,” said Joanne Murphy, 65, the book repairer who found the Rickey’s Bible. “No one wanted it.”
The Catholic Bible was signed by 30 ballplayers as well as team manager Fred Haney.
But how did Rickey’s Bible end up in a Sacramento library? Rickey’s grandson, Branch Barrett Rickey, said it’s a mystery
“It’s the first I’ve heard of the Bible,” Branch B. Rickey told the Sacramento Bee.
He did note, however, that there are a number of Rickey relatives currently living in California. But even they say they’re not sure how the Bible ended up in the library.
“Much of the stuff from my grandfather was parceled out among five daughters and a daughter-in-law,” Branch B. Rickey said. “The division of who got what was very informal.”
He added that maybe his grandfather had “given the Bible as a gift to a dear friend,” but added “there’s any number of speculations.”
Oddly enough, of the remaining ’53 Pirates, none of them remember signing the Bible.
“I don’t remember signing it, but maybe I did,” former catcher Eddy Fitz Gerald told the Bee.
He added that the one thing he remembers is that the ’53 weren’t any good.
“It wasn’t a very good team,” he said. Indeed, considering the fact that the Pirates ended the year 50-104, “wasn’t very good” is a bit of an understatement.

A Bible signed by 30 players from the 1953 Pittsburgh Pirates, and manager Fred Haney, sits in the Sacramento shop of book restorer Joanne Murphy this week months after being donated to the Friends of the Sacramento Public Library. (Randall Benton/MCT/ZUMAPRESS.com).
But, again, how did Rickey’s Bible end up in the library?
The Bee examines a few possibilities:
Christopher Jakle, grandson of Rickey who lives in Sacramento, said he, too, doesn’t know how the Bible ended up here, but noted that a number of the family’s belongings had previously sold on eBay.
Jakle believes the buyer probably died and whoever inherited the Bible didn’t know about its significance.
[…]
Branch Rickey – better known for his front-office roles with the St. Louis Cardinals and the Brooklyn Dodgers – did have a number of connections to Sacramento early in his career, according to local baseball historian Alan O’Connor. Rickey purchased the Sacramento Solons – the precursor to the River Cats – in 1935.
“He was on Riverside and Broadway all the time, watching players and talking to people,” O’Connor said.
“Baseball collectors have told Murphy the restored Bible could fetch as much as $800,” the Bee report adds. “The Bible will be on public display next month in honor of Black History Month at the central branch of the Sacramento Public Library.”
Final Thought — In case you’re interested, here’s a trailer for “42,” an upcoming film about Robinson, segregation, and the Brooklyn Dodgers (yes, that’s Harrison Ford as Branch Rickey):
Click here to read the Sacramento Bee’s full report.
Follow Becket Adams (@BecketAdams) on Twitter
Featured image Randall Benton/MCT/ZUMAPRESS.com
In CONTROL, Glenn Beck presents a passionate, fact-based case for guns that reveals why gun control isn’t really about controlling guns at all; it’s about controlling us. Find out more HERE.


















































































































David
Posted on January 31, 2013 at 11:28amI’m a huge baseball fan, but I don’t want to see this Jackie Robinson movie from what the trailer looks like. First off… I completely understand how it was such a different time back then, and so unfair for not only blacks, but all minorities. But I’ve never seen the movie Schindler’s List before even though I completely understand the horor that occurred in World World II. Now I realize many would respond that I can’t understand it unless I am either in their shoes exp eriencing it. And this is true with anything with anything completely. But I have an imagination. And just as some don’t go to watch certain movies if they enjoyed the novel it was based on because they’re afraid it will wreck their version of it, it’s not necesary to see a film to gain a greater impact if you can imagine a great horror in your mind based on the info. And that’s how I am with history, such as with slavery, and life in the 40′s and 50′s with racial relations, before I was born in the 60′s and onward.
My biggest issue that I saw with the trailer at least is with what I saw with an emphasis on “Hollywoodizing” it, such as, I’m sure, playing up any sex and romance part of it for ratings. And it’s not that there wasn’t foul language & so forth in those days, but of course Hollywood will partake as much of that as they can for ratings as well. So, it will have that “feel” rather than simply be about baseball. Also & mainly as bad as those times were against race liberal Hol
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chips1
Posted on January 30, 2013 at 7:27pmI’m so happy that God was able to sneak a Bible into California. It’s a miracle.
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PoliticallyRightUs.Com
Posted on January 30, 2013 at 8:01pmJajaja that’s awesome!!!
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scootervanneuter
Posted on January 30, 2013 at 8:16pmAmen
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The-Monk
Posted on January 30, 2013 at 7:26pmAt least his last name wasn’t Davidian…
I mean really,,,, who names their Child Branch?
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momrules
Posted on January 30, 2013 at 7:34pmI don’t know Monk but I had a great uncle named Random. Caused a few snickers among we kids.
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The-Monk
Posted on January 30, 2013 at 8:07pmHi Momrules,
When I was a Child we used to visit one of my Moms high school buddies every summer. She had 2 Children (a boy and a girl) named Zip and Star. The husband committed suicide and we stopped visiting them. As a Child I reasoned that he killed himself for naming his Children Zip and Star. I was fairly young back then.
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