Josh Gibson

By Jessica McElrath <http://afroamhistory.about.com/mbiopage.htm>, About.com

Josh Gibson
U.S. Postal Service
Dates: December 21, 1911 - January 20, 1947
Occupation: Negro League baseball player
Also known as: the black Babe Ruth

Josh Gibson, often called the black Babe Ruth, could hit a homer with
amazing ease. He was one of the most powerful hitters in the Negro Leagues,
and stories of his homers were legendary. According to his Hall of Fame
plaque, he hit almost 800 home runs in his 17-year baseball career. With
such remarkable ability, he would have been a prime candidate to play in the
major leagues. However, just three months before baseball was integrated,
Josh Gibson died.

 Josh Gibson's Childhood Mark and Nancy Gibson welcomed their first-born son
Joshua Gibson into the world on December 21, 1911. He was born in Buena
Vista, Georgia where he lived until he was thirteen. Seeking a better life
for his family, Mark Gibson moved north to Pittsburgh, and sent for his
family three years later in 1924.

It was in Pittsburgh that Gibson was introduced to baseball. He loved the
game, and was always anxious and was willing to travel far in order to play
in sandlot pick-up games. At sixteen, just one year after dropping out of
high school, Gibson played as catcher for the Gimbel A.C., an all black
amateur baseball team.

 Gibson's Baseball Career A few years later, in 1929, he began playing as a
catcher for the Pittsburgh Crawfords Colored Giants. His extraordinary
hitting ability became known throughout the area. It was estimated that he
often hit homers of about 500 feet. According to one story, while playing in
Monessen, Pennsylvania, the mayor ordered the measurement of one of his
homers; it was measured at 512 feet.

In 1931, after hearing about Gibson's amazing hitting ability, the Homestead
Grays enthusiastically gave him a spot on the team as a catcher. One year
later, however, he returned to the Pittsburgh Crawfords where he played
several seasons with teammate Satchel Paige. In 1937, he was traded back to
the Grays, where he remained until his death. That same season, with help
from Gibson's powerful hitting ability, the team won the Negro National
League championship. They went on to win it the next eight consecutive
times.

In the 1940s, Gibson, was one of the highest paid players in black baseball.
While a journeyman player earned about $1250, Gibson was paid from $4000 to
$6000 for a season with the Grays. During off-seasons, plus the 1940 and
1941 season, Gibson played in the Mexican League earning about $6000 per
season. After the Grays filed a lawsuit and received a judgment against him,
Gibson returned in 1942.

Gibson Suffers from Physical Ailments In 1943, after blacking out, it was
discovered that Gibson had a brain tumor. He refused to have an operation
because of his belief that he would lose his mental ability to function
normally. Therefore, he suffered from headaches and blackouts that became
increasingly more frequent. As Gibson suffered physical ailments, he took to
drinking. He died of a stroke on January 20, 1947.

*Sources:*

Peterson, Robert W., *Only the Ball was White*. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.:
Prentice-Hall, 1970.

Hogan, Lawrence D., *Shades of Glory*. Washington, D.C.: National
Geographic, 2006.

-- 
"I'm selfish, impatient, and a little insecure. I make mistakes, I am out of
control, and at times hard to handle, but if you can't handle me at my
worst, then you sure as hell don't deserve me at my best." ~Marilyn Monroe

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