![]() Cub still holds club records for at-bats (9,421), total plate appearances (10,395), total bases (4,706), extra base hits (1,009), intentional walks (198), and sacrifice flies (96). Banks played in 2,528 games under a dozen different managers from 1953 to 1971 to break Anson’s club record. “During my half-month stay with the Cubs in September, I met more white people than I’d known in all my 22 years,” Banks observed. So when the Cubs purchased Banks contract for $15,000 from the Monarchs on September 7, 1953, he stepped into a world he was not accustomed to. “It is Ernie Banks’s greatest legacy, more important than all the home runs he hit.” 3 The impact this quiet man made on a populace so firmly entrenched against blacks in general was amazing,” author Peter Golenbock said in 1999. “Into this milieu came a black man who today is called Mr. “The only genuine difference between a Southern white and a Chicago white was in their accent.” 1 Edwin Berry, the executive director of the Chicago Urban League, described Chicago as “the most residentially segregated city in the United States.” 2 “Most Chicago whites hated blacks,” columnist Mike Royko said. What was Chicago like in the early 1950s when the young 6-foot, 175-pound infielder joined the Cubs after an all-star season with manager Buck O’Neil’s Kansas City Monarchs, one of the most successful teams in the Negro American League? Ironically, Cap Anson, the legendary Cub first baseman of the 1800s, set an early exclusionary tone by refusing to play teams with blacks. Banks’ new team finished with a 65-89 record, 40 games behind the pennant-winning Brooklyn Dodgers.Īppearing at Wrigley Field for the first time in a Cub uniform, Banks became the first African American to play for the 77-year-old Chicago franchise. The Cubs lost, 16-4, to the Philadelphia Phillies that day in route to a seventh-place finish in the eight-team National League. The 22-year-old Dallas, Texas, native went hitless in three at-bats, scored one run, and made an error at shortstop in his major league debut. Rather, it’s what the game meant to the Chicago Cubs’ franchise and major league baseball in general. It’s not so much what Ernie Banks did on Thursday, September 17, 1953. 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