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Dodgertown's
Magical Appeal
Holman Approaches
Rickey
Bud Holman's
Dilemma
Rickey's Baseball
School
Jackie Robinson
Emerges
Vero's First
Exhibition
Branch Rickey's
Philosophy
O'Malley Develops
Dodgertown
21-year Lease Signed
O'Malley Proposes
Stadium
Emil Praeger Design
Holman Stadium
Dedication
Dodgers Win Opener
Vero Beach History
Dodgertown Camp
for Boys
St. Patrick's Day
Tradition
O'Malley, Praeger
Team Up
Foreign Visitors
Welcomed
Golf Courses
Privately Built
O'Malley's
Dodgertown Vision
Success Year-Round
Dodgertown



Rickey's Baseball School

Holman duly impressed the Dodgers. He was genuinely interested in having everything fit together perfectly even if it cost him personally, as when he wrote a check to the city for use of apartment buildings nearby Dodgertown, a key to closing the agreement. “We insisted on having those apartments for our staff (married couples) and the press,” said Bavasi.5 “We offered them $100 a month for rent of each apartment. But the city balked at the offer. Holman took out his checkbook and asked the value of the buildings. They said $52,000. Holman started to write out a check for that amount. The city fathers refused to sell. Then they rented ‘em to us...and we closed the deal.”6 This would be the start of something big. But, progress was as slow in arriving as Vero Beach’s commerce.
When the Dodgers first agreed to make Vero Beach their spring home in 1948, it appeared to officials that the makeshift facilities for fields would be a deterrent to continuing the relationship in the long term. Primitive was too nice a word to be used for the state of the playing fields. “It was just a poor excuse for a baseball field,” said Hall of Fame center fielder Duke Snider.
“We’d carry a fungo bat in case you had to stop and kill a snake on the way,” said former Dodger star pitcher Carl Erskine.7
Initially, while the camp was functioning as a training and baseball teaching facility under the tutelage of Dodger President Rickey, the poor field conditions meant the Dodgers would play most of their major league exhibition games in front of crowds in Miami Stadium. The minor leaguers played on the various local fields, including next to the airport, trying to dodge snakes, bugs and all other manner of wildlife among the Florida landscape. Rickey started the morning session with a lecture to the hordes of players and coaches.
Rickey’s desire to find a spring training site that would permit his new star, Jackie Robinson, who had crossed Major League Baseball’s color line as the first African-American player in 1947, to have some normalcy was extremely important. Most Florida communities planted in the depths of the South discriminated against African-Americans, where segregation was a way of life. According to author Sidney P. Johnston, “Rickey believed that racism was less prevalent in Vero Beach than most other places in the South. African-American baseball players, like all people of their race, encountered discrimination not only in larger cities, such as Jacksonville and Tampa, but in small towns as well. Jackie Robinson aroused protests in Sanford during his first year in the Dodger farm system, while Jacksonville and Deland closed their stadiums to the integrated Dodger farm system.”8

5 Bill Boeding, Vero Beach Press-Journal, February 20, 1988
6 Joe Hendrickson, Dodgertown
7 Ibid.
8 Sidney P. Johnston, A History of Indian River County “a sense of place”, page 116




This aerial taken on March 7, 1950 shows the general Dodgertown layout with Fields No. 1 and No. 2 adjacent to the barracks, which housed the more than 600 major and minor league Dodgers.




The double play duo of second baseman Jackie Robinson and shortstop Pee Wee Reese get their work done at Dodgertown.




With more than 600 Dodger players on property, many were assigned to practice on one of the fields near the airport, which meant taking a walk across the street.


Jackie Robinson

Jackie Robinson made history when he crossed the color barrier in Major League Baseball in April 1947. But, prior to his debut, he played in the minor league system of the Brooklyn Dodgers. Robinson had to endure all forms of discrimination in the South during spring training. Robinson played in Daytona Beach, FL in 1946 and this is the program from the game.




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