Rachel Robinson: 100th birthday| Still alive| All star game| Young

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Jackie’s widow and baseball’s First Lady Rachel Robinson is celebrating her 100th birthday. Today we will discuss about Rachel Robinson: 100th birthday| Still alive| All star game| Young

Rachel Robinson: 100th birthday| Still alive| All star game| Young

Rachel Robinson (née Isam; born July 19, 1922) is an American former professor and registered nurse, as well as the widow of professional baseball player Jackie Robinson.

Born
Rachel Isum

July 19, 1922 (age 100)
New York City, U.S.
Education Manual Arts High School
Alma mater
  • University of California, Los Angeles (BS)
  • New York University (MS)
Occupation Nurse, professor
Spouse(s)
Jackie Robinson
(m. 1946; died 1972)
Children 3
Awards Commissioner’s Historic Achievement Award (2007)
Buck O’Neil Lifetime Achievement Award (2017)

100th birthday

Rachel Robinson: 100th birthday| Still alive| All star game| Young

Baseball’s All-Stars gathered on the field to honor Rachel Robinson on her 100th birthday before Tuesday night’s game at Dodger Stadium.

Los Angeles Dodgers star Mookie Bates led a tribute to the widow of Jackie Robinson, in Canada and the U.S. Spoke to the crowd from the infield grass after the national anthem. Players from both teams followed him across the grass.

Still alive

Yes,  she is alive and celebrate her 100th birthday He studied at the University of California, Los Angeles. While she was in university, she met Jackie in 1941. They married in 1946. Their son, Jackie Robinson, Jr., was born in November 1946. They later had a daughter, Sharon, and another son, David. Jackie Robinson died in 1972.

She currently lives on a 60-acre (240,000 m) ranch in Salem, Connecticut.

All star game

An enthusiastic chorus of baseball fans obliged with joy. With the Dodgers hosting the All-Star Game for the first time in 42 years, special attention was paid to honoring the couple’s life and legacy, which may have helped change the landscape of the game for the better.

Moments earlier, Academy Award-winning actor Denzel Washington walked into the field wearing a Brooklyn Dodgers No. 42 uniform to pay tribute to Jackie Robinson, who broke the color barrier at Ebbets Field on April 15, 1947.

Young

Another milestone will take place seven days later on July 26: the long-awaited opening of the Jackie Robinson Museum in lower Manhattan.

I doubt Rachel Robinson would say that the opening of the museum is more important. Living a century, as he has, is a remarkable feat, although I often think of Martin Luther King Jr.’s last speech when he mentioned longevity.

“Like anyone, I would like to live a long life,” he said. “Longevity has its place.”

The idea is that it doesn’t matter how long we live. What matters is what we achieve in our lifetime. Jackie Robinson was just 53 when he died in October 1972. His wife dedicated her life to keeping his legacy alive.

Thanks to him, the tenets of Jackie Robinson’s life continue to resonate and will now be memorialized in a new museum.

 

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