The Dollop with Dave Anthony and Gareth Reynolds - 270 - Forgotten Fleet Walker
Episode Date: June 1, 2017Comedians Dave Anthony and Gareth Reynolds examine a historic baseball player who has been dismissed, erased, and forgotten. SOURCESTOUR DATES REDBUBBLE MERCH...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
When you're staying at an Airbnb you might be like me wondering could my
place be an Airbnb and if it could what could it earn? You could be sitting on
an Airbnb and not even know it. That in-law sweet guest house where your
parents stay only part-time Airbnb it and make some money the rest of the year
whether you could use a little extra money to cover some bills or for
something a little more fun. Your home might be worth more than you think. Find
out how much at airbnb.ca slash host.
You're listening to the dollop. This is a bi-weekly American History podcast. Each
week I, Dave Anthony, cat whisperer, historian, lover of women, reach a story
from American history to my friend. Gareth Reynolds who has no idea what the
topic is gonna be about. I love your new list. Back in.
Do you want to look who to do? I'll do one bottle. People say this is funny. Not Gary
Gara. Dave, okay. Someone or something is tickling people. Is it for fun? And this is
not gonna become a tickly podcast. Okay. You are queen fakie of made-up town. All
hell queen shit of Liesville. A bunch of religious virgins go to mingle and do
what? Pray. Hi, Gary. No. I say done, my friend. No.
October 7th, 1856. Okay. Moses Fleetwood Walker. Yo. Better known as Fleet Walker.
Yo. Was born in Mount Pleasant, Ohio to Moses Walker and Caroline O'Hara. So he
was from a Moses Walker too. That's what I'm talking about. His parents were, okay,
so his parents both had one black parent and one white parent. Okay. But Fleet was
born with a very dark appearance. Okay. A town of Mount Pleasant was a very safe
place for an African American to grow up in at the time. Okay. It was somewhat
incubated from the racism elsewhere in the nation. It was a working class town
that had a large abolitionist Quaker population. Okay. Which you want at that
time. Yes. If you're a black guy in the 1800s, find some Quakers. Yeah. Good
oatmeal. Don't want to want your freedom. Right. Also freedom, but mostly
I'm talking about the oatmeal. Yeah. Well, hello, boy. Care for some oatmeal? Yeah.
All right. Care for some more oatmeal? Yeah. You're enjoying your freedom? What?
A little more oatmeal? Yeah. Hey, how about some oatmeal for your pockets? What? I want to put
some of this oatmeal down your pants. I don't want to be free anymore. Let me
fill your shoes with oatmeal and you run there and back. Let's see how much it
squishes. I don't like freedom. So it was also, the town was also, there were a lot of
abolitionists that lived there, prominent abolitionists. And it was prominent ones.
Part of the Underground Railroad. Okay. The town, which is, which if you're not
familiar with that, is an Underground Railroad. Yes. It actually had a free
school for black students. So it's possible that the walkers were actually
part of the Underground Railroad. In the 1860 census, a three-year-old girl was
recorded in the family named Lizzie Walker, but a decade later, her name was not
listed. And since there is no record of her birth or death, she may have been a
child who was being smuggled north when a census worker came. Oh, wow. Awkward. Right?
That's got to be really crazy. Yeah. Super weird. Um, yeah. Hi, who's this? Hi.
Hi. Hello. Hi. Hello. Why do you keep saying hello? Hi. How many are there?
Oh, four. What? Two. How many do you need there to be, huh? When Fleet was three, the
family moved 20 miles up the Ohio River to Steubenville, Ohio, which you love.
Love, Stoops. That same year, Fleet's younger brother and a future lifelong
sidekick, Weldy Walker, was born. And a sidekick was born. Weldy. Weldy. I hope he
becomes a welder. I think you should connect these two pieces of iron. Use
me, sir. I'm Weldy. I gotta blow torch. I know what I'm doing. I'm Weldy. Is that
the whole song? Yeah. Well, these father Moses would become one if not the boy you
hear dad part of the Red Sea. I'll tell you, I know how to put it together. A
little blow torch and some metal. I'm Weldy, I tell you. Boy, I am. I am. His
father Moses would become one if not the first black physician in the state and
then a Methodist Episcopal Church minister. Okay. I would have done the
opposite way. I would have become a minister and then a doctor. Right. Yeah. Or
maybe just cut the minister part. So Fleet had a comfortable middle class
upbringing in a town that was relatively unaffected by the Civil War. After high
school in 1878, he was accepted to Oberlin College to study philosophy in the
arts. Okay. Which is back then that's the best way to get a job. Right. Yeah, for
sure. Yeah. Pursue your arts degree. Fleet played baseball at Oberlin and quickly
set himself apart as a catcher and lead off hitter and he was a good student, a
decent public speaker, handsome and very confident. Okay. Except school was not his
thing baseball was and it would eventually negatively affect his grades. He'd
often get mentions in the Oberlin review for his standout performances and this
did not go unnoticed with the ladies. He was romantically linked to both
Arabella Taylor and Edna Mason, two women who are also half black, half
white. Okay. A regular pitcher Fleet caught for was Harlan Birkett. Birkett
almost didn't end up as a student at Oberlin. The day he and his father pulled
into the school, an unpopular student was being tarred and feathered by his
fellow students. You know, turn around. You want to make a Huey? I think there's
other places we can probably go. No, this looks like a good school. I don't know, but
that guy's giving him tarred and feathered. He looks, it's just a prank. It's my
major. Oh man, Burns. Anyway, I'm joining the fraternity. Hey. Birkett's father said he
thought Oberlin students might be a bit too rough. Really? Because of the
tarring and feathering that he saw? Is that why? Son, I think this might not be a
great college because of the way that they're pouring tar on that human. Ah,
I don't know, dad. Oh, and feathers. Kids nowadays, I don't get it. You walk
differently. You're tarring and feathering your pals. But Birkett decided the
college was for him. In his first year, a fellow student showed Birkett how to
manipulate the friction grip and release of an object that could make it
curve. He did this by using a grape. Wait, what? So a student at the school showed
him how to use... Show him how friction grip and release when you're throwing an
object could make it curve. He showed him with a grape though. To use the grape. So
he goes into the lab where the guy's like, boy, I actually have come up with
something that could help me, some of you athletes. If I throw anything larger than
a grape, I'm likely to throw my back and shoulder out. Gentlemen, I have been working
with this grape for two years. I have learned how to make it. Okay. Settle down.
You're sweating a lot, man. Are you okay? Are you okay? You're sweating an awful
lot. Do you want to sit down? Okay. How old are you? You look like you're 15 and
maybe 94. You're 49. I've been a student working with grapes for my god, 29 years.
Oh my god. Just grapes? Yes, I am a grape major and minor. Oh my god. It turns out
there's not a lot, the grapes. And so I just started throwing them. When do you
graduate grape? Birket then use snowballs over the off season to practice. Whoa. This
guy, this is a montage, obviously. And the next year he was one of only three
known pitchers in the state who could throw a curveball with a snowball with
a snow. I'm still pitching with snow or grape. Right. Okay. Coach, I can't make it
work with a baseball. Can we get the guys to play with grapes? I'm actually
gonna have to throw a flag on the play. The grapes are not for sporting use. It
was so he's he's one of the three people who could throw a curve in the state. Yeah.
It was a very controversial pitch at the time. Many dismissed it as being an
optical illusion. Boy, I mean, we just it was just the ceiling to intelligence
forever. You could only know so much. And then like the fact that I saw it happen, but I
don't think it happened. I was a wizard. To throw this new pitch, Birket had to
have a competent catcher behind the plate. And that was fleet. At the time,
catchers use their bare hands. Oh my god. Catchers mitts would not be used for
another decade. Fleet would sometimes wear a thin lambskin glove with finger
holes cut out. But more than often, he was catching bare hands. It's tough. The two
men probably did not have the best relationship. Birket was known to be
delighted in having thrown a minstrel show on campus. Alrighty. While fleet was
at Oberlin for the first two years, we're opening for the Tarring and Feather
first two years, it was just interclass games. But then colleges around the
country started to look at collegiate sports as something to help create
status, build stronger campus community. Oh, and to make a shitload of money.
Right. In 1881, Oberlin expanded into intercollegiate sports. Okay. That was the
year Weldy joined fleet at Oberlin. Hey, you need someone to put those things
together? Well, he played right field and second base. They didn't win many
games. But in the final game against the University of Michigan, fleet led
Oberlin to a 10 to three win. Michigan was so impressed. And they needed a
catcher. So the university offered fleet a position at their law school. Hmm. This
was 1870. The University of Michigan was now only the second college in America
to have an African American law school graduate. Okay. Fleet also knocked up
Arabella around the same time. So they got married and she came with him. Now
fleet was a good law student and was looking at a decent career. But one day,
he was helping put up a fence around the baseball field to make sure the 600
expected fans would pay their entry fee. Okay. And that's when Flint real fleet
realized the game had the potential to give him a nice career. And he talked to
Weldy and Weldy was also on board. Okay. So putting up a fence, he was like,
wait a minute. There's a future. What is this? We got to put up a fence to keep
out the whole. Eureka moment. The local play paper called fleet the wonder. He
was given the opportunity to get paid to play in a few games for semi
professional teams. He played in Pittsburgh for the Newcastle. Nessian ox. I
loved the Nessian ox. I mean, I don't even know what that means. You don't know
what a Nessian. I guess. No. Oh, well, you've never been to
Hunmasters. What? That's where they got the Nessian. Nessian ox or Nessian? Oh,
they sell both. Where is this? Hunmasters. Go there. They have a website. He was,
um, fleet was very well received and was considered a brilliant talent. Another
time, the white sewing machine company from Cleveland paid fleet to play the
Louisville Eclipse in Louisville, Kentucky. Okay. That's the weirdest baseball
sentence I've ever read. I'm a little confused, but one more time. The white
sewing machine company. Interesting start already. From Cleveland. Paid fleet to
play the Louisville Eclipse in Louisville, Kentucky. Play them again. Play them as who?
I think it's like advertising. I think that they like sent like the white
sewing machine companies like, let's have a ball club go down with the white
sewing machine company. So they were just kind of put together their own like
white team. Yeah, I think so. Okay. Fleet had lived a life in which he had
somehow managed to avoid experiencing overt racism directed towards him. Enter
Kentucky. Hey, the morning of the game, the hotel where the team had their
pregame breakfast, refused fleet entry. Cool. When his team arrived at the
stadium, the Louisville players and management refused to play if fleet
took the field. Wow. Fleet's manager. Even as an athlete, how can you not just be
like, I want to beat him? Right. Like if you have that, but like, I don't like him
that much. Yeah. That much of a problem. Then you want to beat him. Then you win. Instead
they're like, well, he can't play. I can't play him. Yeah. Same color. Because they
first scared they're going to lose. It'll be tough to know who's who if there's a
black person. Fleet's manager accepted the terms and benched fleet. Wow. Putting in
a replacement catcher. Now, this was a time before they had mitts, as we said.
And by the end of the first inning, the replacement catcher's hands were so
swollen and bruised that he refused to keep playing. Yeah. That happened to
every game or standing. Does that happen to every game where the catcher's like,
I can't. The manager tried to get other players to go in his catcher, but no one
wanted to play the position. This caused a delay in the game. The Louisville crowd
then decided starting then decided to start chanting nigger. Oh good. I was
fun to hear the paper reported that it was done in a very playful manner. Oh the
playful and bomb drop. The Louisville management thought the chanting was a
green light to allow fleet to play. This seems like. What do we like here? I
don't like the crowd. I don't like the person is like they like you. So they
offered to let him play for some weird reason. Fleet did not want to leave the
bench. He didn't feel comfortable. I don't know why I didn't want to go out and play.
So weird. Let's go get him coach. All right, let's go. But after much persuasion,
he went in the game. Fleet warmed up and was ready to go. But at that point, two
furious Louisville players stormed off the field and into the clubhouse to
protest. And the game again was delayed. Finally, the third baseman volunteered
to catch and Fleet went back to the dugout. Louisville won six to three.
Congratulations, America. Yeah. Most of the media reports at the time were
supportive of Fleet and argued that he was worthy of the title of best amateur
catcher in the nation. Some even wrote the Cleveland team had grounds for a
lawsuit against Louisville, although that would never happen. Good. Closure. Closure.
And that's the end. So Fleet Walker is building a name for himself as a
potential. I genuinely thought that was the end for a minute. Oh, really? Yeah, I was
like, huh, I don't know what my lesson is. So it looks like this guy can become a
great player. In 1883, the manager of the minor league Toledo Blue Stockings
offered Fleet a contract with the Blue Stockings. What? Yummy. What's happening?
We're playing the garters. OK. Fleet dropped out of law school and pursued his
dream of being a full time professional baseball player. His old Oberlin
college pitcher, Harlan Burkitt, was also on the Blue Stockings. But Burkitt was
not the pairing that brought Fleet attention. He also caught for future
National Baseball Hall of Famer Hank O'Day. Together they were considered the
greatest battery partners in the country. In Fleet's first season with Toledo,
they won the Northwest League title and Fleet played in 60 of their 84 games.
Their success enabled the team to move up to the American Association. Fleet was
now the second major league baseball player making Jackie Robinson not the
first. Wait. What? Yeah. What do you mean? Fleet. He played for the majors before
Jackie Robinson. Yeah. And he's dark skinned but not. He's black guy. He's not
fully black though, right? He's black guy. But he's a black guy. Yeah. What? You
know what? The actual first black player to play in the majors was William
Edward White in 1879, five years before. But he was technically the first
African-American player. He played a grand total of one game for the Providence
Grays in the National League. He was born in Georgia to a white plantation
owner and his black servant. White was so fair-skinned that he passed as a white
man and he did not point out to anyone that he was half black and a former
slave. So while he is the first guy who played in the major leagues who was
black, no one actually knew he was black and he lived his whole life as a white
guy and on his death certificate he was even listed as white. That is just
like... So he's not really... Mind-bendingly... So the first black guy to play was
actually a white guy. I mean he's a black guy. No, he was a black guy, but if you're
passing as white... Well, you're... I mean baby steps. You just quietly say it in
your 70s. You know, he's actually the first black guy. Huh? What? Nothing. I'm gonna kill you!
No, no, no, no, no, no, no! Okay. So I consider Moses Fleet Walker to actually be
the first... Still. So there is someone else before Jackie Robinson. Yes. Okay. That is
indeed true. White was born in Georgia. Oh, I already did that. So Toledo is
promoted. Fleet Walker is going to be the first black player to play major league
baseball because people actually knew he was black as opposed to the other guy who
his name was white. But the executive committee of the American Association... His name was also white.
It was white. Yeah, his name is white. He was just... I mean, he was just destined for radar
flying under. But the executive committee of the American Association lost their
fucking minds. They moved a motion to ban blacks from playing in the Northwestern
League, specifically trying to expel Fleet Walker. However, after a bitter fight,
the motion was dropped and Walker was allowed to play. He was signed to a
$2,000 contract. Okay. Which is pretty nice. I think for back then, that's fucking
great money. Well, whenever we hear any figure, we're like, that's really good for
back then. We have like no idea of what the scale is, but we hear any dollar
around we go, I mean, back then, that was a million bucks back then. Really? A million
bucks back then. This was at a time when the average labor would earn around $10
a week. That's like a million bucks now. So first up, Toledo were scheduled to
play an exhibition game against the Chicago white stockings. The white stock
stockings, these all, they got started to stocks, all these guys. Oh, I don't think
that was a good decision. The white stockings were the best team in the
country and had won the last three titles. They were managed by a big
superstar of the game, feature hall of ammo, an outspoken racist douchebag cap
Anson from a local Toledo newspaper quote. Walker, the colored catcher of the
Toledo club was a source of contention between the home club and the Chicago
club. Shortly after their arrival in the city, the Toledo club was informed. There
was an objection in the Chicago club to Toledo's playing Walker. Walker has a
very sore hand and it had not had not been intended to play in yesterday's game.
And this was stated to the bearer of the announcement for the Chicago's. Not
content with this, the visitors declared with the swagger for which they are
noted that they would play ball with no damned nigger. The order was given then
in there to play Walker and the beefy bluffer was informed that he could play
or go. Just as he blank, please. Anson hauled in his horn somewhat and consented
to play remarking, we'll play this here game, but we won't, but we won't play
never know more with the nigger in. So that's all right there in the newspaper.
Okay, a couple things. Yeah. One, I like that they are like, don't swear. No, I know.
They put, they actually put blank in the paper. Don't swear where it should be.
And word, and word, and word, and word. Don't swear. Don't swear. But also,
that's how dumb that quote is at the end. Oh, it's fucking stupid. I mean, it's like,
we'll play this here game, but won't play never know more with the. Yeah, like there
are so many twists and turns as far as negatives go there that I think he might
be saying he'll play with a black guy. I think he doesn't realize he is, but he
is saying, I'll never not always don't do it. Not gonna can if I will, will not.
Okay, so you're playing with him. Yeah, I like black people. Toledo manager, Charles
Morton had decided he wasn't putting up with any of Cap Anson's racist shit.
Fleet was supposed to sit the game out injured, but Morton put him in just to
spite Anson. Good. Anson, isn't that great? Yes.
Anson agreed to play after Morton said that if he forfeited the game, then he'd
forfeit his team's share of the ticket stubs. But Fleet did not play catcher
because of injuries he played in right field. That's great, too. Yeah. But he
was like, no, we just got to get you in, kid. Oh, so I just stand out in the field.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. You're bad boy. You're the bad boy. No, no, no. That's
great. I want to kill myself. My position is horrible. I understand. What about a
glove? And they're not around. Toledo's first official game was scheduled to be
in Louisville, Kentucky. Good. Back to the old stop. Bruja is over an
ex exhibition game. Jesus. Once again, he was refused entry and service at the
team hotel. The media attacked him in the paper. Fans reigned abuse on him
relentlessly again, and the Louisville players threatened to walk off if he
played. But Toledo management was fine with all the threats. They pointed out
that if Louisville walked off and forfeited, then Toledo would get the
points for the win. And Louisville would also be fined $500. So Louisville
reluctantly agreed to play during the game. We won't like it, though. We're not
going to like it. During the game, Fleet was abused and threatened by the crowd
and players on Louisville. Because of this, he did not play well. He made
several errors and did not get a hit. The local paper headline the next day
read quote Negro catchers disastrous errors. I don't know why he's not
playing good. This became the norm throughout the season. The press,
players and fans would relentlessly abuse and threaten Fleet. And because of
segregation laws, he would often have to sleep on park benches while his team
slept in a hotel. What? How did no one would take him in?
Not good.
God bless. How'd you sleep, Fleet? Oh, good. It's a good bench. Better than
the last bench. Yeah, my bed was lumpy. Yeah, fuck you. Yeah. Fuck you'll
fuck yourself. No, right. Anyway, fuck you.
And then the second black player came to play in the majors. Well, he was
called what? Yeah. Yeah. This now we have two, two black three, three. Well, I
mean, yeah, white, but whitey the white two black guys who are brothers. So
already that's a crazy fucking story. Yeah, the first two totally erased from
history. Are we a racist? Well, he was called up and played five games in the
1884 season due to team entry. You know, I think I could fix that fence, but it
just needs to be like sealed together a little better. Little job for wealthy if
you ask me just play baseball. Okay. Because of Segre. Oh, already that the
brothers never played together. However, because Fleet was injured for those
games. As usual, it was his hands. So there were some bright spots. When
Toledo went to play the St. Louis Browns, a large group of black fans came out to
cheer for the star black catcher of the opposing team and fleet had a great
game. After well these brief time with Toronto, he returned home in 1884 to
Steubenville, the peaceful integrated sanctuary city he grew up in. A new
roller skating rink had been built. And well, he decided to go for a skate on
opening night with a with a black friend on arrival. They found a no
Negroes need apply, except for positions of menials in the window when they
tried to enter. The owner stopped them and said, quote, you're colored and you
can't skate. Not one to take shit. Well, the in his friend filed a civil rights
lawsuit on the grounds of racial discrimination and they won. Nice. $5.
Sorry. $15.
Seriously? Yeah. Each.
And and then he still the judge still allowed the skating rink to bar black
people. Cool. After all the years of having a fairly integrated town,
Steubenville was moving backwards. There were other indicators that all around
those advocating segregation were winning the battle against those for
integration. The next time Toledo came up against the Chicago White
Stockings, manager Charles Morton made an agreement with Cap Anson days before
the game that he wouldn't field any black players for the game.
The issues with Toledo went even further. Fleet was also facing racial
hatred from certain teammates. And New York age interviewed later with Toledo
pitcher Tony Malaine would elaborate on what Fleet was putting up with. Tony
Malaine was pitching pitching for Toledo and he did not like to be the
partner of a Negro Malaine quote. He was the best catcher I ever worked with,
but I disliked a Negro and whenever I had to pitch to him, I used to pitch
anything I wanted without looking at his signals. One day he signaled me for a
curve and I shot a fastball at him. He caught it and came up to me and said,
I'll catch you without signals, but I won't catch you if you're going to
cross me when I give you signals. And all the rest of the season, he caught
me and caught anything I pitched without knowing what was coming.
Wow. And yet it's so weird to compartmentalize it like that, to have that
ability to be like, he's the best catcher ever. Right. But I hate him because he's
black. And I'm going to try to hurt him. I'm going to try to hurt him, but he's the...
He's a great teammate. Oh yeah, he's a great teammate. Hell of a guy. One of the best
teammates I've ever had. Look, if we had another white on our hands, oh man.
Oh man. Now that was my kind of black guy. The one whose last name was white,
looked white, and acted white. I miss ol' Whitey. I miss Whitey.
Fleet and the club were constantly getting threats and pressure to drop him. Weeks
before a scheduled game with the Richmond Virginians, the Virginians wrote that at
least 75 men were waiting in Richmond for Fleet if he turned up to play. The letter
signed off with quote, we only write this to prevent much bloodshed as you alone can prevent.
Wow. So that's... It's that's on you. Yeah. Whether it was the threats, fleets, injuries,
or the team's financial struggles, he was released from the team. He first worked as a male clerk
when he left the majors, but he was not done with baseball. In 1885, he briefly played for Cleveland
in the Western League before moving to play for Waterbury. In the offseason, he used some of the
major league cash he'd saved to buy the Le Grand in Chicago, which was a hotel theater,
and he operated briefly with Weldy. And in 1886, Fleet played for Waterbury again, and the manager
of defending champions, New York Little Giants, signed to play in the international league.
Fleet was happy to arrive in Newark to catch for their star pitcher, another black guy named George
Stovey. Fans called them the Spanish Battery, and they both had a great season. I feel like
they might not have known what Spanish people were. Yeah. Well, at that time, I mean, you were
like, oh, we'll take what we can get. They're labeling us with non-N words, which is nice.
Is he, he's like in your bag. And he's fine. He's just got his head in there. He's poking around.
Quite a seal. In 18, in the 1887 season, exhibition game against the Chicago White
Stockings, New York management. I'm not getting used to the Chicago White Stockings. I mean,
it's hard to deal with White Stockings. So the Newark management agreed not to play Fleet or Stovey
after threats again from Cap Anson, who again did not want to play against black men or two in
this case. They were benched. And that same day, the international league owners voted to ban
any future contracts for black players. Throughout the rest of 1887, most of the minor leagues moved
towards racial segregation as official policy. Oh, good. This meant the end of any baseball
career that Weldy had. Right. Because he's not currently signed. And a lot of progress. It also
meant there's now a countdown to the end of Fleet's career because once his contract's out, it's over.
He's done. So Weldy wrote to the tri-state league president who had introduced the policy
and then he had the letter published in the Sporting Life under the headline,
Why Discriminate. The law is a disgrace to the present age and reflects very much upon the
intelligence of your last meeting and cast derision at the laws of Ohio. The voice of the
people say that all men are equal. So in 1888, Fleet followed the Newark manager that originally
signed him to the Syracuse Stars, another international league team. He was a popular player
even though his play was mediocre. Fleet was the unofficial spokesman for the team and he
was held in high regard throughout the town. But the years of dealing with constant violent threats
and abuse started to weigh on Fleet. The official stance of segregation had made baseball a safe
space for bigots. Screaming, kill the nigger became commonplace at baseball stadiums. Jesus.
By the time he got to Syracuse, Fleet was carrying a loaded revolver with him wherever he went.
He's just, I just can't imagine going to see a baseball game and just that being the thing
that you're most fired up about. Oh my god. When the team was in Toronto, Fleet was out on the
street when a group of white Toronto fans started harassing and threatening him and he pulled out
his gun. No shots were fired but the media used it as an example of how blacks had a propensity
for violence. It's one of those things though that in the moment feel so good. So fucking good.
Like just feels like those are the look on their face when they're like, all right. So great.
But yeah, I'm sure the media was really understanding. Look at them.
Jess Shia was 33rd birthday and in his seventh season as a pro ball player,
Syracuse released Fleet. This was the end of his baseball career. There wouldn't be another pro
black player in the international league again until Jackie Robinson in 1946 when he played
for the Montreal Royals. Fleet returned to his job as a male clerk. He became a friend of former
Syracuse University professor, Dr. Joel Gilbert Justin. Dr. Justin had been having a hard time
with resolving a problem with his invention that he called the Justin gun, which was using gun
powder instead of compressed air to fire artillery shells. So just some casual shit he's doing in
his garage. Wait, what is he doing? He's building a Justin gun using gun powder instead of compressed
air. Fleet designed an outer casting that fixed the problem with the Justin gun, which he patented.
And they never made any money because the other patents made it. It was confused.
Right. Sure. But he's so fucking smart. Right. That he invented the thing that made a gunwork.
In the two years after his retirement from baseball, Fleet took to drinking. He had grown
bitter after his treatment, which is weird. One evening while he was walking through the streets
of Syracuse Drunk, he came across Irish cousins, Patrick Curley Murray and Patrick
Bootle Murray. Oh, boy. There were two cousins named Patrick Murray. Okay. I was really curious
what happened separated by nicknames. Right. Curley and Bootle. Right. Bootle and Curley.
Bootle. I'm Bootle. And this is my cousin, Curley. Hello. Hello. Would you like to fight?
Bootle and Curley and Bootle and Curley and Bootle and Curley. I love you cousin.
Curley and Bootle were not happy to see a black man in their neighborhood.
They started racially abusing him. And when Fleet didn't take the bait, they threw rocks at him.
One hit Fleet in the back of the head. And then Fleet confronted them, which quickly escalated
into a brawl. Fleet pulled the knife and stabbed Curley in the groin. You're gonna stab a guy in
the dick. I mean, anytime you want to meet a guy named Curley, you probably want to stab him in
his groin. Absolutely. The men took off. I just imagine. Took off? Running around. Where's Curley
going? Well, the other guys, I guess. So Curley's on the ground. Fleet was arrested and taken to
jail the next morning. Fleet learned that Curley had bled to death. Fleet was charged with second
degree murder. The news that a black former major league baseball player had stabbed a white man
to death got national headlines. But the Syracuse community seemed to mostly be on Fleet's side.
Throughout the trial, the court house was packed mostly with white supporters of Fleet.
But that's also because blacks weren't allowed inside the court unless they were on trial.
Right. Oh, cool. Cool policy. The Murray cousins had a history of being violent drunks,
and the members of their group that gave testimony what happened that night gave inconsistent
accounts. In contrast, the well-dressed and articulate Fleet walkers sat throughout most
of the trial with his youngest child on his lap and wife and baby by his side. He was polite
and concise and a cross examination and clearly established that he was attacked because of the
color of his skin. A jury of 12 white men somehow found Fleet not guilty on grounds of self-defense.
They might have actually been black guys just who were named white. The crowd erupted into cheers
to the point that the judges gavel flew apart as he tried to bring the court back to work.
Yeah, that's like from a movie. Yeah. The judge appeared pleased with the verdict and gave a
stern warning to Fleet not to drink anymore. He then shook hands with Fleet's wife as Fleet shook
the hands of each member of the jury. All is fucking great. But two weeks after the acquittal,
his father died. Fleet returned to his job as a mail clerk. He was now in his mid 30s. In 1893,
his mother died and two years later, his wife died of cancer. Three years later, he married
his old flame from Oberlin, Edna Mason, but things didn't go well for the marriage. Within months,
he was sentenced to a year in federal prison for male robbery. I couldn't figure out what
that what he was just robbing the guy. For 12 months, he left Edna and his three children
from the previous marriage while he was in jail. The details are just not clear,
but he never worked for the Postal Service again. After he got out, Fleet and Weldy owned
the Union Hotel in Steubenville. Then he ran a theater somewhere else. Edna and Fleet would be
well respected for how they ran the theater over the next two decades, showing plays, opera,
vaudeville and films. During this period, he came up with three new patents for inventions that
improved a projectionist ability to seamlessly change cinema rules. Wow. I mean, guys like this
that are so smart. It's like, whatever they do, like, no, I'm just going to do this great.
And Fleet and Weldy became increasingly politically active. He started a Black nationalist publication.
The Walkers openly advocated for the Back to Africa movement, which was a segregationist solution
for what to do with freed slaves in white society. And the movement would eventually culminate in
the founding of Sierra Leone and Liberia, which are working out great. Despite the Walker Brothers
words of returning to Africa, they never acted on them and live it out the rest of their lives
in Ohio. The theater he ran for two decades was segregated and allowed minstrel shows to be regularly
performed. Wow. In 1920, after 22 years of marriage, Edna died. Shortly after her death,
he sold the opera house and moved with Weldy to Cleveland where they ran another theater.
Moses Fleetwood Walker died of pneumonia on May 11, 1924, at the age of 67. Until 1990,
he was in an unmarked grave until Oberlin College paid for his headstone as a tribute to their
star former student and the first African-American baseball player. 13 years after Fleet died,
Weldy was buried beside him. As of 2016, Weldy, the second African-American to play Major League
Baseball, still does not have a headstone on his grave. Today, it is widely believed that the great
Jackie Robinson was the first African-American to play Major League Baseball. He was not.
In March 2017, the Ohio House voted 93 to 1 in favor of recognizing Fleet's birthday,
October 7 as Moses Fleetwood Walker Day. It is now waiting Senate approval. The one no vote
was a white Republican named Nino Vitale. Vitale cited Fleet's conviction for male robbery,
the murder he was acquitted of in self-defense, and his times of alcohol abuse after his career as
reasons of objecting to commemorating what Fleet had accomplished. Fleet had a batting average of
263, which was the third best on the Toledo team and 23 points above the league average.
Boy, that is crazy. Why does nobody know that? I don't know.
That's the thing like that is so just shitty about, you know, the way you're taught and
digest history too is that, you know, you just accept all these things. Well, so, so,
like people, if you don't know this, Jackie Robinson's numbers retired in baseball
and his numbers up in all these stadiums around the country, which is great. And he did a great
thing. Well, even even beyond that, though, Jackie Robinson is completely, I mean, they made a
movie about him three years ago. I mean, Jackie Robinson has looked at as the first black person
to ever play baseball. Because he's the first black player who, I mean, he was just fucking
brutalized. Yes. And not to take away that's. And he, and he, and he took it and he didn't have,
he knew he couldn't give any attitude. He just had to play the game. And so he came out of it and
and then other black players were allowed to play. What America doesn't want to do is look at the
time that the first black player played and they broke him as a person and made him drink and made
him leave the game he loved. Like that's not the story. That's not the story they want to tell,
right? They want to tell the story of the one that opened the world up to black players to play
baseball. That is the, that's the reason. The reason is because I mean, honestly, because Jackie
Robinson just dealt with it, dealt with it and was allowed and was allowed to keep playing.
If Jackie Robinson a couple of years later, it didn't work out or they passed a law saying
blacks could not play in baseball, he would be forgotten. Right. Just like Fleet Walker was.
And Weldy still doesn't have a headstone? Yeah, that's got to change. Maybe we could
start a GoFundMe. It can't be that much.
Yeah, it can't be that much. We could, we should be able to do it. You know, we can do
is we take one tombstone another and we weld them together. Weldy!
Well, we should, we should try to do that. Well, let's look into it.
All right. I think Maurice for the research on that one.
We like to call that more research.
You know, we sign baseball players. Alrighty.