
NEGRO LEAGUES CENTENNIAL TEAM BOBBLEHEAD SERIES: Raymond C. "Ray" Brown

Item Number: | 2076435 |
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Item Description
The Negro League Centennial Team (1920-2020) is comprised of 30 of the greatest African-American and Cuban players from 1895-1947 plus a manager and a team owner. Each individual is depicted on a baseball-shaped base with replica of Kansas City's Paseo YMCA, the site where the Negro National League was organized on February 13th, 1920. The bobbleheads are officially licensed by the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum and approved by the families when applicable. Each player is individually numbered to only 2,020. This bobblehead is of Raymond "Ray" Brown, a member of the Homestead Grays. Brown was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2006.
Brown was the anchor of the pitching staff that led the Homestead Grays to nine straight Negro National League II pennants (1937-1945) and 10 overall in the league's 16-year history. Until late in his career, Brown was also a strong hitter and would play outfield on days he was not pitching. Like many of his Negro League contemporaries, Brown was college-educated (Wilberforce University), taking advantage of educational opportunities provided by the 104 Historic Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) created after the Civil War. The HBCU campuses often were the spring training grounds for Negro Leagues' teams due to Jim Crow laws prevalent in the south.
Brown was the anchor of the pitching staff that led the Homestead Grays to nine straight Negro National League II pennants (1937-1945) and 10 overall in the league's 16-year history. Until late in his career, Brown was also a strong hitter and would play outfield on days he was not pitching. Like many of his Negro League contemporaries, Brown was college-educated (Wilberforce University), taking advantage of educational opportunities provided by the 104 Historic Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) created after the Civil War. The HBCU campuses often were the spring training grounds for Negro Leagues' teams due to Jim Crow laws prevalent in the south.