The Heyday of Willie, Duke, and Mickey: New York City Baseball's Golden Age Amid Integration
By (Author) Robert C. Cottrell
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
19th March 2026
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
History of sport
Hardback
288
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
A new perspective on postwar New York City baseball, including the citys Negro League teams
In the golden age of baseball, three Major League Baseball teams in New York City vied for supremacy on the diamond, with the New York Giants, Brooklyn Dodgers, and New York Yankees each winning at least one World Series. Too often overlooked, the Negro Leagues had five teams in the city fighting for primacy in the sport: the Brooklyn Royal Giants, the New York Lincoln Giants, the New York Black Yankees, the New York Cubans, and, albeit very briefly, the Brooklyn Eagles.
In The Heyday of Willie, Duke, and Mickey: New York City Baseball's Golden Age Amid Integration, Robert Cottrell highlights a unique period in history when New York City baseball was at its height of dominance, spanning over a decade in postwar America. Cottrell includes detailed coverage of the three years in succession when the Giants, Dodgers, and Yankees won the World Series in the 1950s, featuring star players Willie Mays, Duke Snider, and Mickey Mantle. He also examines the major Black teams of the era, melding the story of New York City baseball with that of the Negro Leagues, Jackie Robinson and the Great Experiment, and the remarkable Black athletes who braved racism and threats to integrate the game.
New York City baseball flourished in the postwar years, but its era of dominance wound to a close amid struggles to transform playing fields and America itself. The Heyday of Willie, Duke, and Mickey is a fascinating perspective on the citys teams, players, and integration of the sport.
Robert Cottrell was a longtime professor of history and American studies at California State University, Chico. He taught a course for many years on American Popular Culture and offered seminars on baseball and American culture. He is the author of The Best Pitcher in Baseball: The Life of Rube Foster, Negro League Giant; Blackball, the Black Sox, and the Babe: Baseballs Crucial 1920 Season; Two Pioneers: How Hank Greenberg and Jackie Robinson Transformed Baseballand America; and The Year Without a World Series: Major League Baseball and the Road to the 1994 Players Strike.