The Heyday of Willie, Duke, and Mickey
New York City Baseball's Golden Age amid Integration
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Publishing:16th Apr '26
£27.00 was £30.00
This title is due to be published on 16th April, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

This book provides a new perspective on the postwar golden age of New York City baseball. Alongside the Dodgers, Giants, and Yankees and their World Series titles in 1954-56, this book includes a careful examination of the city’s Negro League teams and the impact of integration on New York City baseball and the sport as a whole.
A new perspective on postwar New York City baseball, including the city’s 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 city’s teams, players, and integration of the sport.
Robert Cottrell is a slugger who has hit it out of the park, giving us a book that sets a neglected baseball story in the context of an era of profound political change and social changes. Add team and personal rivalries and you get a compelling story that truly matters. -- Michael D’Antonio, author of Forever Blue: The True Story of Walter O'Malley, Baseball's Most Controversial Owner, and the Dodgers of Brooklyn and Los Angeles
After World War II, New York City became the epicenter of major league baseball's renaissance. Robert Cottrell’s riveting account captures its verve and athletic splendor at a time when Mays, Mantle, and Snyder patrolled centerfield and baseball was still the national pastime. But The Heyday is also about baseball confronting its checkered racial past as the nation struggled to realize its democratic ideals. -- Rob Ruck, professor of sports history at the University of Pittsburgh and author of Tropic of Football: The Long and Perilous Journey of Samoans to the NFL
Cottrell provides an eloquent and insightful account of New York City’s three Major League Baseball teams that dominated the sport between 1947 and 1957. Properly focusing on the accomplishments of the team's great center fielders, the Yankees’ Mickey Mantle, the Giants’ Willie Mays, and the Dodgers’ Duke Snider, the book is a must read for anyone who wants to understand the allure of baseball for fans in the ‘Emerald City’ during one of the sport’s greatest eras. -- David K. Wiggins, author of More than a Game: A History of the African American Experience in Sport
Cottrell entertains readers with a year-by-year look at New York City’s Golden Age of baseball, including fascinating stories of stars, rank-and-file players, and also-rans, penny-pinching owners and executives, team rivalries, and fans' emotional roller-coasters during each season. In this breezily-written but highly informative book, Cottrell reveals how many large-scale changes in the 1950s not only transformed society, but baseball, too. None had as big an influence as the battle for civil rights and racial equality. For some, it may seem like baseball’s age of innocence. But, as Cottrell observes, the Golden Age was a two-edged sword. His book is a must-read for anyone who wants to understand the interlocking fates of baseball and American society. -- Peter Dreier, E.P. Clapp Distinguished Professor of Politics at Occidental College and coauthor of Major League Rebels: Baseball Battles Over Workers’ Rights and American Empire
With a historian's insight and a fan's heart, Robert C. Cottrell reminds us why baseball of the 1950s is not only the story of a great city at a moment in time but of a nation whose national pastime revealed so much about it meant to be an American. -- Michael Shapiro, author of The Last Good Season and Bottom of the Ninth
ISBN: 9798881842574
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
344 pages