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| Jackie Robinson | 
Blog  contributor Donna Shor was interviewed this week in a story by CNN  Senior White House Correspondent Ed Henry on Branch Rickey’s decision to  sign Jackie Robinson for the Brooklyn Dodgers.  Rickey  made the decision in the presence of her father-in-law, Rev. L. Wendell  Fifield, a minister at Plymouth Church of the Pilgrims in Brooklyn  Heights.
Fifield’s wife, June, wrote about it in 1966.  The  story was discovered among her papers by his granddaughter, Donnali  Fifield, who is sorting and cataloging the family’s papers for an  archive.  She had tried to get the story noticed for several years.  Rickey’s  decision had even greater meaning because it had taken place in a  church that was established by the abolitionist Henry Ward Beecher and  was a stop on the Underground Railroad.  “I had no idea that I would find a story that linked my grandfather to a part of U.S. history,” she told CNN.  “But as soon as I read it, I knew it was historically significant.”
Ed Henry, who’d heard about it from Donna Shor a couple of years ago, also recognized its importance.  He  remembered the story and asked Shor to talk about it for the segment,  which included interviews with Rachel Robinson, Branch Rickey III, and  Ken Burns.
CNN White House Producer Jamie Crawford helped put together the segment and wrote a blog about the story: 
Friday  marked the sixty-fourth anniversary of the day Jackie Robinson made his  major league debut with the Brooklyn Dodgers, breaking the color  barrier.
Ken Burns is doing a program on Jackie Robinson that will come out in 2015.
Another  Robinson movie in the works: Robert Redford has recently announced that  he is going to play Rickey in a film about the relationship between the  two men.

