This funding will enable the NLBM to provide the latest state-of-the-art technology that will be used to promote diversity, inclusion, and equity through the lens of America's unsung baseball heroes who overcame tremendous social adversity to play baseball. The announcement was made at the NLBM with bank and museum officials alongside Congressman Emanuel Cleaver; Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas; Frank White, Jr., Jackson County Executive; Kathy Nelson, President & CEO, Kansas City Sports Commission and John Sherman, Chairman & CEO Kansas City Royals.
To coincide with the bank's commitment of the new museum, Major League Baseball alumni players David DeJesus, Rajai Davis, and Dexter Fowler will take part in a Bank of America "Play It Forward" baseball clinic on Saturday, May 6 for 50 area youth from the YMCA of Greater Kansas City. The Clinic coincides with the celebration of the winning spirit of the Kansas City Monarchs and is held on the anniversary of Jackie Robinson's first game with the team.
The new state-of-the-art facility will be built adjacent to the Buck O'Neil Education and Research Center (BOERC), which will now be housed in the former Paseo YMCA. That historic building is where Andrew "Rube" Foster established the Negro Leagues in 1920. With help from the anchor grant, the new NLBM, in combination with the BOERC, will create a "Negro Leagues Campus" that will become the gateway into Kansas City's famed Historic 18th & Vine District. This will be a catalyst for economic growth in a vastly underserved, predominantly African American community.
The bank's support will allow the NLBM to expand programming, create dynamic interactive displays, house a gallery to showcase new exhibitions, feature a larger gift shop, and include a more expansive archival and storage space.
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