Displayed is a cut autograph of Jackie Robinson - an amazing baseball player who rightly deserves, on playing ability alone, his place in the National Baseball Hall of Fame. Because of racial segregation, Robinson did not play Major League baseball until the 1947 season, when he was already 28 years old. He broke into the National League as a blazing star, stole 29 bases to lead the league, batted .297, won Rookie of the Year honors, and helped the Dodgers to the NL pennant. His best season was in 1949, when he was the NL MVP. He led the NL in hitting that season (.342), led in steals (37), and scored 122 runs and had 124 RBIs. Over his ten-year career, all with Brooklyn, Robinson was a regular in the infield at first, second, and third base, and he also played some in left field. Robinson helped the Dodgers to six pennants, and he was on the Brooklyn Dodgers' only World Series Champions, in 1955. Robinson's breaking of the unwritten Major League "Color Line" was a seminal event in American history, and both during and after his playing career, Robinson was an immensely important civil rights advocate. The Robinson autograph is on the blank side of an advertising page, cut to 2.75x4.5". Robinson has neatly signed in pencil. The cut signature has been encapsulated by PSA and certified with an auto grade of NR - MT 8. Jackie Robinson literally changed history, and his autograph will be treasured forever.