MICKEY MANTLE AND YOGI BERRA

MICKEY MANTLE AND YOGI BERRA 1954-1964 On April 8, 1954, the Yankees came to Richmond. Led by center fielder Mickey Mantle and catcher Yogi Berra, the team was playing an exhibition game against its newly acquired minor-league organization, the Richmond Virginians, at Parker Field on the Boulevard. The “Vees,” making their home debut, were defeated, after a thunderstorm that the Richmond Times-Dispatch said “turned Parker … Continue reading MICKEY MANTLE AND YOGI BERRA

WINSTON CHURCHILL AND DWIGHT EISENHOWER

WINSTON CHURCHILL AND DWIGHT EISENHOWER March 8, 1946 There was a roar of excitement in Richmond as Winston Churchill, the British Prime Minister who led Great Britain in World War II, and General Dwight Eisenhower, supreme Commander of the Allied Forces, descended upon the city. Traveling by motorcade through the packed crowd of flashing cameras and eager citizens, Churchill brought the world’s eyes to Richmond. … Continue reading WINSTON CHURCHILL AND DWIGHT EISENHOWER

AMELIA EARHART

AMELIA EARHART February 2, 1934 The first aviatrix to fly across the Atlantic Ocean in 1928, Amelia Earhart, arrived in Richmond to promote not flying, but women’s fashion design. On the third floor dress department of Thalhimers, then Richmond’s largest department store, Earhart publicized her own dress line that incorporated decorative plane elements, like a seatbelt belt. Earhart also wanted to bring attention to gender … Continue reading AMELIA EARHART

CHARLES LINDBERGH

CHARLES LINDBERGH October 15, 1927 On October 15, 1927, Charles Lindbergh landed The Spirit of St. Louis before a crowd of National Guardsmen, photographers, and thousands of cheering citizens in a field east of Richmond. Only four months earlier, the aviator had completed the first solo non-stop flight across the Atlantic Ocean that electrified the world and made him an instant celebrity. City officials escorted … Continue reading CHARLES LINDBERGH

CALVIN ROBINSON

CALVIN ROBINSON 1922-1926 In 1922, sixteen-year old Calvin Robinson left the small town of Onancock, on Virginia’s Eastern Shore, to join Richmond College’s freshman class. On the college’s new campus at the city’s western edge, this son of a Baptist minister threw himself into collegiate life. Robinson wrote for the Collegian, pledged Sigma Phi Epsilon, presided over the Debating Council, and managed the Spiders baseball … Continue reading CALVIN ROBINSON