John Irvin Kennedy (October 12, 1926 – April 27, 1998) was an American professional baseballshortstop. Kennedy was the first African-American player to be signed by and play for the Philadelphia Phillies, the last National League baseball team to support anti-Black segregation. The Phillies had fielded all-White teams through the 1956 season.
Kennedy hit over .300 during the Phillies 1957 spring training's exhibition games. The team initially assigned him to their Schenectady minor league affiliate but without a starting shortstop for opening day, Phillies managerMayo Smith told reporters on March 25, 1957, that "...if the season opened tomorrow, [Kennedy] would be my shortstop."[1] Phillies general managerRoy Hamey told reporters the shortstop job was Kennedy’s. However the Phillies acquired Chico Fernández from the Dodgers before opening day, and named Fernández the starting shortstop.
When Kennedy made his big league debut (April 22, 1957, at Roosevelt Stadium), he became the first black player in Phillies history. The game was exactly ten years to the day after then-Phillies manager Ben Chapman led his players in anti-Black verbal attacks on rookie Jackie Robinson at Brooklyn. Playing against the Brooklyn Dodgers, Kennedy entered the game in the top of the eighth inning as a pinch runner for Solly Hemus, who had doubled, but he did not score. The Dodgers won, 5-1.
Kennedy got into a total of just five games, the last one on May 3, 1957. At the plate, he was 0-for-2, including one strikeout. In his two appearances at shortstop he had one assist, one error, and participated in one double play.
Kennedy played amateur baseball through his 50s and 60s in a men’s 30-and-over baseball league in Jacksonville, Florida. A granite marker was placed on Kennedy’s unmarked grave in Jacksonville in 2008. The Philadelphia Phillies recognized Kennedy's role in the history of the organization in a pre-game ceremony on June 29, 2022.[2]