The baseball legend Jackie Robinson, who backed efforts to bring African students to the United States, greets the first African Airlift arrivals in New York in September 1959. Robinson later urged presidential candidate Richard M. Nixon to support the 1960 airlifts, appealing to Nixons interest in courting black voters in the upcoming election. Courtesy Library of Congress, Manuscript Division, Jackie Robinson Papers.
CAN'T SEE OBAMA SNR IN THE IMAGES? NOW HERE'S AN INTERESTING FOOTNOTE:
Harry Belafonte, Sidney Poitier, and Jackie Robinson appeal letter, Aug. 24, 1959, box 3, Robinson Papers; Smith, East African Airlifts of 1959, 1960, and 1961, 2543. Barack Obama wrote that his father had been selected by Kenyan leaders and American sponsors to attend a university in the United States, but a list of the students who landed in New York on September 9, 1959, does not contain the name of the elder Obama. Tom Shachtman, working in the African-American Students Foundation (aasf) papers for a book on the airlifts, has found that the elder Obama came in 1959 with support from the aasf but appears to have been routed a different way as he made his way to the University of Hawaii. Barack Obama, Dreams from My Father: A Story of Race and Inheritance (New York, 1995), 9; Eighty-One Kenya Airlift Students Arrived New York Sept. 9th 1959, box 3, Robinson Papers; Tom Shachtman telephone interview by James H. Meriwether, Aug. 19, 2008, notes (confirmed via e-mail by Shachtman) (in James H. Meriwethers possession).
That’s interesting that a date of September 9th is given as the arrival date in 1959. I will have to refind the article about when they left Kenya on September 5th. IIRC it was written as a tribute to Pamela Mboya who was among the students on the first airlift.