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Forest Hill and Calvary Cemetery

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This is a contributing entry for Forest Hill and Calvary Cemetery and only appears as part of that tour.Learn More.

This is the final resting place of Baseball Hall of Fame inductee John Jordan O’Neil, Jr., known as Buck O'Neil throughout his professional career. O'Neil was born 13 November 1911 in Carrabelle, Florida and passed away at the age of 94, on 6 October 2006 in Kansas City, O’Neil. A standout first baseman and then coach in the Negro Leagues from 1938 to 1955. Highlights of his playing career include in four East-West All-Star Games and playing in two Negro World Series, 1942 and 1946. O'Neil also became the first African American coach in the Major Leagues in 1962 when he joined the staff of the Chicago Cubs. His fellow players call O'Neil "Skip" in recognition of his leadership and coaching, as well as his work scouting players. O'Neil is credited with recruiting and supporting more Negro League veterans to the Major Leagues than any other player or coach in history, and he was also one of the founders of Kansas City's Negro League Baseball Museum. O'Neil recruited a veritable rollcall of major leaguers such as George Altman, Gene Baker, Ernie Banks, Willard “Home Run” Brown, J.C. Hartman, Pancho Herrera, Elston Howard, Connie Johnson, Sweet Lou Johnson, Hank Mason, Satchel Paige, Hank Thompson and Bob Thurman, to name a few. In 2021, O'Neil was elected for induction into the Baseball Hall of Fame.


Buck O'Neil Memorial front side

Plant, Sky, Tree, Grass

Buck O'Neil Memorial back side

Sky, Cloud, Plant, Cemetery

Buck and Ora O'Neil headstone

Flower, Plant, Cemetery, Leaf

Buck O'Neil bust at Hall of Famous Missourians

Wood, Sculpture, Art, Smile

Buck O'Neil bust and marker at the Missouri Sports Hall of Fame

Plant, Pedestal, Sculpture, Statue

Buck O'Neil Memorial Bridge, aka Broadway Bridge

Font, Gas, Signage, Sign

Buck O'Neil's red seat at Kauffman Stadium

Motor vehicle, Vehicle, Automotive design, Blue

KC Ride, Buck O'Neil streetcar #22

Train, Vehicle, Rolling stock, Electricity

Bronze statue at Field of Legends (NLBM)

Smile, Sculpture, Fedora, Hat

Buck O'Neil mural at 18th & The Paseo

Sky, Cloud, Art, Graffiti

Buck O'Neil and future President George Bush 1995 in Arlington, TX

Smile, Glasses, Dress shirt, Coat

Ora and Buck O'Neil at Buck's 80th Birthday Celebration

Glasses, Smile, Tie, Event

A longtime local legend, Buck O’Neil became nationally famous when his friend and NLBM co-founder Larry Lester introduced Buck to Lynn Novick, the executive director for Florentine Films, owned by Ken Burns and others. Novick was so impressed with Buck, her son James would later share O’Neil’s middle name of Jordan. The 1994 nine-inning PBS documentary miniseries simply entitled Baseball won the 1995 Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Informational Series. The much talked about “Shadow Ball” segment de-Negrofied the debonair Buck, transforming him into the "Smithsonian" of black baseball. O'Neil gained national prominence and afterwards, became the subject of countless national interviews, including appearances on the Late Show with David Letterman and The Late Late Show with Tom Snyder.

O’Neil has gained many national honors, and there are many local landmarks and tributes for Buck which include a statue in the NLBM’s Field of Legends. In 2010, a mural by artist Alexander Austin was added to the south side of the Buck O’Neil Education and Research Center at 18th and The Paseo. The 25’ x 50’ mural includes O’Neil and three Negro League players in a dugout and seven images of legendary Kansas City Monarchs, chosen by BBQ king Ollie Gates, who later played in the re-integrated majors. These remarkable players include Ernie Banks, Willard Brown, Elston Howard, Buck O’Neil, Satchel Paige, Jackie Robinson and Hank Thompson.

Another O’Neil statue appears at the Kansas City Royals Hall of Fame Museum at Kauffman Stadium, designed by Harry Weber. At Kauffman Stadium is also the Kansas City Royals Legacy Seat, in bright red behind home plate, in Section 127, Seat 9, Row C, to celebrate this Hall of Fame executive. Sculptor E. Spencer Schubert created an O’Neil bust at the Hall of Famous Missourians in Jefferson City, MO, while the Missouri Sports Hall of Fame in Springfield, MO, has a marker and bust in O’Neil’s honor. The former Broadway Bridge is now the John Jordan Buck O’Neil Memorial Bridge. On 12 November 2001, a Kansas City street formerly known as 17th St. Terrace between Paseo and Highland Avenue, directly behind the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum, was renamed John “Buck” O’Neil Way in recognition of his 90th birthday and community contributions. The Kansas City T-Bones retired his number #22 on 26 May 2006. And finally a KC Ride streetcar, #22, honors the Buck O’Neil legacy.

On 7 December 2006, O'Neil was posthumously awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President George W. Bush; the award was presented to his brother, Warren, on his behalf on December 15. He was chosen due to his "excellence and determination both on and off the baseball field," according to the White House news release. On 24 October 2007, O'Neil was posthumously given a Lifetime Achievement Award by the National Baseball Hall of Fame (HOF), eventually named after him. On 5 November 2021, O'Neil was voted into the HOF by the Early Days Committee as an “executive.”

Lester, Larry. Stivers, Wayne. The Negro Leagues Book. Edition 2.0. Volume 2. Kansas City, MO. NoirTech Research, Inc., 2022.

Image Sources(Click to expand)

Jefferson City, MO

Springfield, MO