Greason arrived at the party in the passenger seat of a golf cart. Once there, he was taken on a trip around the bases, with a stop at each one to detail a part of his incredible life story.
At first base, retired U.S. Marine Maj. Gen. J. Michael Myatt spoke about Greason’s military background.
“It is my job to take everyone here back 82 years, to the year 1942,” Myatt said.
“Franklin Roosevelt was President. The world was in the midst of the Second World War, a terrible war that would kill over 70 million people. The United States needed men to fight.”
Greason was one of those men, among the first Black Marines in the United States military. He fought in the Battle of Iwo Jima in World War II and the Korean War. He and the other Black soldiers who trained at Montford Point in North Carolina earned a Congressional Gold Medal in 2012.
Cpl. Ruben Padilla was one of around 20 Marines that were in attendance.
“He’s just a stellar example of what Marines are inside the Marine Corps and what they become when they come out, which is outstanding civilians as well,” Padilla said.
At second base, Greason’s baseball career was highlighted. U.S. Navy veteran Samantha Erickson spoke there, starting her speech in 1948.
“Harry Truman was president. World War II was over. Our country was confident and could focus on fun things, like sports, and baseball was our national pastime,” Erickson said. “As fate would have it, someone in Atlanta saw William Greason throw a curveball.”
By this time, it’s Greason’s rookie season and the Black Barons are playing the Homestead Grays in the Negro Leagues World Series. The Black Barons ended up losing the five-game series, but Greason’s curveball gave the team its only victory in the series.
He went on to play for Charros de Jalisco in Mexico for two years and eventually spent a year in the MLB with the St. Louis Cardinals. He retired from baseball in 1959.
Greason’s time playing for the Black Barons was chronicled in the Road to Rickwood podcast, produced by WWNO and WRKF and distributed by NPR in association with the MLB. Greason was honored with other Negro Leagues players at the league’s MLB at Rickwood Field game between the San Francisco Giants and St. Louis Cardinals in June, and he also threw out the first pitch ahead of the game.