Wednesday, August 30, 2023
Sunday, August 27, 2023
National tournaments
National Amateur Baseball Association of America
1916-4-24 15 man advisory board to president listed.
National (Amateur) Baseball Federation
1919 Akron Hoover Sweepers https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/Ray-Kolp/
1921 National Acmes
1938 Detroit Altes Lager
1939 Detroit Altes Lager
1940 ACIPCO
1941 ACIPCO
1947 Cleveland Bartunek Clothes
1916-9-17 Minneapolis General Electrics 7, Omaha Armours 3. 6K ATT
(GEs have Fred Chicken)
1918-9-08 Massillon Central Steel 4, Akron General Tires 3. 4K-5K ATT.
1940-9-15 Birmingham News. Box - ACIPCO beat Pittsburgh 10-2. Action pics, ACIPCO team roster with full names. VG.
Tournament all-star team named.
The first national tournament a southern team has won.
8K ATT -6K paid. 23,290 ATT for the tournament's eight days. Tournament held in Birmingham.
1955-9-17 Cleveland J. Schrader Co. 14, Youngstown 3.
1918-1-17 convention - lists officers - organization hopes to establish semi-pro & amateur baseball on sound footing - setting up in the major cities
1918-6-21 vg article attendances of 80K and 90K in Cleveland in 1915 - gives overview of organization
1922-1-22 Sandlot ball wants a commissioner like Landis. Any player who has received money for playing ball will be banned from class A - they are unclean.
"The question is raised at times as to why there are not more Acipco players entering pro ball. The answer lies in the fact that the boys prefer the security of a year-round job at Acipco to playing in some Class B or C loop where their pay probably would not be as much as it would be at Acipco and they are assured of a 12-month job, whereas if they played pro ball, six months pay is all they would get.
And don't think for a minute that there aren't players on this club that couldn't make a go of it if they decided to cast their lot with the pros.
Several of the boys had tempting lures thrust before their eyes not only this year but last season also, but they all returned from Youngstown without having inked any contracts."
1918 Cleveland Standard Parts
c Louis Woerth /
p George Uhle *
1b Jim Delahanty *
3b Sylvester Breen /
lf Frank Delahanty *
1919-1-24 commentary on federation which had very far-reaching goals indeed
"Evils of amateur baseball, such as the pitting of youngsters against seasoned veterans, a thing manifestly unfair, and the importing of star players for the final championships, would all be done away with.
Proper organization of the sandlot game will give better and broader executive managership, proper development of the players themselves and the right kind of interest from the public."
mm 'kay
mm 'kay
1919-5-02 NBF merges with National Amateur Baseball Association
"The time is coming, in my estimation, when sandlot baseball will be entirely a municipal proposition. When that day comes the amateur end of the national game will boom as it has never boomed before.
(The Federation...) has given much thought to the matter of improving the conditions which now exist in a large number of cities where the small boy and his larger brother are exploited as athletes for the financial benefit of some selfish promoter, who does not have the good of the sport or of the athlete at heart.
(The Federation...) has given much thought to the matter of improving the conditions which now exist in a large number of cities where the small boy and his larger brother are exploited as athletes for the financial benefit of some selfish promoter, who does not have the good of the sport or of the athlete at heart.
In some cities, lads who have not passed their twelfth birthday are already professionalized. They have lost their vision of baseball as a means to the betterment of their physical selves, and as a method of recreation, and are wedded to it because it means a half dollar in their pockets each time they play.
It is entirely needless to dilate upon the evils of such a system. It is wrong throughout, and only exists because of the selfishness of older men, who know better, and who should be brought to book by those really concerned about the welfare and advancement of the youngsters."
Again not totally on-board w/ this high & mighty reformism
judge not lest you be judged
segregationists
1919-12-31
strongest in central & middle-west. Goal: promulgation & perpetuation of non-commercialized ball.
strongest in central & middle-west. Goal: promulgation & perpetuation of non-commercialized ball.
Lists the planned sectional competitions (ex. Northwest: Minneapolis, St. Paul, Milwaukee, Duluth, Chicago etc...)
Three classes:
class A: amateur
class AA: industrial
Three classes:
class A: amateur
class AA: industrial
class AAA: semi-pro
"Aiming To Protect Real Amateurs:
The officers of the NBF are much concerned about the exploitation of amateur ball players by individuals and organizations for financial gain. For some time past it has been very hard to find a simon-pure amateur ball player, except among the younger lads. The more skilled players demanded & received sums of money and other rewards for their services as ball players. Teams playing in inclosed parks participated in the division of the net gate receipts, and many firms and individuals backing clubs have paid players on the said clubs. The federation, while recognizing that the more skilled players are entitled to whatever they can secure for their skill as ball players, insists that these kind of players be segregated from those who play the game for the love of the sport, and that more attention be paid to the young boys just taking up the game."
Sounds sort of socialist-utopian -
Pictures:
1919-9-07 Ambridge Our Boys, Pittsburg class A champions; Favorite Knit Team, Cleveland class A champions; fair rooters accompanying Cleveland
Steve Swetonic w/ Ambridge
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brookside_Stadium drew 115K one game in 1915
1930-9-24 5th round
American Baseball Congress' "Amateur world series"
begin:
1935
1937 St. Paul J.J. Kohns
1941
Reider, John-Jack 1937 St. Paul J.J. Kohns - born in Germany
1937-9-28 (Battle Creek) 1st team & second team all stars, + honorable mentions.
1939-9-22 Owatonna Aces arrived today at 4:00 in the morning. Had 14-2 record in league competition. Chattanooga, semi-finalists last year, have only two changes in roster from last year. A few full names listed. Have 34-17 record.
Fresno St. Alphonse CYO has a priest player-manager.
Each qualifying team is permitted to pick three batterymen from own league.
Bancroft has seven players under 21.
Analysis of Battle Creek United Steel and Wire.
1939-9-24 (p.1) Owatonna boys are proud of their butter
1941-8-19 Rosters for New England regional qualifier, with full names. Leroy Best with Gilbert & Barker.
1937-9-20 VG boxes for all games
1948-9-18 Birmingham. ACIPCO-Hammond box. Lines for other games. @ Battle Creek.
National Baseball Congress
list of champions & MVPs
1935
1938
1938-8-15 B Commentary. Claude Gilchrist, 1937 tournament MVP, has stolen 54 bases this year. Hugh Willingham drove in at least two runs each game for 24 consecutive games.
1938-8-16 B Commentary. Dumont profile.
1938-8-28 E Plenty of pics + what players do outside of baseball.
1938-8-28 Atlanta. Box for Buford Bona Allens' 5-4 win over Enid for the national championship. Pic of Byron Speece + another of cheering Buford fans - including the mayor.
1939
1939-8-06 Eagle. Some previewing. Meh.
1939-8-07 Eagle.
Some basic facts about tournament. Duration: 8-11 to 8-23. Expected attendance: 110K. 32 team bracket from the winners of 47 state tournaments.
Baton Rouge Esson will play (alleged.)
18 teams have been certified with 14 to go.
1939-8-07 Beacon.
Some details about LA Shells and Silverton Red Sox. Silverton Red Sox are 18-1, LA Shells are 24-8. Some commentary on players.
1939-8-08 Eagle. Silverton team pic. The Silverton team represents lumber mills owned by Tom Yawkey.
Civics are adding five new players (tho one of them, Claude Willoughby, will end pitching for Chanute)
1939-8-08 Beacon. Fairmount Collegians team pic.
Brief previews of some of the teams. Worcester Nortons have been organized for fifteen years; have 23-5 record. Four with experience in IL and EL.
1939-8-09 Eagle
Golden Coors beat Pueblo Peppers 10-3 to qualify.
Denver Post tournament prizes: Enid Champlin Refiners, $5,629.48; Buford Bonna Allen, $4,222.11; Duncan Halliburton Cementers and Miami Ethiopian Clowns, $1,407.37 each; Flagstaff AZ, $100; Leoti, KS and Ogallala NE, $50 each.
"It's going to be about as easy stopping Enid as fanning Foxx with a tennis ball, but it might be done."
Civics lost their double play combination and winning pitcher from state-winning team.
Trenton team is composed entirely of prison guards.
1939-8-09 Beacon. Four teams certified for tournament; three of them, the Manchester NH McElwains, the Ninety-Six club of SC, and the Indianapolis Firemen, will not play.
1939-8-10 Eagle. Last minute plans. Mt Pleasant MI enter tournament.
Teams are better backed than in 1935.
Pic: Civics' new double-play partners
1939-8-10 Beacon. Pics of players groggy after travel.
Chanute will fill a vacancy; approved by Sisler.
Pic of new Civics Brickell and Lang.
Broadview Hotel is official HQ of tournament.
Manchester NH is team coming from furthest away (they never came)
1939-8-11 Eagle.
Pic: Red Clark(e), Civic Theater pitcher.
Pic: Doc Regele, umpire from Salem OR.
George Sisler busy and excited.
LA Shells have 27-8 record, and ex-Coast League pitchers.
1939-8-11 Beacon.
Pic: Civics' manager and coach.
Pic: Michigan Roosevelt Oilers
Commentary.
1939-8-12 p.1 - Dixie belle throws out first pitch - actually makes it over home plate. 9K ATT - biggest opening day crowd.
1939-8-12 Eagle. LA Shells 9, Civics 8.
Silverton 5, Golden Coors 3.
Action pic.
1939-8-12 Beacon. Fairmount has won 11 straight games.
Nat tournament is doing much for southern Kansas.
1939-8-13 Eagle
Pic: Enid infield
Pic: Brickell
"Pairing a team with Enid is just like matching someone to fight Joe Louis for a ham sandwich a cup of coffee." But Gus Hoffman, sponsor of the Mt. Pleasant Cubs, is unafraid.
1939-8-13 Eagle. Buford 18, Fairmount ND 2. (Combined no-hitter.)
Chanute 12, Palmer House 4.
Claude Willoughby of Chanute had gone 35 innings w/o ER before 7th.
Action pic.
Lauri Myllykangas, p-cap of Worcester. Former IL.
Shirts will be given by Spines to every player who hits over-fence homer during tournament.
Combined crowds of today - afternoon and evening - are supposed to total 15,000.
1939-8-14 Eagle (p.2)
Pic: Cecil Smith, Duncan ss, crossing plate after homer.
Pic: Major league scouts watching
Indianapolis police officers take Golden Coors pitcher into custody. He was wanted for parole violation.
1939-8-14 Eagle. Colo. Coors 3, Fairmont ND Collegians 2.
Worcester 14, Mt. Pleasant MI Roosevelts 2.
Mt Pleasant TX 8, Enid 3.
Duncan 11, Wichita All Steel 1.
Pic: Cecil Smith scores one of his four runs for Duncan
Youth will meet age today as Silverton faces Cementers.
1939-8-14 Beacon. Terrell Traweek of Mt Pleasant TX greeted at plate after homer.
Misplaced chivalry in foul ball incident.
Mt Pleasant Cubs are dark horses making good.
Duncan, Enid, Buford, and Civics were seen as teams to beat going into tournament.
1939-8-15 Eagle. Vandergrift 8, Branson 3.
Wichita All Steel 5, Chicago Palmer House 3.
About Mt Pleasant uniforms. Colorful is the word. A few of the teams are slow in arriving and may have to default such as Rhode Island's champions, who won their tourney only 8-13.
1939-8-15 Beacon. Previews.
George Sisler announces list of seven state commissioners for 1940.
When a game is being played the ball players all clear out from the hotel lobby to watch. They practice every day, play every other day, and still can't keep away from the park.
Claude Willoughby talks about why he is still successful.
1939-8-16 Eagle. Last two nights have been rained out, but prize money is still higher than at corresponding time last year.
Mount Pleasant's satin uniforms are causing a stir.
1939-8-16 Beacon. Lots of commentary, and vg.
1939-8-17 Eagle. Duncan 6, Silverton 0.
Trenton 7, Slater 2. 16K
Wichita Civics 7, Branson MO 2.
Enid 2, Mt Pleasant MI 1.
Struthers 5, Phoenix 3.
Four injuries were suffered at yesterday's baseball in four different ways.
Mt. Pleasant MI has just two players with any pro experience. Enid battery has 30 years of pro ball between the two of them (and 76 years of living.)
Commentary. LA manager = Pete Sanchez.
1939-8-17 Beacon.
Pic of Phil Weinert and Lefty Nix, Buford pitchers.
Pics: Charles Derrington, LA Shells lf. Maurice Harris, Buford. (w/ profiles)
Pic of argument at plate. Jack Mealey, 38-year-old Enid catcher, tossed for using foul language.
Buford has 80-10 record this year. All their players have been in big leagues.
Jesse Collyer, umpire, is instructor at Sing Sing. Tells of baseball there.
1939-8-18 Eagle. Buford Bona Allens 11, LA Shells 0.
Silverton 11, Slater SC 2. Slater made ten errors.
Rome GA 8, Sardis GA 1.
Worcester 10, Vandergrift 5. (line only)
Commentary, and plenty of it. Melton is on Cardinals suspended list.
Upcoming games listed.
1939-8-18 Beacon.
Pic: Duncan infield.
Pic: Gus Hoffman, Mt Pleasant cf, helped off field by Johnnie Hill after ankle injury.
Standings listed.
Buford pitchers have allowed one hit in two games.
1939-8-19 Eagle. 4K ATT. Mt. Pleasant 3, Chanute 2.
Buford 10, Trenton 2. (line only)
LA Shells 5, Sardis GA 0.
Struthers described as Slovakian.
Buford team has worked out dissent which plagued them at Denver.
1939-8-19 Beacon. Rome has won 27 of last 32 games.
Commentary. Claude Willoughby had given up just 2 earned runs in 43 innings - until last night.
1939-8-20 Eagle. Duncan 9, Rome 1.
Lots of pics.
Pic of Frank Melton and Phil Weinert, Buford's pitching hopes.
Plenty of commentary, some about Frank Melton. Iron man.
1939-8-20 Eagle. Action shot - play at the plate.
Chanute 6, Phoenix Thunderbirds 4.
Mt. Pleasant 10, Struthers 1.
Tourney standings listed.
1939-8-21 Eagle. Enid 3, Vandergrift PA Carnegie Steel 0.
Silverton 6, Wichita All-Steel 0.
Trenton 9, Struthers OH 1.
Mt. Pleasant 1, Buford 0.
Chanute 5, Rome Tibize GA 0. 2K ATT.
Pic of argument at plate.
There was the possibility of a protest of Buford's pitchers Melton and Weinert, but players decided they wanted to play. Melton's situation explained. Is not an outlaw nor ineligible.
Preview.
5th round pairings listed.
1939-8-21 Beacon. Pic: Mt. Pleasant catcher Keith Clark congratulates pitcher Vance Cauble.
Pic: Johnnie Hill, MT Pleasant 1b.
Pic: Balsavich, slick-fielding first baseman for Worcester.
Commentary.
1939-8-22 Eagle. Golden Coors 3, Wichita Civics 2. 13 innings. 2.5K ATT.
Red Scourge of Duncan 15, Worcester Nortons 3.
There were high scores in Denver tournament but low scores here. (Mostly.)
Lefty Cauble has plenty of pro experience.
Houston tournament starts late this week.
1939-8-22 Beacon.
Team averages listed. Previews. Commentary.
1939-8-23 Eagle. Enid 15, LA Shells 3.
Silverton 5, Chanute KS 1.
Mt. Pleasant Cubs are very popular - most popular Texas club to play in Wichita since Cisco Kittens.
1939-9-23 Beacon.
Pic: Duncan pitching staff.
Pic of umpires - they wear striped suits.
Pic: Keith Clark, c-MG of Mt. Pleasant
Letter from guy saying that semi-pro is better than amateur - aboveboard - talks of Ban Johnson Leagues in Kansas City - complains that KC papers give no coverage to NBC.
Lots of commentary - interesting stuff - notes variety of team sponsors.
1939-8-24 Eagle. Duncan 2, Mt. Pleasant 1. 11K ATT.
Buford GA 7, Worcester Norton Abrasives 2.
Golden Coors 3, Trenton NJ Prison Guards 2.
Blurry action pic from night game.
9.2K fans went through paid turnstiles last night, not counting 1K knot hole gang, + officials. players' wives, etc. 11K altogether - biggest sports crowd in Wichita history.
Commentary.
Buford Bona Allens finished 2nd in 1936, 2nd in 1937, and 1st in 1938.
Tomorrow's games will be at 8 PM and 10 PM. Previews.
p.1 Pic of Otto "Tarzan" Utt, 250-pound Duncan catcher whose two-run homer beat Mt. Pleasant.
1939-8-24 Beacon. Game previews.
Pic: Johnson Brothers, Moose and Andy, of Buford.
Les Munns and Abe White, Buford pitchers. Munns is former BRO.
1939-8-25 Eagle. Silverton 6, Buford GA 0. 2.5K ATT.
Mt. Pleasant 2, Golden, CO Coors 0.
Silverton has best young team. Roy Helser has won 20 games without a defeat this year. Is the oldest player on the team besides the manager.
Cartoon of man speaking to fireman about to save him: "Could you wait about five minutes please - I wanna listen to this last inning of the Mt. Pleasant game?"
Duncan-Enid preview. Both are former nat. champs.
1939-8-25 Beacon. Enid team pic.
Pic: Chody and Pruitt, Duncan pitchers.
Pic: Abe Miller, Mt. Pleasant pitcher.
Profile of John Henry Hill.
1939-8-26 Eagle. Duncan 5, Enid Champlins 3. p.1 6K ATT. Enid had beaten Duncan 8 out of 9 games this year, including beating them 16-10 in Denver tournament.
Commentary.
Pic: Doc Graves, Duncan right fielder.
1939-8-27 Eagle.
Duncan has retained only four players from nat. champion 1936 squad. All-new pitching staff.
Frank Isbell says umpires need to work out ground rules (if only they had.)
Pic: Roy Helser, MVP.
Mount Pleasant Cubs infield.
1939-8-27 Eagle. Mt. Pleasant 2, Silverton 0. 7K ATT. Biggest Saturday crowd in tournament history.
Tournament youngsters' all-star team named.
Pic: Duncan Halliburton Cementers outfield.
Pic: Virgil and Claude Gilchrist of Enid. George Hall. McConnell.
1939-8-28 Eagle - p.1. Pic of riot. 11,500 ATT.
1939-8-28 (Eagle) Duncan 5, Mt. Pleasant 2. Box. Riot over umpire ruling - explained.
Total prize money of $15,027.30 given to teams, including $2,925.46 for mileage. 1st place, Duncan Cementers, got $5,000 +119.46 mileage, plus all-expenses paid trip to Puerto Rico.
The other nine prize winners received a total of $6,982.26.
Crowd last night was $5,000.
Pic of debris around home plate.
Player awards:
Best hitter: Bruce Sloan, Duncan
Best pitcher: R. Helser, Silverton
Best player: J. Morrow, Mt. Pleasant, in Enid game
Best dressed club: Rome, GA
Most popular player: Johnny Hill, Mt. Pleasant
1939-8-28 (Beacon) Pic of riot. Commentary on controversial decision.
Pic of Ed Lowell, 1b-MG of Halliburton Cementers.
Pic of Halliburton and Mt. Pleasant managers shaking hands.
Pic of John Henry Hill, Mt. Pleasant Cubs 1b, receiving Eagle trophy for most popular player.
Cementers will meet San Juan, PR, for championship of the Americas.
1939-7-12 Erle P. Halliburton fined $13K for sailing his $1.6M yacht where he oughtn't to have.
1941-6-01 eccentric innovations of Ray Dumont, the NBC pres.
1943
1943-8-18 Enid Airs with Cot Deal & Monty Basgall - Portland Firefighters with Barney Koch
1943-9-12 "8K to 12K ATT in almost every game" - woman arbiter hired for publicity purposes - calls only one play - Portland Firemen finished 7th
1943
1943-8-18 Enid Airs with Cot Deal & Monty Basgall - Portland Firefighters with Barney Koch
1943-9-12 "8K to 12K ATT in almost every game" - woman arbiter hired for publicity purposes - calls only one play - Portland Firemen finished 7th
1946
1947
1951
1954
1955
1955-8-31 standings, boxes etc.
"During the Korean War, an Alpine, Texas
team paid Brooklyn Dodgers pitcher Johnny Podres, then in
the United States Navy, $1000 a game and $100 a strikeout.
Podres made $2200 in one game ," (p.2/9)
Virgil Cory of
the Wichita Eagle wrote,
"A national just wasn't possible. The idea had
been toyed with by promoters in New York,
Chicago, San Francisco and other centers of
population for years and had been discarded for
several reasons. Too much expense, failure to
get genuine representation of teams from coast to
coast, and an utter lack of a central governing
organization were chief drawbacks in staging a
national tournament." - (/15)
"Dumont
promised Paige $1,000 to bring his Bismarck, North Dakota
"colored" team to the tournament in Wichita." /16
"With Paige's entry set, Dumont enlisted more teams of color. An American Indian team from Wewoka, Oklahoma and a Japanese-American club from Stockton, California accepted invitations from Dumont. Four other teams of African Americans entered the tournament : the Texas Centennials of Dallas, Texas, the Ft . Scott Blackhawks of Kansas, the Memphis Red Sox of the Negro National League; and the Monroe (Louisiana) Monarchs. 13 Dumont filled out the tournament brackets with an eclectic group of teams from around the United States: Gadsden, Alabama ; Jonesboro (Arkansas) Giants; Shawnee (Oklahoma ) Athletics; Poplar Bluff, Missouri; Union Circulation Co. of New York; Halliburton Cementers of Duncan, Oklahoma; Lompee, Cali fornia; Phoenix, Arizona; Byron, Nebraska; Holy Name of New Orleans; Lorraine, Texas; Blue Coals of Buffalo, New York; the Eason Oilers of Oklahoma; Chicago Sheridans; the Ford V-8's of Omaha, Nebraska ; Oceanside, California; Jones Stores of Kansas City, Missouri; Cleveland Mills of Shelby, North Carolina; Stanzal Brothers of Waukegan, Illinois ; ' ~ 9 Shawnee, Oklahoma; Patterson, New Jersey; the Wichita Wings; the Arkansas City (Kansas) Dubbs; and a Kansas All10 Star team. In all, 32 teams from 24 states participated in the inaugural National Semipro Baseball tournament." /17-18
"Wichita Eagle sportswriter Pete Lightner wrote: By Sunday, teams will be arriving for the national semi-pro tourney. Some of the teams have booked games en route to help absorb the expense. It takes plenty of money to get those teams here. The tournament headquarters estimate that each team will spend at least a thousand and in some cases considerably more to get here and live while here." /18
"The tournament finished with over 50,000 fans attending over a t wo-and-a-half week span . Hap Dumont declared it a rousing financial success, making money even after paying Satchel Paige his $1 ,000 " salary."" 11/19
12-13 supported by Landis and Spink of TSN
"All- black teams would be accepted in future years, but that would be up to individual member states that were part of the National Baseball Congress to decide. From 1936 on, the wi nners of the state or regional tournaments were granted entry into the national tournament, with Hap Dumont and his associates picking and choosing teams to round out the field." /21-22
"The 1936 tournament saw Lawrence stadium expand to hold 20,000 fans . Those fans were charged anywhere from forty cents to $1 . 10 to watch the games. Ten teams eventually divided the prize money of $14,617.45. Fans of teams such as the Duncan, (OK) Halliburton Cementers were even able to listen to the games on the radio." /22
"With Paige's entry set, Dumont enlisted more teams of color. An American Indian team from Wewoka, Oklahoma and a Japanese-American club from Stockton, California accepted invitations from Dumont. Four other teams of African Americans entered the tournament : the Texas Centennials of Dallas, Texas, the Ft . Scott Blackhawks of Kansas, the Memphis Red Sox of the Negro National League; and the Monroe (Louisiana) Monarchs. 13 Dumont filled out the tournament brackets with an eclectic group of teams from around the United States: Gadsden, Alabama ; Jonesboro (Arkansas) Giants; Shawnee (Oklahoma ) Athletics; Poplar Bluff, Missouri; Union Circulation Co. of New York; Halliburton Cementers of Duncan, Oklahoma; Lompee, Cali fornia; Phoenix, Arizona; Byron, Nebraska; Holy Name of New Orleans; Lorraine, Texas; Blue Coals of Buffalo, New York; the Eason Oilers of Oklahoma; Chicago Sheridans; the Ford V-8's of Omaha, Nebraska ; Oceanside, California; Jones Stores of Kansas City, Missouri; Cleveland Mills of Shelby, North Carolina; Stanzal Brothers of Waukegan, Illinois ; ' ~ 9 Shawnee, Oklahoma; Patterson, New Jersey; the Wichita Wings; the Arkansas City (Kansas) Dubbs; and a Kansas All10 Star team. In all, 32 teams from 24 states participated in the inaugural National Semipro Baseball tournament." /17-18
"Wichita Eagle sportswriter Pete Lightner wrote: By Sunday, teams will be arriving for the national semi-pro tourney. Some of the teams have booked games en route to help absorb the expense. It takes plenty of money to get those teams here. The tournament headquarters estimate that each team will spend at least a thousand and in some cases considerably more to get here and live while here." /18
"The tournament finished with over 50,000 fans attending over a t wo-and-a-half week span . Hap Dumont declared it a rousing financial success, making money even after paying Satchel Paige his $1 ,000 " salary."" 11/19
12-13 supported by Landis and Spink of TSN
"All- black teams would be accepted in future years, but that would be up to individual member states that were part of the National Baseball Congress to decide. From 1936 on, the wi nners of the state or regional tournaments were granted entry into the national tournament, with Hap Dumont and his associates picking and choosing teams to round out the field." /21-22
"The 1936 tournament saw Lawrence stadium expand to hold 20,000 fans . Those fans were charged anywhere from forty cents to $1 . 10 to watch the games. Ten teams eventually divided the prize money of $14,617.45. Fans of teams such as the Duncan, (OK) Halliburton Cementers were even able to listen to the games on the radio." /22
Tightens eligibility standards /22
"The 1938 tournament incorporated almost eighty percent of the teams from industrial firms and not one of them was integrated." /23-24
"Originally, Dumont and his advisors made it extremely 22 difficult for military teams to participate in the NBC tournament. Teams would have to qualify in numerous district games, which service clubs found difficult to attend due to their military obligations. Special Services Captain Leroy Mounday of Fort Riley, Kansas, who had one o f the better military teams in the Midwest, asked the NBC hierarchy to amend the rules that better allowed the service clubs to participate in the NBC tournament. Mounday recommended that they be exempted from district qualifying and that professionals players be allowed to play (which the NBC banned from competition up until this point), permitted them to play at the site closest to their state tournaments, and gave them flexibility in scheduling games . Dumont acquiesced to Mounday's recommendations and granted the service clubs permission to play in the 1942 NBC tournament." /30-31
"Competition for the average citizen's dollar was at a premium during the war years, and Dumont knew that he had to make his tournament and program more attractive than other activities. In fact, the American Baseball Congress, a rival organization, decided to suspend operations for the duration of the war. As a result, the ABC never again was able to achieve the popularity and success of the National Baseball Congress ." /33-34
Dumont's innovations, good and bad /33-40
"Wichita Eagle columnist Pete Lightner wr ote that "the early national tournament drew around $19,000, or not so much as a present state tourney. Quite a boost , and prexy Dumont expects the national to go up a r ound $36,000 or more (in 1945), twice as high as what his first one grossed." /41-42
:By the tenth anniversary of the tournament in 1945, Dumont had lined up an international semi-pro tournament." /42
- invited Japan to play in international tournament in 1945 - PR blunder /43
"Whoever wants to know the heart and soul and mind of America had better lear n baseball, the rules and r ealities of the game-and do it by watching first some high school or small-town teams." Historian Jacque Barzun in God's Country and Mine: A Declaration of Love Spiced with a Few Harsh Words - /50
"An exhibition game in September 1950 between that year's National Baseball Congress champions, the Ft. Wayne , I ndi ana Capeharts against a Japanese semi-professional team from Osaka named the All- 44 Kanebo club was the first stage in Dumont's plan to promote his brand of baseball overseas." /51-52
"The five game series ended up drawing 317,000 Japanese fans and, if Cookson is to be believed, performed perhaps one of the greatest Trojan horse maneuvers in history" /53
"In 1954, Dumont decreed that camp teams could no longer play as units in the National Baseball Congress 46 tournament . Billy Martin, who would go on to play second base for the New York Yankees and manage numerous Major League Baseball teams, said, "As Whitey Herzog will tell you, Hap Dumont made it tough on service players in 1954 by not letting camp teams play as units, but we moonlighted, like I did from Camp Carson, Colorado with Goodland, Kansas. Nice people, nice town, even if we couldn't beat Herzog's guys from Springfield, Missouri." /53-54
"The 1938 tournament incorporated almost eighty percent of the teams from industrial firms and not one of them was integrated." /23-24
"Originally, Dumont and his advisors made it extremely 22 difficult for military teams to participate in the NBC tournament. Teams would have to qualify in numerous district games, which service clubs found difficult to attend due to their military obligations. Special Services Captain Leroy Mounday of Fort Riley, Kansas, who had one o f the better military teams in the Midwest, asked the NBC hierarchy to amend the rules that better allowed the service clubs to participate in the NBC tournament. Mounday recommended that they be exempted from district qualifying and that professionals players be allowed to play (which the NBC banned from competition up until this point), permitted them to play at the site closest to their state tournaments, and gave them flexibility in scheduling games . Dumont acquiesced to Mounday's recommendations and granted the service clubs permission to play in the 1942 NBC tournament." /30-31
"Competition for the average citizen's dollar was at a premium during the war years, and Dumont knew that he had to make his tournament and program more attractive than other activities. In fact, the American Baseball Congress, a rival organization, decided to suspend operations for the duration of the war. As a result, the ABC never again was able to achieve the popularity and success of the National Baseball Congress ." /33-34
Dumont's innovations, good and bad /33-40
"Wichita Eagle columnist Pete Lightner wr ote that "the early national tournament drew around $19,000, or not so much as a present state tourney. Quite a boost , and prexy Dumont expects the national to go up a r ound $36,000 or more (in 1945), twice as high as what his first one grossed." /41-42
:By the tenth anniversary of the tournament in 1945, Dumont had lined up an international semi-pro tournament." /42
- invited Japan to play in international tournament in 1945 - PR blunder /43
"Whoever wants to know the heart and soul and mind of America had better lear n baseball, the rules and r ealities of the game-and do it by watching first some high school or small-town teams." Historian Jacque Barzun in God's Country and Mine: A Declaration of Love Spiced with a Few Harsh Words - /50
"An exhibition game in September 1950 between that year's National Baseball Congress champions, the Ft. Wayne , I ndi ana Capeharts against a Japanese semi-professional team from Osaka named the All- 44 Kanebo club was the first stage in Dumont's plan to promote his brand of baseball overseas." /51-52
"The five game series ended up drawing 317,000 Japanese fans and, if Cookson is to be believed, performed perhaps one of the greatest Trojan horse maneuvers in history" /53
"In 1954, Dumont decreed that camp teams could no longer play as units in the National Baseball Congress 46 tournament . Billy Martin, who would go on to play second base for the New York Yankees and manage numerous Major League Baseball teams, said, "As Whitey Herzog will tell you, Hap Dumont made it tough on service players in 1954 by not letting camp teams play as units, but we moonlighted, like I did from Camp Carson, Colorado with Goodland, Kansas. Nice people, nice town, even if we couldn't beat Herzog's guys from Springfield, Missouri." /53-54
"The 1951 National Baseball Congress state tournaments
were ones in which eighty percent of the participating
teams represented towns of 5,000 people or fewer . These
teams, for the most part, were munic i pally owned
franchises. The remaining twenty percent were s p lit
between industry-sponsored teams and the teams from
military installations. 4 The 1952 NBC tournament saw the
last hurrah for military service teams, as fourteen out of
the thirty-four teams were from military posts. 5 The Fort
Leonard wood players, representing Springfield, Missouri ,
managed by Whitey Herzog, could not even make it to the
finals in Wichita in time to play in the tournament due to
their participation in the All-Service baseball tournament
in Denver, Colorado." /54
"Johnny Braden, the general manager of the employee relations department at General Electric, headed up the Fort Wayne baseball club. The G.E. plant supported Braden and his dream of putting together a stellar baseball team, by compensating each player with $600 extra dollars. 8 During Ft Wayne's incredible run, Braden used sixty-two different players, onl y seventeen of whom were on more than one championship team . Fort Wayne was such an established semi- pro town that when the Pittsburgh Pirates tried to launch a professional farm club chere in 1948, the team folded wi thin a few years." /55-56
fn: "General Electric sponsored the team for several years and then they decided to part ways with Johnny Braden. Braden, though did not have any trouble finding sponsors: the 1950 team was called the Capeharts and the 1956 title squad was known as the Dairymen. The players were still employed at the General Electric plant."
"Johnny Braden, the general manager of the employee relations department at General Electric, headed up the Fort Wayne baseball club. The G.E. plant supported Braden and his dream of putting together a stellar baseball team, by compensating each player with $600 extra dollars. 8 During Ft Wayne's incredible run, Braden used sixty-two different players, onl y seventeen of whom were on more than one championship team . Fort Wayne was such an established semi- pro town that when the Pittsburgh Pirates tried to launch a professional farm club chere in 1948, the team folded wi thin a few years." /55-56
fn: "General Electric sponsored the team for several years and then they decided to part ways with Johnny Braden. Braden, though did not have any trouble finding sponsors: the 1950 team was called the Capeharts and the 1956 title squad was known as the Dairymen. The players were still employed at the General Electric plant."
"A West Texas millionaire named
Herbert L . Kokernot owned one such team, the Alpine City,
Te x as, Cowboys . Koker not threw money at accomplished
baseball players, such as Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher
Johnny Podres, and lured them to play in a ballpark that
was reminiscent of some professional baseball facilities. " /56-57
College players introduced in 1960s, quickly became big part of tournament /70
Alaska /71
Daryl Spencer during 1960s: ""Twenty years ago it seemed like every town in America had a minor league team. Everyday kids were getting released and coming back home to play semipro ball. Nowadays you don't have but a handful of minor leagues, and when a kid does get released, it seems like he always quits." /72
Boulder Collegians find recruitment easy - lots of fut. pros /73
"Dumont could not control fate, as some of the men who had influenced him and the early success of the NBC tournament passed away during the sixties. Pete Lightner died in a private plane crash in the early summer of 1960. Lightner was returning from an assignment for the Wichita Eagle, for which he had served as the sports editor for well over thirty years, when the accident occurred. When Lightner passed away the coverage of the NBC tournament in the Wichita Eagle, while still abundant, lacked the personal touch that Dumont's dear friend brought to it." /76
"At the end of the 1970s, the National Baseball Congress changed ownership hands again. Joe Ryan, the president of the American Association since 1972, acquired the NBC tournament along with a Miami attorney, Ron Fine. Ryan said at the time, "I not only respect Ray Dumont as a promoter and a person and Wichita as the traditional site of the tournament. But I also knew that with the college fountainhead of talent, the NBC was like a pretty good minor league . Basically, Class A and some teams even stronger. " 13 Ryan kept the NBC tournament in Wichita at a time when it seemed destined to ride off to greener pastures in another city." /90
Considered moving tournament to different place; Milwaukee, perhaps. (May have only been for publicity.) /58
Pushback on proposed legalized gambling /61
College players introduced in 1960s, quickly became big part of tournament /70
Alaska /71
Daryl Spencer during 1960s: ""Twenty years ago it seemed like every town in America had a minor league team. Everyday kids were getting released and coming back home to play semipro ball. Nowadays you don't have but a handful of minor leagues, and when a kid does get released, it seems like he always quits." /72
Boulder Collegians find recruitment easy - lots of fut. pros /73
"Dumont could not control fate, as some of the men who had influenced him and the early success of the NBC tournament passed away during the sixties. Pete Lightner died in a private plane crash in the early summer of 1960. Lightner was returning from an assignment for the Wichita Eagle, for which he had served as the sports editor for well over thirty years, when the accident occurred. When Lightner passed away the coverage of the NBC tournament in the Wichita Eagle, while still abundant, lacked the personal touch that Dumont's dear friend brought to it." /76
"At the end of the 1970s, the National Baseball Congress changed ownership hands again. Joe Ryan, the president of the American Association since 1972, acquired the NBC tournament along with a Miami attorney, Ron Fine. Ryan said at the time, "I not only respect Ray Dumont as a promoter and a person and Wichita as the traditional site of the tournament. But I also knew that with the college fountainhead of talent, the NBC was like a pretty good minor league . Basically, Class A and some teams even stronger. " 13 Ryan kept the NBC tournament in Wichita at a time when it seemed destined to ride off to greener pastures in another city." /90
Considered moving tournament to different place; Milwaukee, perhaps. (May have only been for publicity.) /58
Pushback on proposed legalized gambling /61
Sunday, August 20, 2023
Cubans in baseball
Saturday, August 19, 2023
Friday, August 18, 2023
1907 Honolulu League notes
Friday, August 4, 2023
OH KY IN semi-pro
1924-6-14 Indiana Cardinals with Al Leake and spit-baller Stoneking
1927-12-05 Akron General Tires shall play no more
OH KY IN PA IL MI WV leagues
Central League
1926 Ludlow & G.-H. Armco 8-9 standings 10 teams in league
1927 Times-Star
1926-4-10 Opening day is tomorrow. Bob Bescher, former CIN stolen base star, will play for Springfield. Ludlow were 1925 champs.
1926-11-10 clubs returning for next year - league made $40 profit
1926-5-31 Cincinnati Enquirer. 3K ATT.
Viox, Jim 1927 Ludlow
1927-8-21 Wee Willie Gutzweiler, diminutive portsider & one of top pitchers in league
lost to MLB Jim Beckman 1-0
Larry Jacobus
1928-2-08 *loses right eye* relied mostly on spitball
https://www.newspapers.com/search/?date=1926&keyword=%22central+baseball+league%22
Indiana-Ohio League (D) (BR says Ohio-Indiana but incorrect)
Indiana-Ohio League (D) (BR says Ohio-Indiana but incorrect)
1907 BR (No info)
1908 BR (Stats)
1907-7-15 (Richmond IN) Portland manager Lewis Hunt and Richmond manager Jessup have been working to form league.
1907-7-20 Richmond. Meeting of managers. "Mr. Kling stated that he thought league ball would increase the gate receipts in every town from thirty to forty per cent and all the managers agreed with him."
Box for Richmond-Van Wert Friday game with an attendance of 100.
1907-8-17 (Indianapolis) Lewis Hunt has allowed two hits in 28 innings - eight in 54 innings. Threw 19 straight hitless innings.
1907-11-22 Richmond. League has balance of $80. Shows umpire expenses. Lists how much each time contributed.
1932 Dayton Marcos
1934 Richmond Lincos
1939
1940
1941
1942 Middletown Armcos
Bloebaum, Buddy in one pro year hit .281 in MSVL at 29 (1932) 1942 Middletown Armcos
Bass, Dick 1937 Richmond Kautskys post-season
Mackiewicz, Felix 1942 Lafayette Red Sox
1935-8-06 first names given for Indianapolis Sterlings - Russ Paugh is formerly of the Indiana University, and had a 20-2 record last year - Sterlings have a 14-3 record so far
1936 Joe Kelly, Richmond Kautskys
1935 Russ Paugh pic, Indianapolis Sterlings
1935 Jimmy Tobin/ Norman Babock, Sterlings
1935 Indianapolis Sterlings team pic w/ full names
Weeb Ewbank Pro Football HOF - played most years - Middletown 1942
Finals
1942-9-20 Armcos 4, Red Sox 3. 1500 ATT.
1942-9-27 no game
1942-10-04 Armcos 6, Red Sox 3. Red Sox 10, Armcos 8.
1942-10-11 Armcos 9, Red Sox 2. line score
Interstate Semipro/Baseball Association (based in Cincinnati)
1916
1916-2-07 15 teams in new organization.
1916-3-03 There are now 22 teams in Class AA Interstate Association.
1916-3-30 Meeting 3-31. Teams must pay $10 now, other $15 on 5-01.
1916-4-01 Two new teams joined. "Because nearly every team entered in the league so far represents a certain community, the Interstate may become the real Community League of [Cincinnati]."
1916-4-08 Rules are ordained concerning the hiring of umpires.
1916-7-27 Elimination series will start soon. The Ludlow White Sox will oppose the famous Brookville team, and a large crowd is expected.
1916-9-15 Norwood may play the Cleveland Strollers.
1916-10-24 Meeting. Hamilton Krebs team is suspended until it pays its $85 fine for persisting in using pitcher Herrmann, a crime it had already been fined for before. Twelve teams will receive $85 for share in gate receipts.
Over a span twenty games over which the comission had control, there was a total attendance of 57,136 and total gate receipts of $15,166.02. Expenses were $2,576.54. The Amateur Commission received $958.40 as its share, the winning club received $4,965.01, and the losing clubs received $385.21. The Norwood club received $610.15, the Norwood players received $405.09, the NBF received $156.45, and the Cincinnati class AA received $1,131.96.
+ details about park rental.
1916-8-17 Sunday's scores, with standings.
1916-8-24 Sunday's scores.
1916-9-07 Sunday's scores.
K.I.O. Semi-pro Association
1919
1922
1924 8-04 standings
1927 Greenfield
1928
1929 Cheviot
1931 6-07 standings
1934
Boehler, George 252 pro wins 1930 Lawrenceburg born & died in Lawrenceburg 1931 Harmony
Geary, Bob 189 pro wins 1929 Harmonys
Jacobus, Larry 176 pro wins 1929 Armco 1930 Middletown
Kopf, Larry 1931 Middletown long-time P-M
Pott, Nelson 1929 Cheviot as outfielder 1930 Cheviot
White, Red aka Buck MLB 1909-11 1928 Cheviot 1929 Times-Star
1922-4-22 Outfielder Kenneth Hogan, lately releeased by the Reds, will remain in Cincinnati and play with Price Hill.
1922-7-08 In effort to prevent players jumping, KIO will fine deserters $25 and is barring the officials of other leagues from their games. Leagues like Blue Grass League are trying to take away their players.
1922-8-12 KIO will take 5% of 3 final games & divide evenly among the 22 other teams. This has always been the KIO custom.
George Diehl of the Potters, who will face Price Hill in finals, has been pitching for Cincinnati amateur & semipro teams for a quarter century but is still a force to be reckoned with.
1923-6-23 League president John Dugan found that Joe Neale is ineligible to play in the championship series beginning 7-01. Under NBF rules he is ineligible because he played with Reds thru September 1922. Hack Farrell of the Potter is ineligible under the same rule.
K.I.O. releases, umpires, and teams listed.
1924-7-20 second round of championship series produces surprises
1926-3-18 p.5 TSN. Comello and Hunter, young infielders from Cincinnati, are trying out with Indianapolis AA. They both belong to the "K.I.O. Independent League, an organization which of late has sent many young players to the ranks of Organized Baseball. It was from this same league that Johnny Hodapp graduated to the Indianapolis team, making good in his first attempt."
1929-10-16 Wee Willie Gutzweiler again - beats MLB Joe Heving 1-0, runs scoreless streak to 19IN
Reddington & co-workers consider Wally Kopf & Viox as logical candidates for MVP
1934-2-05 Second reorganization meeting. Ten clubs admitted to league; six have announced their managers.
Cincinnati Enquirer has the boxes
Cincinnati Enquirer has the boxes
1922-7-08 Kirby "Red" "Buck" White, Price Hill regular pitcher, possibly the oldest local semipro pitcher.
Final
1922-8-13 Price Hill 10, Potters 2. No box. (Cincinnati Post.) 2.7K ATT. George Diehl touched for 23 hits. Price Hill has signed, under NBF rules, three new players, who may play for them in the NBF tournament but not the local series.
1923-8-26 Bellevue 3, Potters 0. No box. (Cincinnati Post.) Buck White shutout Potters; Potters have not beat him in seven years.
1922-5-07 Vic Johnson, Price Hill, one-hits North Bend.
1924
8-31 Before 10K, Gardner-Harvey beats Ludlow 4-0 behind masterly pitching of spitballer Al Leake
Ludlow was previously undefeated having won 19 straight games
9-07 Ludlow wins 2-0 Neal "King" Brady has his day
9-14 Gardner-Harvey wins 5-3 Leake wins own game with triple - Ludlow protests
protest turned down league pres wrote to both Heydler & Ban Johnson asking what they would do under same circumstance
Price Hill
1922-8-05 Has 19-0 record; scores listed for all. Have scored 200 runs and allowed 46.
Frederick L. Hoffman upholds the decision of John Dugan, K.I.O. president, to ban Rush Meadows and William Kuhlman of Oakley for having played a game for a Blue Grass League team, July 20. Under NBF rules players who have played in OB after June 1 are ineligible.
1922-8-07 Price Hill has won 20 straight; has not lost a game all season. Just now, ended championship Dreams of Oakley by beating them 6-0 before 5K fans at Redland Field. Oakley played with two players declared ineligible for KIO play because they had played for a Blue Grass League club in July.
1922-9-15 Five members of Price Hill, semi-pro champs of greater Cincinnati, were on the world champ 1917 Norwoods. The five: Buck White, Gus Kellerman, Harry Champlin, Gordon Weil, and Lee Witter. (Witterstaetter) Other NBF info.
Michigan-Indiana League
1935 La Porte Coalers
1946 St. Joseph Auscos
1947
1948 Lafayette Red Sox
1949 St. Joseph Auscos 8-30 standings 8-30 batting commented final batting
1950 folded mid-season.
Cyrulewski, Arthur (Art Cyrul) p vg 1949 St. Joseph Auscos
Orphal, John p 1949 Fort Wayne defending national champs - lost 18-4
Orphan, Hugh p 1949 Fort Wayne
Orphan, Hugh p 1949 Fort Wayne
Brewer, Chet 1949 Michigan City Cubs
Fields, Wilmer Negro League pitcher - of in AAA 1952 1949 St. Joseph Auscos 2
Flanigan, Ray 1949 St. Joseph Auscos Baseball in Wartime
McCoy, Benny 1946-48 St. Joseph SABR bio
Thomas, Walter NLB p-of
1948-9-10 St. Joseph. Commented Auscos stats. They were 10-4 in non-league games. Only four Auscos hit above .300 in 42-game league schedule. Some full names.
Playoffs begin today.
1948-9-23 South Bend. Studebaker local no. 5 finished season with 40-36 record. Was 20-22 in league schedule and 17-10 v. black traveling teams. 1st year in M-I League - was doormat of 1st half but did much better in 2nd half.
1948-10-19 Muskegon. Frank Ververka was 17-5 for the Benton Harbor Buds. On Sundays he pitched for Chicago Heights in another strong semi-pro league, with whom he was 20-3. [That other strong semi-pro league was the Greater Chicago Semi-Pro League.]
1949-8-19 Joe Bestudik stole show in pre-game individual contest - made three incredibly accurate throws from center to home. Wilmer Fields was less accurate but had one longer throw so was given 1st. Felix Mackiewicz showed good breeding by bringing gloves left on field into dugout with him in flight for shelter from the rain.
1949-9-09 Because Augie Hixson is hurt and players cannot be added to roster for play-offs, the Lafayette Red Sox may have to play in W-I playoffs without a catcher. Joe Bestudik will probably have to catch. (And he did.)
1949-9-10 St. Joseph Auscos will play Benton Harbor Buds in 1st round of play-offs. Prize of $1000 for playoff winner.
1948-9-19 Lafayette beats Studebakers before 3K fans to win championship.
1949-5-11 South Bend. Lots of Studebaker pics. Pic of four batters: 2b Danny Callan of Florence NY, of Denny Aeschliman of Wauseon OH, MG-ss Ray Scott, and Walter Thomas, veteran of last year's team.
Pic of three pitchers: Don "Burrhead" Evans, Tommy Demark, and Orinthal (Andy) Anderson. Pic of MG Ray Scott, former AA, who last year hit .267 with 14 doubles, 4 triples, and 4 homers. (source?)
1949-9-10 Wilmer Fields, Ross Jones, Mack Stewart.
Fort Wayne NBC champs 1947-50. Terrible record in M-I in 1949.
essay on 1949 Windsor Canadians very informative.
Northern Kentucky League
1929
1929-10-16 post-regular-season - Golden Rods have both MLB Joe Heving on mound and brother MLB Johnnie Heving behind plate. They lose 1-0 to Lawrenceburg, to the pitching of Wee Willie Gutzweiler - Heving behind the plate did not outdo Lawrenceburg's Tom "Red Hart"
1931
Burris, Roy .296 1928MSVL at 27 -only year as pro. 1931 Akron.
1931-7-15 (Battle Creek) Postum will play host to the Akron Firestones of the O.I.P. Akron finished 1st in the 1st half of the league with a 20-4 record. They have three heavy hitters, two of them 200 pounds.
Ohio-Pennsylvania League
1926 Akron General Tires (1st half 14-0) 9-02 standings
1927 Massillon Agathons enlisting big guns for Ohio championship General Tires batting
1928
Burdick, Johnny p 13-11 1929 Akron CENL 1928 General Tires Playing under name of Johnny Knell
Ketchum, Charlie 1926
Kelly, Eddie 1926 setting pace w/ 11 HR - has turned down many pro offers since 1921
which are detailed - a good position in the city/semi-pro = lot more money
1926-4-14 Erie roster filling out
2nd no-hitter and 3rd shut-out in eight days - has play by play
1927-6-05 Press. Pics of four Northside Traders, including Bimmy Steele. O-P talk.
1927-8-16 Beaver Falls Elks had 22-2 record in 1st half - first class roster listed
their pitcher who had chosen to remain semi-pro has beaten 14 major league teams: Elvin Hilty
1926-7-12 (Pittsburgh) boxes.
1927-6-11 Press Boxes, standings.
1926-6-11 Post. Boxes, standings.
1928-6-17 Akron. Local boxes. "Knell [Burdick] and Ed Kelly, Goodyear employes who were declared unsatisfactory for the Goodyear team, made up the winning battery for Generals in the second game."
"Iglasias, now playing under the name of Hickey," is at short for the General Tires. Your guess is as good as mine.
1926-9-19 Akron. General Tires take both ends of doubleheader from the Homestead Grays. Ketchum won the first game. 4.5K. The General Tires' last appearance.
Elvin Hilty
1919-7-26 Irwin loses 2-0 to Elmer Knetzer of Allegheny Steel
1919-9-14 Pitcairn, Pennsylvania Railroad - k'd 13 in 6 innings
1921-8-21 story of his discovery.
1922 pic as of 8-20 has 35 wins, 6 losses - of 6 defeats, two were against MLB teams
1924-6-22 "One of the old-timers who isn't far from the bleachers is Elvin Hilty"
says he worked in the railroad shops
says he worked in the railroad shops
1926-9-05 has 15-2 record pitched little in 1925 - had boils
called through two years ago when lost some games - has come back fully
1927-6-12 has shutout the league-leading Agathons twice "ace spitballer"
1928-4-22 signs with Coshocton Regulars of Eastern Ohio only pitcher to defeat Homestead Grays 4 times in season
1928-5-14 "Count"
1928-7-08 suspended indefinitely from Coshocton & league twice did not come to pitch
1930-6-05 w/ Pitcairn - Ollie Carnegie in his outfield - loses 5-1 to Altoona Works
1964-8-13 McGraw & Mathewson tried to sign him for $175/month
1968-8-13 GREAT RESOURCE - lots of memories - would get $75/g - says he worked as plumber
now 73
Ohio-West Virginia League
1923 9-03 standings
1923-7-29 The players manager John Olzeski of the Dillonvale Indians has gotten. He thinks his team is better than when it won the Ohio Valley League pennant in 1922.
Doctoring the ball is illegal in Ohio Valley - Rube Evans was ejected for it while pitching for Youngstown Valley Oils.
Southern Indiana - Southeastern Illinois Association (Si-Si Association)
1916
1916
1916-7-20 huge controversy over Warmoth obtained release under pretense of going to play with Terre Haute
Tri-State Amateur Association
1946
Niemes, Jack 1946 Deer Park Turf And Field 16K, 3H in 1st game since return from Navy.
1946-6-03 Trailmobile is only undefeated team - their star pitcher is Billy Adkins, a 15-year old high school sophomore. Adkins will face Niemes.
1946-6-23 Niemes beat Adkins 6-2.
Tri-State Federation
Tri-State Federation
1926'
1926-9-26 Standings for the elimination series of the Tristate League, Miami Valley League, and Millcreek Valley League.
Western Ohio League
1924 7-14 standings
1924-9-18 Urbana Eagles 5, champ Greenfield Athletics 3.
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Ambidextrous / switch pitchers
https://switchpitching.blogspot.com/p/list-of-ambidextrous-pitchers.html Manuel, Moxie Wheeler, George https://www.baseball-reference.com...
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https://baseballhall.org/discover/short-stops/amazing-jackie-price https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Jflun5CyIc
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1907-11-24 Manila businessmen are eager to see the local league a success. They dislike the proposition that a league will play at Fort Wil...
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