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Steve Wylie (left) 12-1 and Bus
Quinn (Armando Vasquez) (centre) 10-1 led the Brandon pitching staff.
(Photos courtesy of Lil
Lowe)
Right , Shortstop Coney Williams was
a key acquisition for the Brandon Greys. Williams hit .304
during league play and was one of five imports who suited up with
the Greys.
A round of applause for Andrew Marshall of
Winnipeg! He's been kind enough to share a discovery
with us.
" ... I recently purchased a large lot of old books and
when flipping through the pages of one, I discovered the
year-end bank balance sheet for the "Winnipeg Reos",
dated 1948. It lists their profits, coaching salaries,
etc."
Quite
amazingly, the Winnipeg Reos of 1948 ended up with a
balance of $2,228.18 (according to the financial report
from B.G. West, the Secretary-Treasurer). The team
brought in over 4-thousand dollars from 50 games at
Osborne Stadium and overall, had income of more than
52-hundred dollars. The largest, single expenditure
was $807 for " Players Pay". The Reos spent $509.58 on
bats and balls, $43.39 for hospital and medical, $83.75
on drinks and gum and 9.67 on charges for telegraph and
telephone services.
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With Jackie Robinson's integration of the major leagues in 1947, the
Negro Leagues began a decline that would see the end of major Negro
League ball within a couple of seasons. A few of the barnstorming
teams continued into the 1950s with the famous Kansas City Monarchs
surviving into the 1960s. Many black players hooked up with the
teams in Canada, especially on the prairies.
Above left - catcher Roy Swanson, from the Atlanta Black Crackers
barnstormed with the New Orleans Creoles and Brooklyn Cuban Giants and
suited up with Estevan, Saskatchewan and Elwood in the Mandak League.
(The Ogden, Utah, Standard-Examiner, July 9, 1950)
Above right - the outfield of the Baltimore Elite Giants,
1948. Lester Lockett, Henry Kimbo, Frank
Russell. Lockett played for three seasons in the Mandak League.
(Baltimore Afro-American, May 8, 1948)
Below left - the outfield of the Harlem Globetrotters, 1952 - John
Keene, Larry Cunningham and Ted Dixon.
Cunningham played in Ontario with Galt and Hamilton.
(The Inter Lake, Kalispell, Montana, August 20, 1952). Below
centre - Freddie Sheppard, centrefielder of the 1949 New
Orleans Creoles. In 1950-51 he played with Minot, Estevan and Swift
Current. (The Winona Republican-Herald, July 30, 1949)
[However, the same photo was used in 1952 to identify Larry
Cunningham of the Harlem Globetrotters - The
Independent Record, Helena, Montana, June 29, 1952)
Below right - Mel Duncan of the Kansas City Monarchs in 1950
(Jefferson City Post-Tribune, June 2, 1950)

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