| |
Some players went back to the Negro Leagues in
the late 50s. Ned Powers, writing in the Saskatoon Star Phoenix
(August 22, 1959) noted:
"Big Bob Herron, who will be
remembered as one of the greatest sluggers to grace prairie semi-pro baseball
during the last 10 years, has spend a highly productive season in the ranks
of the Kansas City Monarchs.
The Monarchs won the American Negro league
championship this summer and Herron was selected to play in the East-West
all-star game at Comiskey Park. The West won the game 8-7, but
the box score published in the Chicago Sun-Times shows Herron with two hits
in three trips. He started at third base and then moved to left field.
Herron wound up the league with a .343
average, including 87 hits. He had 24 home runs, 12 triples, 22
doubles and 106 runs batted in. Although he worked the outfield
mostly, Bob took an occasional whirl on the hill and won four out of five
starts.
Bob is back in this country now, appearing
on tour with the Monarchs. He'd like to be remembered to his many
friends. He especially recalls his first season in Saskatoon, a most
memorable day being a 16-strikeout, one-hit performance against the
California Mohawks in 1950. In later years, Herron did Saskatoon clubs
considerable harm with a booming bat on behalf of the North Battleford
Beavers but he was always well respected for his ability."
John
Donaldson (Radville, 1925) (In the Moose Jaw Optimist tournament of 1925,
Donaldson pitched a perfect game, striking out 19. Radville, however,
was beaten in the final by Scobey, Montana which featured Swede Risberg and
Oscar Happy Felsch, two of the players banned for life in the infamous Black
Sox scandal of 1919.
In
the west, Seattle had an oh so brief look at Negro League ball
after the Second World War. The following from John Reeves history
of baseball in Seattle :
In
1946 the new West Coast Negro League formed to expand professional black
baseball out west. The Seattle franchise, the Steelheads, was
actually The Harlem Globetrotters. Originally formed in 1944 as a
barnstorming team, moved to Seattle in 1946 to join the West Coast Baseball
Association. Not to be confused with the Harlem Globetrotters basketball
team, they played straight baseball. The Negro League team that most
resembled the basketball team was the Indianapolis Clowns.
To
gain local support they changed their name to the Seattle Steelhead, after
the salmon runs. Other teams in the League included: Portland Rosebuds
(owned by Jesse Owens), Oakland Larks, San Diego Tigers, Los Angels White
Sox, and San Francisco Sea Lions. The League was set up so they would play
in the PCL parks while their white counterparts were on the road. For the
1946 season, the teams were scheduled to play 110 games. Not only did they
play in Seattle, but the Steelhead played games in Tacoma, Bremerton,
Spokane, and Bellingham, to display professional black baseball to the
region. As a result of manager/catcher Paul Hardy signing a contract before
he was released by the Chicago American Giants, a ban against Negro American
League teams playing in Seattle was instituted.
Unfortunately,
the only teams that earned money to stay in business were Seattle and
Oakland. As best that can be determined, when the League folded Oakland was
in first and Seattle in second. The association ended in July of 1946, but
the Steelheads played through September and once again became the Harlem
Globetrotters.
Paul
Hardy Catcher- Manager, Everett Marcel Catcher, Johnny Cogdell RHP, Frank
Saylor RHP, Mike Berry RHP, Al Jones RHP, Rogers Pierre RHP, Lafayette
Washington RHP, Nap Gulley LHP, Herb Simpson 1B, Sherwood Brewer 2B (left,
in a photo from the 1990s), Joe
Spencer 2B, Ulysss Redd SS, Robbie Robinson 3B, Bruce Wright 3B, Eugene
Harden Utility, Jack Johnson Utility, Howard Gay OF, Stamp Holly O,F Zell
Miles OF, Leo Rivers OF, John Bissant OF, Collins Jones OF.

Left
- Willie Cathey signs with Indianapolis Clowns in July of
1949 shortly after Cathey had beaten the Clowns in a double
header.
Centre - catcher Leonard Pigg seen in a 1951
promotion for the Clowns. The caption on the blurb reads:
"POUNDIN' PIGG - Leonard Pigg, Oklahoma born,
and now residing at Seattle, Wash., who led the entire Negro
American League in batting in 1949, and last season pounded the
pill for a .410 mark at Roblin, Manitoba, Canada, is again
whacking the ball solidly for the Indianapolis Clowns this
season, with a .378 average, and doing most of the receiving in
the Funmakers' drive to retain their first place position in the
NAL. Pigg and his full 240 pounds, will be seen in action
... against the mighty Kansas City Monarchs baseball club."
Right -
Catcher Ira McKnight was among the players to join the
league in the declining years of the Negro circuits.
McKnight, who would later play with Saskatoon and North
Battleford in Canada, suited up in 1956 with the Kansas City
Monarchs.

Above left -
A pair of Kansas City Monarchs model the latest in uniforms.
From "A" to "Z", the Monarchs again lead in innovation with
"names" on the back of their jerseys.
Pitcher Gene Collins is "A". Catcher Isaiah
"Ike" Jackson is "Z". Monarchs' owner Tom Baird
is in the middle, barely visible in this version of the 1951
photograph. Above middle - John Kennedy with the
Kansas City Monarchs in 1956. Above right - Johnny Britton
(right) and Jim Newberry (centre) meet their new
manager Hiroshi Hamazaki. The players were
farmed out to Japan by the St. Louis Browns in 1952, the first
American players to go to the Japanese League. Hamazaki
directs the Hankyu Braves. (The
Baltimore Afro-American, May 27, 1952)

Bill Powell (right), who played in the Negro League with
the Birmingham Black Barons after military service in the Second
World War, pitched in two East-West All-Star games. He entered
organized pro ball in 1951 with a 14-8 record with Colorado
Springs of the Western League and a few games in the Pacific
Coast League. After a 14-9 season in Triple-A with Charleston
Senators in 1953, Powell (listed at 31 years of age at the time)
was sold by the Senators to the Cincinnati Redlegs. The
Reds had hopes he would become the first Negro to make their
major league pitching staff. After mixed results in Spring
Training with the Reds in 1954, Powell was sent to the
International League. He continued to pitch until 1961,
including brief stints in Canada with Medicine Hat and
Lloydminster in 1959. (Photo from the
Charleston Daily Mail, December 11, 1953)
Peanuts Davis (Negro Leagues)
Key Pitch: Knuckleball
Description: “We had a pitcher named Peanuts Nyasses Davis, a
knuckleball pitcher, and you couldn’t even play catch with him unless
you had a mask on. The ball’d hit you in the mouth. He could throw it
with control and throw it hard!” Raydell Maddix in The Negro Leagues Revisited (Brent
Kelley, 2000)
Photo Credits :
Photos of Tom Alston, Herbert Barnhill, Chet Brewer, John Britton, Willard
Brown, Allen Lefty Bryant, Pee Wee Butts, Spoon Carter, Bill Cash, Doc Dennis,
Jesse Douglas, Willie Hutchinson, Gentry Jessup, Rufus Ligon,
Lester Lockett,
Wyman Red Longley,
Gready McKinnis,
Satchel Paige,
Art Pennington,
Andy Porter,
Double Duty Radcliffe,
Othello Renfroe, Harry Rhodes, Frazier Robinson, Herb Souell,
Ted Strong from The Negro Baseball Leagues, A Photographic History
Photos of Lloyd Pepper Bassett, Lyman
Bostock,
Ray Dandridge, WIlmer Fields, Cowan Hyde from When the Game Was Black and
White
Barney Brown (1936 &1944), Spoon
Carter, Alonzo Perry from The Negro Leagues Book
Acie
Griggs from Negro League Baseball Players Association, www.nlbpa.com
THE CUBAN CONNECTION >>
|