Negro League Baseball was among the most important businesses in Black America during the first half of the 20th century. The men and women who played the game sacrificed greatly to produce some of the best baseball that was played. They participated in a sport that they loved while trying to make a living. They all deserved to be remembered. Some of these players are well known, such as Oscar Charleston, Satchel Paige, James “Cool Papa” Bell and Buck O’Neil. But there are many that are not known, but contributed just as much to the game. These lesser-known players paid the same dues and their stories deserve to be told as the well-known players.
This is my small contribution to these exceptional players, the teams of the Negro Leagues and what they did. They must not be forgotton, for they represent an integral part of baseball history. Blacks organized their own all-Black teams during the late 1800’s and early 1900’s, playing each other and also against teams of White all-stars. Beginning in 1920, several Black teams organized into the first Negro league. Negro league baseball lasted until about 1950. During their existence, the leagues featured some of the greatest players in baseball history.
Ted Williams best expressed the importance of Negro Leagues players in his 1966 Hall of Fame acceptance speech. In his memorable speech he touched on Negro League baseball. “Baseball gives every boy a chance to excel. Not just to be as good as someone else, but to be better. This is the nature of man and the name of the game. I hope that one day Satchel Paige and Josh Gibson will be voted into the Hall of Fame as symbols of the great Negro players who are not here only because they weren’t given the chance.” It took another five years, but Paige was chosen by the newly formed Negro league Committee in 1971. He was by Josh Gibson’s induction the following year.
Black players organized their own all-Black teams during the late 1800’s and early 1900’s, playing each other and also against teams of White all-stars.
Overall, during the flush years from the late twenties to early forties, the Negro Leagues were enjoying enormous success.
Toni Stone, Connie Morgan and Mamie Johnson blazed a trail for women in the Negro Leagues.
The successes of Black players like Jackie Robinson, Roy Campanella, Monte Irvin and many others signaled the end of the Negro League .
Negro National League (1920-1931)
Andrew “Rube” Foster, owner and manager of the Chicago American Giants, formed the Negro National League (NNL) in 1920. The league’s membership included the Kansas City Monarchs, Detroit Stars, St. Louis Stars, Indianapolis ABCs, as well as Foster’s club. There were also teams, at various times, in Memphis, Birmingham, Cleveland, Columbus, Pittsburgh, Toledo, Louisville, Milwaukee, and Nashville. The death of Rube Foster in 1926, plus the financial challenges, exacerbated by the Great Depression, drove the league out of business in 1931.
Eastern Colored League (1923-1928)
This circuit was based primarily on the East Coast. The Eastern Colored League (ECL) was formed when the Hilldale Club, based in Philadelphia, and the Atlantic City-based Bacharach Giants, associate members of the Negro National League, aligned with White promoter Nat Strong to form the new league. Top teams included the Brooklyn Royal Giants and Baltimore Black Sox. The ECL raided NNL rosters resulting in friction between the two leagues. The dispute was quickly settled, and a Colored World Series was established from 1924-1927. Beginning in late 1927 the league was wracked by dissension between club owners. Disagreements among the owners led to the league's demise in May of 1928.
American Negro League (1929)
Following the demise of the Eastern Colored League, some of the teams, such as the Bacharach Giants of Atlantic City, the Baltimore Black Sox, along with the Homestead Grays, an important independent club from Pittsburgh, formed the American Negro League led by Ed Bolden in 1929, but that league only lasted one season.
East-West League (1932)
Established by former Homestead Grays player and manager Cumberland Posey, this circuit, too, was short-lived. The league featured eight teams located in the East and Midwest. In addition to the Grays, the Baltimore Black Sox and Cleveland Stars, among others, were league members.
Negro Southern League (1932)
The NSL was organized as a minor league by Thomas T. Wilson in 1920. Picking up a few teams from the defunct NNL, the Negro Southern League spent one season as a major league, 1932. From 1920 to the 1940s, it was primarily a minor league.
Negro National League II (1933-1948)
The second incarnation of the Negro National League (NNL II) was formed in 1933 and featured several well-known teams. The list of NNL II clubs included the Baltimore Black Sox, Brooklyn Royal Giants, Detroit Stars, Indianapolis ABCs, Nashville Elite Giants, Pittsburgh Crawfords, and Washington Black Senators, to name a few. The league lasted until 1948. The surviving teams merged into the Negro American League.
Negro American League (1937-1962)
Formed in 1937, the Negro American League (NAL) played through 1962. This was three years after the Boston Red Sox became the last Major League team to sign a Black player. After the signing of Jackie Robinson in 1947, the integration of baseball signaled the end to Negro League Baseball. The league resorted to barnstorming after 1950. It was considered a minor league, with many clubs supplementing league games with barnstorming tours.
The Chicago American Giants were the most dominant team in Black baseball. Owned and managed from 1911 to 1926 by player-manager Andrew “Rube” Foster, they were charter members of Foster’s Negro National League. The American Giants won five pennants in that league, along with another pennant in the 1932 Negro Southern League and a second-half championship in Gus Greenlee’s Negro National League in 1934. Along with the New York Lincoln Stars and the Indianapolis ABCs, the 1917 Chicago American Giants were one of the premier teams during World War I.
They were the best Black professional baseball team during the roaring twenties. On the roster in the ‘20s were Rube Foster’s brother, Willie, “Colonel” Jimmie Crutchfield, and Ted “Double Duty” Radcliffe, Bruce Petway, John Henry “Pop” Lloyd, Pete Hill, Frank Wickware, and “Cannonball” Dick Redding. Foster’s club relied on fielding, pitching, speed, and “inside baseball” to succeed in the young Negro National League (NNL), winning championships in 1920, 1921, and 1922. When the Kansas City Monarchs supplanted the American Giants as the dominant team beginning in 1923, Foster tried rebuilding but by 1926 his health (physical and mental) was failing.
Accordingly, his protégé Dave Malarcher took over on-field management of the team. Malarcher followed Foster’s pattern, emphasizing pitching and defense, and led the American Giants back to the top-tier of the Negro leagues, winning pennants in 1926 and 1927. Both seasons also saw the American Giants defeat the Bacharach Giants of Atlantic City, champions of the Eastern Colored League, in the Negro League World Series. The NNL collapsed in 1931, and in 1932 the team won the Negro Southern League pennant as Cole’s American Giants.
The next season the American Giants joined the new Negro National League, losing the pennant to the Pittsburgh Crawfords in a controversial decision by league president Gus Greenlee (owner of the Crawfords). The 1933 season saw the Giants get kicked off of their home field after the end of May; the park owners preferred to use the land as a dog racing track for the remaining summer months. This forced the Giants to play the majority of their home games in Indianapolis for the balance of that season. In 1934, the American Giants won the NNL’s second-half title, then fell to the Philadelphia Stars in a seven-game playoff for the championship.
In 1937, after a year spent playing as an independent club, the American Giants became a charter member of yet another circuit, the Negro American League. Sports entrepreneur Abe Saperstein owned the American Giants in 1952, its last season in the Negro American League. Its players were dispersed to the four remaining NAL teams for the 1953 season. After dropping out of the Negro American League, the American Giants became unaffiliated and turned to barnstorming, playing games in the Midwest. The team disbanded after the 1956 season.
The Indianapolis ABCs were formed around the turn of the century, playing company teams from around the city. They soon played other teams in Indiana, including some White teams. Their emergence coincided with the remarkable growth of Black baseball, and by 1916 the ABCs won their first major championship. Named for the local brewery that initially sponsored them – the American Brewing Company – the Indianapolis ABCs were one of the most well-known and successful teams in Negro League Baseball history.
The American Brewing Company then sold the team to Thomas Bowser. In 1914, Charles Isham “C.I.” Taylor who played second base on the team, purchased a half interest and became the team’s new manager. The 1915 ABCs finished the regular season with a 37-25-1 record. Against the Chicago American Giants, the Cuban Stars, and the Lincoln Stars – their toughest Black competition – they went 26-16-1. An intense rivalry developed between Taylor and Rube Foster, the two managers acknowledged as the best in Black baseball.
A schism had developed between Bowser and Taylor following the 1915 season, and at the beginning of the 1916 season there were two ABC teams, with Bowser leading one and Taylor the other. Eventually Taylor’s aggregation retained the quality players who formed the nucleus of his championship squad, and Bowser’s was forced to sell off his team to Black businessman Warner Jewell. After losing a hard fought championship series to Foster’s Chicago American Giants in 1915, the ABCs defeated the Chicago American Giants for the western championship in 1916.
When the Negro National League was formed in 1920, Indianapolis was one of its charter members. That year the ABCs finished in fourth place, with a 39-35 record. The team finished second in 1922, with a 46-33 record. The team featured two future Hall of Famers: first baseman Ben Taylor – C.I.’s brother – and rookie outfielder Oscar Charleston, who was an Indianapolis native. After Charles Taylor’s death in 1922, his wife Olivia Taylor, tried to run the team with C.I.’s brother Ben at the helm. This made her the first woman to own a top-level African American team, a decade before Effa Manley. She who owned the Indianapolis ABCs from 1922 to 1924. In addition to her involvement with the ABCs, Taylor became president of the local NAACP chapter.
She helped bring the national convention to Indianapolis in 1925, and became the first female to ever head the national convention. Player raids by the Eastern Colored League, formed in 1923, hurt the ABCs and in 1924 they were dropped from the league by mid-season. In later years, a different franchise under new ownership, but bearing the same name entered into the reconstituted Negro National League in 1931-1933. Each of the teams from the Great Depression years of the 1930s who bore the once proud ABCs name were characterized by instability and confusion. Due to a dispute with the Chicago American Giants which resulted in the loss of their Indianapolis ball field, the ABCs moved to Detroit where they became the Detroit Stars.
That team lasted only a year before disbanding at the end of the 1933 season. The team moved again and became the St. Louis Stars, playing in the Negro American League from 1938 to 1941 before disbanding. In the last ditch effort to bring an ABCs team back to Indianapolis, the 1938 ABCs franchise shifted operations to the Midwest. They played as the St. Louis Stars from 1939 to 1940. Meanwhile, the Atlanta Black Crackers of 1938 moved into Indianapolis and played under the ABCs banner for a short time in 1939.
The team was founded by Frank Leland after he and his partner, Rube Foster, split up the Leland Giants in 1910. Frank Leland’s new club was sometimes also known as Leland’s Chicago Giants, until a court injunction forced Frank Leland to stop using the name Leland Giants. In 1920, the Chicago Giants became a founding member of the Negro National League (NNL). They played as a travelling team, without a home field, and finished in last place in both 1920 and 1921. Their best player was a young catcher/shortstop named John Beckwith, who was purchased by Rube Foster for his Chicago American Giants after the 1921 season.
Founded in 1919 by Tenny Blount with the help of Rube Foster, owner and manager of the Chicago American Giants, the Detroit Stars immediately established themselves as one of the most powerful teams in the West. The Detroit Stars played their first game on Easter Sunday, April 20, 1919, at Mack Park on Detroit’s East Side. They defeated the 1918 city champion, Detroit Maxwell Internationals, a powerful White semi-pro team, in front of 3500 fans. The Maxwells’ roster included one former major leaguer and at least four former minor leaguers. Foster transferred several of his American Giants veteran players to the team, including player-manager Pete Hill and legendary catcher Bruce Petway.
In 1920, the Detroit Stars became charter members of Rube Foster’s Negro National League (NNL). The Stars’ inaugural game as members of the NNL was played at Mack Park in Detroit on May 15, 1920, when they defeated the Cuban Stars. Detroit finished second in the league in 1920, runners-up to Foster’s American Giants. New outfielder Jimmie Lyons enjoyed a brilliant season at bat. Featuring great players like Hall of Famer Cristobal Torriente as well as Ted “Double Duty” Radcliffe and Bingo DeMoss, Detroit fielded a contending club throughout the 1920s.
Undoubtedly the greatest black player to spend most of his career in Detroit, Norman “Turkey” Stearnes was a five-tool player originally from Nashville, Tennessee. He was fast on the bases, hit for both power and average, and played a top-notch center field. Stearnes won six home run titles and holds the Negro League career record for home runs. The left-handed hitter was one of the greatest sluggers of all-time – Black or White. Stearnes made his major Negro League debut in 1923 with Detroit, playing for the Stars through 1931 as well as in 1937. He also starred for the Chicago American Giants and Kansas City Monarchs in the 1930s.
However, the Stars never won a pennant. The closest they came was in their first season at new Hamtramck Stadium in 1930 when they won the second-half NNL title before losing the Negro National League Championship Series to the St. Louis Stars in seven hard-fought-games. Stearnes’ heroic performance powered the Stars, as Detroit’s superstar hit .467 and slammed 3 homers and 8 extra-base hits in the seven games, scoring 9 runs and driving in eleven. For the rest of their tenure in the NNL, the Stars were consistently good (finishing under .500 only twice), but not brilliant (finishing as high as second place only twice). Victims of the Great Depression, the Stars folded along with the Negro National League in 1931.
The origins of the St. Louis Stars date back to the early 20th century. The Stars were a continuation of a franchise originally organized as the St. Louis Giants in 1909 by a White businessman, Charlie Mills. The St. Louis Giants won the 1912 and 1913 St. Louis City League Championships but were unable to beat the top ranked Indianapolis ABC’s and the Chicago American Giants in the western championship in the following years. In Febuary 1920, Mills was present at the YMCA on 18th and Vine in Kansas City, MO. for Rube Foster‘s meeting to form the Negro National League.
His Giants finished 6th in 1920. They then acquired star center fielder Oscar Charleston in 1921 and he helped the Giants surge to 3rd place. After two seasons in the league, Mills sold the franchise to Dick Kemp and Dr. Sam Sheppard. Under the new ownership, the name was changed and the ballclub became the St. Louis Stars. As the Stars, they eventually built one of the great dynasties in Negro league history, winning three pennants in four years from 1928 to 1931. The Stars inherited most of the Giants roster with the exception of Charleston. In their first year as the Stars, the team finished at an even .500 for the season.
In 1923 the Stars experienced a losing season for the only time in their history, while remaining in the Negro National League until its demise following the 1931 season. By 1924, the team rose to fourth place in the league, at 42-34. In 1925 they won the second half title of the split season but lost a seven game series to the Kansas City Monarchs, winners of the first half, 4 games to 3. After this initial setback, the Stars won three pennants, in 1928, 1930, and 1931, winning playoffs the first two seasons against the Chicago American Giants and the Detroit Stars, respectively.
Hall of Famers Cool Papa Bell, Mule Suttles and Willie Wells played for the St. Louis Stars during this time. Shortstop Willie Wells played eight years with the Stars and led the team in many offensive stats, including home runs (119) and RBI (608). Cool Papa Bell and Mule Suttles also rank among the team’s all-time hitting leaderboards.
Their third flag was the last one in the history of the league that Rube Foster founded and, following the lead of the league itself, the Stars disbanded following the 1931 season. Six years later, a new franchise bearing the same name became a charter member of the Negro American League, fielding teams in 1937 and 1939. Struggling for financial survival, the franchise shifted to a co-hometown status, pairing St. Louis with other cities-New Orleans in 1940-1941 and Harrisburg in 1943.
In 1940 the team played as an independent but returned to the Negro American League the following year. After disbanding for a year, they made a final effort to organize in 1943, when they were entered in the Negro National League. They withdrew early in the spring of that year to barnstorm against a team headlined by Dizzy Dean, and were promptly suspended by the league.
From 1916 to 1929, the Cuban Stars (East) were owned by Alex Pompez. They carried the same name as another, contemporaneous Cuban baseball team that after 1916 primarily played in the midwestern United States. To differentiate between the two, the Pompez team, which played mostly in New York and the northeastern US, became known as the Cuban Stars (East), informally known as the New York Cuban Stars. From 1916 to 1922 they were an independent team that played in the New York and northeast region of the United States.
The other team the Cuban Stars (West) were organized by Abel Linares and Tinti Molina as a traveling team that played only road games. Before their 1916 U.S. professional regular season, the Cuban Stars toured through Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the Dominican Republic. Pompez wanted his team to leave an impact in the transnational baseball circuit. As a Black Cuban American, Pompez understood both the business of the Negro baseball leagues and the wealth of talent in Latin America and the Caribbean. His positionality resulted in an increase of Latin American talent into the U.S.
The Cuban Stars remained independent and played year-round until they joined the Eastern Colored League (ECL) in 1923. By then, Martín Dihigo had joined the team and become a star player. The New York Cuban Stars earned second place in their first season in the Eastern Colored League. The ECL disbanded in 1928. The Cuban Stars along with four former ECL teams—the Bacharach Giants of Atlantic City, the Baltimore Black Sox, the Hilldale Club of Darby, PA, and the Lincoln Giants of New York—organized the American Negro League. It lasted only one season in 1929.
The Kansas City Monarchs were the longest-running franchise and it’s most prominent in the history of baseball’s Negro leagues. Operating in Kansas City, Missouri and owned by J. L. Wilkinson, they were charter members of the Negro National League from 1920 to 1930. J. L. Wilkinson was the first White owner at the time of the establishment of the team. The Monarchs steadily grew in popularity over the 1920s partly after Wilkinson hired veteran Cuban baseball star Jose Mendez to manage the team in 1923. The Kansas City Monarchs won several championships, including the first Negro League World Series in 1924.
In 1924 the Kansas City Monarchs took on the Eastern Colored League champions Hilldale team from Darby, Pennsylvania in the Negro League World Series. Games in the series were played in various locales including Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Baltimore, Maryland, and Kansas City. But the final game took place in Chicago, Illinois, where the Monarchs triumphed with five runs in the ninth inning earning the title “World’s Colored Champions.”
In 1930, the Monarchs became the first professional baseball team to use a portable lighting system which was transported from game to game in trucks to play games at night. The lighting system allowed the Monarchs and their opponents to play night games which led to greater success and notoriety for the Monarchs while boosting interest in the Negro Leagues across the nation.. This was five years before any major league team did. The Monarchs had only one season in which they did not have a winning record. The team produced more major league players than any other Negro league franchise, including Hall of Famers- Satchel Paige, Jackie Robinson, Hilton Smith, Willard Brown, Ernie Banks, and Buck O’Neil.
Two of the most famous players on the team were hall of famers pitcher Satchel Paige, and shortstop Jackie Robinson. Paige joined the Monarchs in 1935, but his longest stint with the team was from 1939 to 1947. In 1948 Paige left the Monarchs to join the Cleveland Indians following Jackie Robinson’s move to the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947. Robinson played only one season (1945) with the Monarchs before moving on to the Dodgers.
Wilbur “Bullet Joe” Rogan, pitcher for the Monarchs, established a reputation as one of the finest players in the sport and became one of the first Black superstars. Hilton Smith was a mainstay of the Kansas City Monarchs’ pitching staff from 1936 until 1948, a time when the Monarchs were one of the dominant teams in the Negro Baseball Leagues. Although he was well known in the baseball world, the quiet, workmanlike Smith was greatly overshadowed by Satchel Paige, his flamboyant teammate. The Monarchs continued their winning ways by dominating the Negro National League (and later the Negro American League), with 12 league championships in its 37 seasons of existence. The team officially disbanded in 1965.
The Dayton Marcos history predates the formal organized leagues of Negro league baseball. As an independent team, and also as the only Black team in the Ohio-Indiana League they played Black and White teams all over the country throughout the 1910s. Old newspaper accounts and fading memories are some of the only sources of information on the Marcos. The team was started by Daytonian Moses Moore, a real estate agent. Moore owned the New Marco Hotel and apparently named his team after that enterprise.
The team was to be entertainment for Dahomey Park, the first Black-owned and operated amusement park in the United States. Local newspapers sometimes referred to the team as “Moses Moore’s Marcos.” They played in the then newly formed Negro National League, which was formed by Rube Foster. The Marcos were one of the original eight teams to play in the first organized major Negro league to survive a full season. At that time, the Marcos were owned by Daytonian John Matthews who ran the team until his death in 1942.









































































