National Colored Baseball League
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The National Colored Base Ball League, the National Colored League, or the League of Colored Baseball Clubs was the subsequent attempt, after the Southern League of Colored Base Ballists, to have a league consisting of all-black teams. It predated Rube Foster's Negro National League by over three decades.


History

The league was organized by
Walter S. Brown Walter may refer to: People * Walter (name), both a surname and a given name * Little Walter, American blues harmonica player Marion Walter Jacobs (1930–1968) * Gunther (wrestler), Austrian professional wrestler and trainer Walter Hahn (born 1 ...
, a newspaperman with the '' Cleveland Gazette''. Brown served as the league president and secretary, he was also the owner of the Pittsburgh club. On March 14 and 15, 1887, after a series of meetings throughout the winter, team representatives met at the Douglass Institute in
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to finalize the schedule. Acknowledging the experimental nature of the new league, the various delegates kept the schedule short leaving "plenty of open dates between championship games, so as to permit the clubs to take advantage of every opportunity for exhibition games." "Player salaries were to range from $10 to $75 per month; each club was to hire a local umpire; visiting teams were guaranteed $50 plus half the gate receipts, and were to receive $25 from the home team in case of rainout." They adopted the Reach brand baseball, and in return the company would supply the league with two gold medals: one for highest batting average and the other for highest fielding percentage at the end of the season. The league consisted of eight teams: The
Baltimore Lord Baltimores The Baltimore Lord Baltimores were a professional pre-Negro league baseball team based in Baltimore, Maryland in 1887. The Lord Baltimores played as charter members of the short–lived 1887 National Colored Base Ball League, hosting home games at ...
, Boston Resolutes, Louisville Falls Citys, New York Gorhams,
Philadelphia Pythians The Philadelphia Pythians (also Pythian Base Ball Club, Pythian Baseball Club, or the "Pyths") was one of the earliest Negro league baseball clubs, founded in 1865. African-American leaders Jacob C. White Jr. and Octavius V. Catto established th ...
, Pittsburgh Keystones,
Washington Capital Citys The Washington Capital Citys were briefly a professional pre- Negro league baseball team in the 1887 National Colored Base Ball League. The Washington Capital Citys were based in Washington D.C. History The National Colored Base Ball League was th ...
, and
Cincinnati Browns The Cincinnati Browns were a professional baseball team in the National Colored Base Ball League, the first attempt at a professional Negro league The Negro leagues were United States professional baseball leagues comprising teams of African Ame ...
. Neither Washington nor Cincinnati would play a game as they "failed to put up their bonds" at the beginning of the season. The Cuban Giants declined Brown's invitation to join the league as they were unwilling to sacrifice more lucrative Sunday bookings in Brooklyn. On opening day, May 5, 1887, the Lord Baltimores beat the Pythians 15–12. The league quickly experienced financial problems. Due to the passage of the
Interstate Commerce Act of 1887 The Interstate Commerce Act of 1887 is a United States federal law that was designed to regulate the railroad industry, particularly its monopoly, monopolistic practices. The Act required that railroad rates be "reasonable and just," but did no ...
, railways revoked the reduced "group rates" normally enjoyed by traveling baseball teams. Fares fluctuated wildly and could double or triple overnight, wreaking havoc on the budgets of baseball teams throughout the country (even those in the American Association and the National League). A storm from the west, coupled with the rate hikes, led to disaster for the traveling Boston Resolutes on their way to Louisville. The storm caused the Resolutes to cancel several exhibition games they had planned along the way to help them pay for their trip. They missed their first scheduled game with the Louisville Falls City, and barely arrived for the second on May 7. Despite all the turmoil, the Resolutes beat the Falls City 10–3. Unfortunately, the revenue from the sparsely attended game was not enough to cover the cost of the trip to their next game in Pittsburgh, as a result the Resolutes were stranded in Louisville. The Philadelphia Pythians withdrew from the league after their May 16 game with the Gorhams failed to take in enough money to pay for the use of the Athletics ball park. By May 28, the league had folded.


Season standings


Notable players

* Sol White * Frank Grant * Oscar Jackson * Andrew Jackson * Robert Jackson * William Malone * John Nelson * William Selden *
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*
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* Weldy Walker * Arthur Thomas *
James W. Wilson Thom & Wilson, the New York City-based architectural office of Arthur M. Thom and James W. Wilson, was a prolific partnership that turned out numerous brownstones in somewhat generic Romanesque Revival and Renaissance Revival styles. The firm's ...


See also

*
Negro league baseball The Negro leagues were United States professional baseball leagues comprising teams of African Americans and, to a lesser extent, Latin Americans. The term may be used broadly to include professional black teams outside the leagues and it may be ...


References

{{Authority control Negro baseball leagues Colored Colored 1887 in baseball Sports leagues established in 1887 Organizations disestablished in 1887