Birmingham Black Barons

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Birmingham Black Barons

Leagues

Significant Players

Joe Bankhead
Lyman Bostock, Sr.
Lorenzo "Piper" Davis
Bill Foster
Willie Greason
Carl Long
Willie Mays
Satchel Paige
Ted Radcliffe
Harry Salmon
Sam Streeter
Mules Suttles
Willie Wells
Artie Wilison

The Birmingham Black Barons played professional baseball for Birmingham, Alabama in the Negro Leagues from 1920 to 1960 when the Major Leagues successfully integrated. They alternated home stands with the Birmingham Barons in Birmingham's Rickwood Field, usually drawing larger crowds and equal press.

Drawing largely from a successful ACIPCO Industrial League team, the Black Barons were organized in 1920 for the inaugural season of Rube Foster's Negro Southern League. They played in that league for three years before making the leap to the larger Negro National League. They were unable to keep their position due to irregularities with the team finances and returned to the Southern League for three more years. Their return to the National League was marked by the emergence of star pitcher Satchel Paige, who led the Black Barons to the second half pennant. They lost the Negro National League title to the Chicago American Giants in four straight games.

For the next decade or so they alternated leagues before being bought by Memphis, Tennessee funeral home director Tom Hayes. They returned to the National League for good in 1940. Early in the decade the team was sold again to Abraham Saperstein who also owned the Harlem Globetrotters basketball team. In 1943 they won their first of three pennants. Starting in 1945, they became full members of the Negro National League and enjoyed great success, winning their third pennant in 1948 with the help of teenage outfielder Willie Mays. They ended up losing three Negro World Series to the Homestead Grays that decade, forging a notable rivalry. As the Major Leagues started signing talented African American players, the Black Barons tried to form a new Negro American League with three other Southern teams. The new league played four seasons from 1956 to 1960 before folding. The Black Barons played their last game in 1960.

On February 26, 2006 ESPN Classic broadcast a throwback game from Rickwood Field featuring amateur players in the uniforms of the Birmingham Black Barons and Bristol Barnstormers. The style of play, the equipment, and the umpires all reflected the 1940s game. Willie Mays attended along with one-time Black Baron Charley Pride. The Black Barons rallied to break an eighth inning tie and win the game 9-8.


Negro League teams

All-Nations Club | Arkansas Black Travelers | Atlanta Black Crackers | Austin Black Senators | Bacharach Giants | Baltimore Black Sox | Baltimore Elite Giants | Birmingham Black Barons | Bismarck Churchills | Boston Royal Giants | Brooklyn Bushwicks | Brooklyn Royal Giants | Chattanooga Black Lookouts | Chicago American Giants | Chicago Columbia Giants | Chicago Giants | Chicago Union Giants | Chicago Unions | Cincinnati Tigers | Cleveland Buckeyes | Cleveland Cubs | Cleveland Giants | Columbia Giants | Columbus Blue Birds | Columbus Buckeyes | Columbus Elite Giants | Cuban Giants | Dayton Marcos | Denver White Elephants | Detroit Stars | Detroit Wolves | El Paso | Ethiopian Clowns | Fort Worth | Gilkerson's Union Giants | Globe Trotters | Harrisburg Giants | Hilldale Club | Homestead Grays | House of David | Illinois Giants | Indianapolis ABCs | Indianapolis Clowns | Jamestown Red Sox | Jersey City Colored Athletics | Kansas City Monarchs | Leland Giants | Lincoln Giants | Louisville Black Caps | Louisville Buckeyes | Memphis Red Sox | Milwaukee Bears | Mineola Black Spiders | Monroe Monarchs | Montgomery Grey Sox | Nashville Elite Giants | Newark Eagles | New Orleans Crescent Stars | New Orleans Pelicans | New York Black Yankees | New York Cubans | Oakland Larks | Page Fence Giants | Philadelphia Giants | Philadelphia Stars | Philadelphia Tigers | Pittsburgh Crawfords | Pittsburgh Keystones | Poins | Potomacs | San Antonio Black Bronchos | San Antonio Black Indians | Seattle Steelheads | St. Louis Giants | St. Louis Stars | St. Paul Colored Gophers | Tennessee Rats | Waggoner Greasing Palaces Baseball Club | Washington Black Senators | Washington Elite Giants | Washington Potomacs | Zulu Cannibal Giants

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