Grand Rapids (baseball)
Grand Rapids | |
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Minor league affiliations | |
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League | Central League (1948–1951) |
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Major league affiliations | |
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Team data | |
Previous names |
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Previous parks | Recreation Park, Alger Park, Bigelow Field |
The Grand Rapids Baseball Club was a minor league baseball team based in Grand Rapids, Michigan that played under several different names at various times between 1883 and 1951.
An ancestor to a Major League franchise
[edit]From 1894-1897, Grand Rapids played in the Western League, a minor league precursor to what is now the American League of Major League Baseball. Despite being a founding member of the newly reorganized Western League under Ban Johnson, Grand Rapids was only allowed annual, rather than a five-year, franchise renewal rights. This lack of permanency, as well as the city's refusal to allow professional games to be played in the city limits on Sundays - traditionally the day for the largest crowds by far - were contributing factors in the failure to upgrade Recreation Park, their home grounds; the ballpark was adequate by 1894 standards but quickly fell behind the times as newer, larger parks such as Detroit's Bennett Park (Detroit) (in 1896) were being completed. That lack of improvements, the poor level of team play with basement finishes in the previous three seasons, as well as the city's smaller comparable size to other league towns, caused Johnson to remove the team to Omaha, Nebraska after the 1897 season.
In July 1899, the Columbus, Ohio franchise of the Western League, run by team president Tom Loftus, moved to Grand Rapids after a year and a half of financial losses due to lack of fan support. At the same time, the Interstate League team knows as the Grand Rapids (or Torreyson's) Furniture Makers, filling the void of the Western League's departure, moved to Columbus when Grand Rapids fans were less enthused over the lower standards of Interstate League play.[1] Grand Rapids' second iteration as a Western League city began on July 20, 1899, and the team routinely played to overflow crowds in what was admittedly a smaller than average Recreation Park [2]. As an obvious celebration of the return of the superior Western League - soon to be renamed the American League and declared a major league - the 1899 Grand Rapids team was rechristened the Prodigals and contained future Hall of Famers Sam Crawford and Rube Waddell, in addition to a team the majority of which had, or were soon to have, major league experience, including Frank Genins, Billy Sullivan (1900s catcher), and Louis Bierbauer.
Despite Grand Rapids strong fan support and first division placement, there appears to be no serious consideration by Johnson to keep one of only eight American League franchises in Grand Rapids, especially when his league's budding competition with the National League had him eyeing franchise placements in Chicago, Cleveland, and New York. Ultimately on October 14, 1899, two days after the Western League's rebirth as the American League, the Prodigals franchise was transferred to Cleveland for the 1900 season, where it plays to this day as the major league Cleveland Guardians.
Firmly established a minor league city
[edit]Later Grand Rapids teams played mostly in the Central League but also in various other Michigan-based leagues. After a long minor league hiatus in Grand Rapids, the West Michigan Whitecaps of the Midwest League began play in Comstock Park, Michigan, just outside Grand Rapids, in 1994.
The ballparks
[edit]Prior to Western League play in 1894, the various Grand Rapids professional teams played at a variety of parks intended more for convenience than for permanence. Midtown Green, located at Fountain and Eastern streets, as well the property upon which Gerald R. Ford Job Corps (formerly South High School) presently sits (19th century site of the Kent County Fairgrounds), at Hall and Jefferson, were two such sites most frequently used.
Recreation Park was built in 1894 over a five-week period at a cost of $1,500. It was located conveniently on the South Division electric streetcar line, behind the site of the present-day Cottage Grove Silver Line Rapid station. It was the city's first intended permanent home of professional baseball in advance of the arrival of the much-heralded Western League and the effort was headed by team president and future Grand Rapids mayor George "Deacon" Ellis. [3] [4] The grandstands were located 400 feet off of Division Street through property largely utilized by sawmills; it was a common complaint that fans walking to the games from the streetcar line frequent did so through sand and sawdust.[5] Prior to 1898, teams played at Recreation Park for non-Sunday games and at Alger Park on Reeds Lake on Sundays, so as not to run afoul of the city's Blue laws or the wishes of the owner of the Recreation Park property. Playing professional baseball games on Sundays within the city limits was a frequently recurring controversy and a stumbling block tripping up improvements of the grounds until the laws were relaxed in time for the 1899 season - the final year of its use as an athletic facility. The stands and fences were taken down following the 1899 high school football season, and what wood had not by this time rotted was removed to Reed's Lake for use at the ballpark there.
Later, the teams played at Bigelow Field on South Division Avenue and 39th Street.[6] A McDonald's restaurant occupies a portion of the site today.[7]
Notable alumni
[edit]Baseball Hall of Fame alumni
[edit]- Burleigh Grimes (1940, MGR) Inducted, 1964
- Rube Waddell (1899) Inducted, 1946
- Sam Crawford (1899) Inducted, 1957
Notable alumni
[edit]- Nick Altrock (1899)
- Louis Bierbauer (1899)
- Theodore Breitenstein (1891) ERA Leader
- Hal Carlson (1915)
- Bud Clancy (1923)
- Josh Devore (1920-1921, 1923-1924)
- Red Donahue (1895)
- Red Dooin (1899)
- Pat Duncan (1916)
- Pretzels Getzien (1883-1884)
- Charlie Hemphill (1899)
- Joe Heving (1924)
- Dave Hoskins (1948)
- Bert Humphries (1909)
- Bumpus Jones (1894-1895, 1899)
- Frank Killen (1901)
- Bobby Lowe (1908)
- Jeff Pfeffer (1913)
- Dusty Rhodes (1950)
- Lance Richbourg (1920)
- Milt Shoffner (1926)
- Sherry Smith (1913)
- Billy Sullivan (1900s catcher) (1899)
- Ed Summers (1906)
- Lee Tannehill (1917)
- Jack Taylor (1909) ERA Leader
- Maurice Van Robays (1934)
- Stan Wasiak (1941)
- Al Wickland (1911)
References
[edit]- ^ Although often so referred to in digital spaces, the 1899 Grand Rapids Western Leaguers were never referred to as "furniture makers" in any of the contemporaneous press - this applied to the Interstate League product only for that year. All three daily newspapers, whenever mentioning a mascot, always referred to the team as "Prodigals". An August 5, 1899 issue of the Grand Rapids Daily Democrat did refer to them once as the "Rabbits"; the Grand Rapids Herald of August 20, 1899, in a drawing captioned "A Pennant Race", drew for third place an image of what might be construed as a rabbit. (there obviously being no ready imagery conjured by the term "prodigal") However, these are the only such references discovered.
- ^ Various Grand Rapids newspaper sources place seating capacity at about 2,000. Crowds approaching 4,000 were noted during the 1899 Western League season that placed fans along the foul lines from the first base coach's box to the right field fence. The left field fence was largely not available for this as the park was tightly flanked on its north side by the Detroit, Lansing and Northern (future Pere Marquette) railway.
- ^ "The Base Ball Park. It Will Be Located on South Division Street." The Evening (Grand Rapids) Press, March 7, 1894, p4
- ^ "Today Decides It Question of Western League Ball In Grand Rapids. Loftus Is On Hand," The Evening (Grand Rapids) Press, July 12, 1899, p7
- ^ "New Base Ball Park Is Being Figured Upon for This City Next Year." The Evening (Grand Rapids) Press, June 19, 1897, p8
- ^ "History".
- ^ "Bigelow Field".
External links
[edit]
- Defunct minor league baseball teams
- Brooklyn Dodgers minor league affiliates
- Chicago Cubs minor league affiliates
- Detroit Tigers minor league affiliates
- Defunct baseball teams in Michigan
- 1883 establishments in Michigan
- 1951 disestablishments in Michigan
- Baseball teams established in 1883
- Sports clubs and teams disestablished in 1951
- Baseball teams disestablished in 1951
- Michigan sports team stubs
- Midwestern United States baseball team stubs