Ed Kemp | |
---|---|
Outfielder | |
Batted: Unknown Threw: Unknown | |
Negro league baseball debut | |
1922, for the Philadelphia Stars | |
Last appearance | |
1924, for the Lincoln Giants | |
Teams | |
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Ed Kemp was an American baseball outfielder in the Negro leagues. [1] He played with the Philadelphia Royal Stars in 1922, Baltimore Black Sox in 1923 and the Lincoln Giants in 1924. [2]
The Dayton Marcos were a Negro league baseball team based from Dayton, Ohio that played during the early twentieth century.
The Pittsburgh Keystones was the name of two historic professional Negro league baseball teams that operated in 1887 and again in 1921 and 1922. The first team was a member of the first black baseball league in 1887, the League of Colored Baseball Clubs. The league only lasted a week, which resulted in a 3-4 record for the Keystones, and included Weldy Walker, the second African-American to play in the major leagues and future hall of famer, Sol White.
José María Tranquilino Fernández Marín Sr. was a Cuban baseball catcher and manager in the Negro leagues from the 1910s to the 1940s.
The Louisville Black Caps were a professional Negro league baseball team based in Louisville, Kentucky. The team played as the Black Caps in the Negro National League in 1930 before playing as the Louisville White Sox in 1931.
Ramón "El Profesor" Bragaña Palacios was a Cuban baseball pitcher and outfielder in the Negro leagues and the Mexican League.
The following is a timeline of the evolution of major-league-caliber franchises in Negro league baseball. The franchises included are those of high-caliber independent teams prior to the organization of formal league play in 1920 and concludes with the dissolution of the remnant of the last major Negro league team, the Kansas City Monarchs then based out of Grand Rapids, Michigan, in about 1966. All teams who played a season while a member of a major Negro league are included. The major leagues are the original Negro National League, the Eastern Colored League, the American Negro League, the East–West League, the second Negro National League and the Negro American League. Teams from the 1932 original Negro Southern League are also included which allows for the inclusion of the few high caliber minor Negro league teams.
Joseph B. Spencer Jr., nicknamed "J.B.", was an American Negro league second baseman in the 1940s.
Ernest C. Carter Jr., nicknamed "Spoon", was an American Negro league pitcher in the 1930s and 1940s.
Thadist B. Christopher was an American Negro league outfielder in the 1930s and 1940s.
Calvin Coolidge Irvin was an American Negro league baseball shortstop and college basketball coach.
Robert Poindexter, nicknamed "Roy", was an American Negro league pitcher in the 1920s.
Eldridge Everett Mayweather was an American Negro league first baseman between 1935 and 1942.
James Albert Kemp, nicknamed "Gabby", was an American Negro league second baseman and manager between 1937 and 1941.
John Kemp was a Negro league outfielder in the 1920s.
George Walter Kemp is an American former Negro league catcher who played in the 1940s.