Joe Bell | |
---|---|
Pitcher / Outfielder | |
Batted: Unknown Threw: Left | |
Negro league baseball debut | |
1932, for the Montgomery Grey Sox | |
Last appearance | |
1932, for the Montgomery Grey Sox | |
Teams | |
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Joseph "Lefty" Bell was an American baseball pitcher and outfielder in the Negro leagues. He played with the Montgomery Grey Sox in 1932. [1]
While 1932 was Bell's first year in professional baseball,he was expected to be one of the league's best pitchers by the end of the season. [2] However,he only appeared in two recorded games as a pitcher,going 1–0 with a 3.14 earned run average in 14.1 innings pitched. He also played the outfield,recording four hits in 14 at bats.
Norman Thomas "Turkey" Stearnes was an American baseball center fielder. He played 18 years in the Negro leagues,including nine years with the Detroit Stars (1923–1931),six years with the Chicago American Giants,and three years with the Kansas City Monarchs (1938–1940).
The Montgomery Grey Sox were a Negro Southern League (NSL) baseball team based in Montgomery,Alabama. While the NSL was regarded as a minor league throughout most of its existence,with the collapse of the first Negro National League in 1931,the league is considered a major league for that one season.
The Newark Browns were a Negro league baseball team in the East-West League,based in Bloomfield,New Jersey,in 1932. They played their home games at General Electric Field.
The Long Branch Cubans were a professional baseball team that played from 1913 to 1916. It was the first U.S. minor league baseball team composed almost entirely of Cubans. Several players,including Dolf Luque and Mike González,went on to play in the major leagues. The Cubans played in Long Branch,New Jersey from 1913 to 1915,except for the first half of the 1914 season,when they played in Newark,New Jersey. In 1916,they started the season playing in Jersey City,New Jersey as the "Jersey City Cubans." Later that summer,they moved their home games to Poughkeepsie,New York,where they were usually referred to as the "Long Branch Cubans." In late July 1916 they briefly moved to Harlem and finally to Madison,New Jersey in August.
Henry H. Hannon Jr. was a Negro leagues outfielder and manager who played from 1908 to 1914 and later managed the Montgomery Grey Sox.
The Memphis Red Sox were an American Negro league baseball team that was active from 1920 to 1959. Originally named the Barber College Baseball Club,the team was initially owned and operated by Arthur P. Martin,a local Memphis barber. In the late 1920s the Martin brothers,all three Memphis doctors and businessmen,purchased the Red Sox. J. B. Martin,W. S. Martin,and B. B. Martin,would retain control of the club till its dissolution in 1959. The Red Sox played as members,at various times,of the Negro Southern League,Negro National League,and Negro American League. The team was never a titan of the Negro leagues like wealthier teams in northern cities of the United States,but sound management lead to a continuous thirty-nine years of operation,a span that was exceeded by very few other teams. Following integration the team had five players that would eventually make the rosters of Major League Baseball teams and two players that were inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame.
The 1932 Detroit Wolves baseball team was a Negro league baseball team that competed in the East–West League (EWL) during the 1932 baseball season. The team compiled a 28–9 record and won the EWL pennant,finishing six-and-a-half games ahead of the second-place team. The Wolves played their home games at Hamtramck Stadium in Hamtramck,Michigan.
John Ray was an American Negro league outfielder in the 1930s and 1940s.
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Edgar Leo "Eight Rock" Birdine, also spelled Burdene and Burdine,was an American baseball pitcher,outfielder,and third baseman in the Negro leagues. He played with the Memphis Red Sox and Birmingham Black Barons from 1927 to 1932.
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