Kansas City Royal Giants | |
---|---|
Information | |
League | Western Independent Clubs (1910–1912) |
Location | Kansas City, Missouri |
Ballpark | Shelley Park (1910–1912) |
Established | 1910 |
Disbanded | 1912 |
Nickname(s) | Kansas City Royal Giants (1910–1912) |
The Kansas City Royal Giants were a professional Negro leagues baseball team, based in Kansas City, Missouri. From 1910 to 1912, the Kansas City Royal Giants played as a member of the Western Independent Clubs, along with their local rival, the Kansas City Giants. The Kansas City Royal Giants played home games at Shelley Park.
Negro leagues baseball first began in 1909 in the Kansas City area. The Kansas City, Kansas based Kansas City Giants preceded the Kansas City Royal Giants by one season, playing their home games at Riverside Park. The two teams would become entwined as local rivals, with numerous players joining the rosters of both teams. Early negro leagues teams weren't formed together into exclusive leagues, where teams only play against other teams within their league. It was common in the era for teams to "barnstorm" on long road trips against a variety of teams or host games against semi–pro or other local teams, so, statistics and records for teams can vary. The 1909 Kansas City Giants were noted to have played as members of the Western Independent Clubs, with the Kansas City Royal Giants following one season later. [1] [2] [3]
When the Giants turned fully professional, Kansas City Giants owner Tobe Smith signed numerous local players who had played for the Jenkins and Sons and a Kansas City Monarchs semi–pro teams. [2] Kansas City Giants player/manager "Topeka Jack" Johnson was a former professional boxer, known to have been a boxing sparring partner of heavyweight champion Jack Johnson. In the winter of 1909, Johnson helped form the Kansas City "Royal Giants" negro leagues team to be based in Kansas City, Missouri. The Kansas City Royal Giants began play in the 1910 season, immediately becoming a local rival of the Kansas City Giants. [1]
The Kansas Royal Giants were owned by Kansas City businessmen M.B. Garrett and George Washington Walden, with Jack Johnson hired to manage the ballclub. Fortune J. Weaver was also an owner of the KC Royal Giants and was president of the Afro–American Realty and Investment Company. Just before the start of the 1910 season, Johnson unsuccessfully attempted to start a Negro National League, writing articles that appeared in newspapers in Chicago and other major cities. Johnson wrote: "It certainly has been proven from the big leagues on down to the minors, that there is nothing in the world that beats organized baseball and harmony..." [4] [5]
In beginning play, the Royal Giants ran an advertisement for local teams to play against. The address of 1005 McGee Street, Kansas City, Missouri was listed as the team business address. [2]
The Kansas City Royal Giants began play in 1910, hosting home games at Shelley Park. In July, the Royal Giants won two against the Kansas City Giants in front of 6,00 fans at Shelley Park. Playing at Riverside Park, the Giants defeated the Royal Giants 5–2 and in September the Royal Giants lost three more games to the Kansas City Giants. The Giants were reported to have defeated the Royal Giants by scores of 8–3 and 6–0 in a doubleheader in October, 1910 at Riverside Park. "Norman" and "Sunny Jim" were the noted pitchers for the Royal Giants. The final game between the two teams in 1910 was played at Association Park, a 5–2 Giants victory, with the Giants winning $200 and half of the gate receipts. The Royal Giants' record among Western Independent Clubs was reported to have been 4–2 and placed the team 2nd among the teams, while playing under manager Topeka Jack Johnson. The Kansas City Royal Giants were reported to have compiled a 5–9 record against their new rival, the Kansas City Giants. [6] [7] [1] [2]
In 1910, the Kansas City Giants released three players who attempted to play for the rival Kansas City Royal Giants in a morning game and then travel across the city to play for their own club. The players were said to have played the morning Royal Giants game and then arrived late for the second game and were released by the Giants. [5]
After the 1910 season, friction between Jack Johnson and owner George Washington Walden led to Johnson returning to manage the rival Kansas City Royal Giants. [4]
In 1911, the Royal Giants played under manager Robert Boone and placed 11th with a 3–9 record among Western Independent Clubs. In June 1911, the Kansas City Royal Giants played a three–game series against the Kansas City Giants. The Giants were noted have swept the series, defeating the Royal Giants by the scores of 11–2, 4–1 and 8–7. [8] [9] [1]
On May 13, 1911, it was reported Royal Giants player John Merida died of a heart attack. [10] [11]
In June 1911, Royal Giants' owner Fortune Weaver wrote to the Indianapolis Freeman newspaper in regard to unstable teams and the need for an organized negro league. Weaver wrote: "Without a league Negro baseball is bound to go down. There are too many would-be managers and too many unreliable players." Weaver cited a Pekin Tigers of Cleveland team that had folded and did not play a scheduled series in Kansas City and the French Lick Plutos from French Lick, Indiana, who also did not show for their series in Kansas City. "Now, this kind of business is killing Negro baseball." Weaver concluded. "I am informed that other team managers are having the same trouble with teams they have booked. I tell you, boys, there is only one remedy for these troubles, and that is the Negro League." It was noted that in 1911, the Royal Giants picked up players who jumped from the Pensacola Giants team while they were in Kansas City, which led the Pensacola club to disband. [5]
After the 1911 season, Kansas City Giants player and former Royal Giants player Dee Williams was shot to death in Kansas City and the Kansas City Giants continued play, but as a semi–pro barnstorming level team with a depleted roster. Topeka Jack Johnson then returned to the Kansas City Royal Giants in 1912, with Johnson and George Washington Walden resolving their differences. [2] [1] [4]
The Kansas City Royal Giants played their final season in 1912, continuing as a member of the Western Independent Clubs. Playing again under Jack Johnson, the Royal Giants finished with a 3–2 record, placing 2nd among Western Independent Clubs. [12] [13]
Following the 1912 season, a Kansas City Royal Giants team played in 1916 thorough the 1920s as a semi–professional negro leagues team. [14] [5]
In 2016, it was reported that the Society for American Baseball Research (SABR) dedicated a new grave marker for "Topeka Jack" Johnson at Mount Auburn Cemetery in Topeka, Kansas. [15] [16]
The Kansas City Royal Giants teams from 1910 to 1912 hosted home games at Shelley Park. Shelley Park was located at Oak Street (west); Missouri Avenue (north); Locust Lane (east); Independence Avenue (south) in the River Market Neighborhood, Kansas City, Missouri. The site had previously served as a city graveyard beginning in the 1840s, before namesake mayor George M. Shelley and the city park board had the graveyard condemned, moved and the site turned into a park. Today, the ballpark location is home to a fire station and the I-35 & Hwy 9 interchange. [17] [18] [12] [15] [19]
Year(s) | # Yrs. | Team | Level | League | Ballpark |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1910–1912 | 3 | Kansas City Royal Giants | Negro minor leagues | Western Independent Clubs | Shelley Park |
Year | Record | Finish | Manager | Playoffs/Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1910 | 4–2 | 2nd | "Topeka Jack" Johnson | No playoffs held |
1911 | 3–9 | 11th | Robert Boone | No playoffs held |
1912 | 3–2 | 2nd | "Topeka Jack" Johnson | No playoffs held |
Joseph Williams, nicknamed "Cyclone Joe" and "Smokey Joe", was an American right-handed pitcher in Negro league baseball. He is considered one of the greatest pitchers of all-time and was elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 1999.
The Chicago American Giants were a Chicago-based Negro league baseball team. From 1910 until the mid-1930s, the American Giants were the most dominant team in black baseball. Owned and managed from 1911 to 1926 by player-manager Andrew "Rube" Foster, they were charter members of Foster's Negro National League. The American Giants won five pennants in that league, along with another pennant in the 1932 Negro Southern League and a second-half championship in Gus Greenlee's Negro National League in 1934.
The New York Lincoln Giants were a Negro league baseball team based in New York City from 1911 through 1930.
The St. Louis Stars, originally the St. Louis Giants, were a Negro league baseball team that competed independently from as early as 1906 to 1919, and then joined the Negro National League (NNL) for the duration of their existence. After the 1921 season, the Giants were sold by African-American promoter Charlie Mills to Dick Kent and Dr. Sam Sheppard, who built a new park and renamed the club the Stars. As the Stars, they eventually built one of the great dynasties in Negro league history, winning three pennants in four years from 1928 to 1931.
The Indianapolis ABCs were a Negro league baseball team that played both as an independent club and as a charter member of the first Negro National League (NNL). They claimed the western championship of black baseball in 1915 and 1916, and finished second in the 1922 NNL. Among their best players were Baseball Hall of Fame members Oscar Charleston, Biz Mackey, and Ben Taylor.
Hurley Allen McNair was a baseball player in the Negro leagues and the pre-Negro leagues.
Oscar "Heavy" Johnson (1895–1960) was a baseball player in the Negro leagues. He played catcher and outfielder. Johnson was one of the Negro league's foremost power hitters in the 1920s, reportedly weighing 250 pounds, and known for hitting home runs. Longtime MLB umpire Jocko Conlan once said that Johnson "could hit a ball out of any park."
Carroll Ray "Dink" Mothell was a catcher and utility player who played for 15 years in the Negro leagues. Known for his versatility, Mothell played every position. It was said you could use him "most any place, any time."
William Thomas Pettus was an American baseball first baseman in the Cuban League and Negro leagues. He played from 1902 to 1923 with several teams.
Tullie McAdoo was an American baseball first baseman in the Negro leagues. He played from 1908 to 1924 with several teams, playing mostly with the St. Louis Giants.
Tim Samuel Strothers was an American baseball catcher and first baseman in the pre-Negro leagues.
John Thomas "Topeka Jack" Johnson was a Negro leagues second baseman and manager for several years before the founding of the first Negro National League. He was also a professional boxer and trainer, and his nickname may have resulted from the need to distinguish him from the heavyweight champion Jack Johnson.
William Rufus "Shin" Norman was a Negro leagues pitcher for several years before the founding of the first Negro National League.
The Nebraska City Forresters were a minor league baseball franchise based in Nebraska City, Nebraska. From 1910 to 1913, "Forresters" played exclusively as members of the Class D level Missouri-Iowa-Nebraska-Kansas League, winning the 1912 league championship.
John H. Merida, nicknamed "Snowball", was an American Negro league catcher and second baseman between 1907 and 1911.
The Larned Wheat Kings were a minor league baseball team based in Larned, Kansas. From 1909 to 1911, Larned teams played exclusively as members of the Class D level Kansas State League. The team began play known as the Larned "Cowboys" in the 1909 season. In 1911, the Kansas State League, Larned included, folded during the season due to drought. Larned hosted home minor league games at City Park.
Dee Williams was an American Negro league outfielder between 1909 and 1911.
The Kansas City Giants were a professional Negro leagues baseball team, based in Kansas City, Kansas. From 1909 to 1911, the Kansas City Giants played as a member of the Western Independent Clubs. The Kansas City Giants played home games at Riverside Park. The Giants were a rival of the Kansas City, Missouri based Kansas City Royal Giants.
Otto Bolden was an American Negro league catcher between 1909 and 1912.