Robert Keyes | |
---|---|
Pitcher | |
Batted: Left Threw: Left | |
Negro league baseball debut | |
1941, for the Memphis Red Sox | |
Last appearance | |
1945, for the Memphis Red Sox | |
Teams | |
|
Robert Keyes, nicknamed "Youngie", was a Negro league pitcher in the 1940s.
Keyes made his Negro leagues debut in 1941 with the Memphis Red Sox. He went on to play five seasons with the Red Sox through 1945, and also had a brief stint with the Philadelphia Stars in 1943. [1] [2]
The Cuban House of David were a traveling Negro league baseball team that played from about 1928 to 1936 featuring players primarily from Cuba.
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.
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