William Craddock | |||
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Right fielder | |||
| |||
Negro league baseball debut | |||
1929, for the Baltimore Black Sox | |||
Last appearance | |||
1929, for the Bacharach Giants | |||
Teams | |||
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William Craddock was an American baseball right fielder in the Negro leagues. He played with the Baltimore Black Sox and Bacharach Giants in 1929. [1]
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.
The Cuban Stars were a team of Cuban professional baseball players that competed in the United States Negro leagues from 1907 to 1930. The team was also sometimes known as the Cuban Stars of Havana, Stars of Cuba, Cuban All-Stars, Havana Reds, Almendares Blues or simply as the Cubans. For one season, 1921, the team played home games in Cincinnati, Ohio and was known as the Cincinnati Cubans.
The Minneapolis Keystones was a small club of black baseball players formed in Minneapolis, Minnesota running from approximately 1908 to 1911.
William "Dolly" King was an American professional basketball and baseball player. He was one of a handful of African Americans to play in the National Basketball League (NBL), the predecessor of the NBA.
William Nathaniel Rogers was a baseball player in the Negro leagues from the 1920s to the 1940s.
The Cuban House of David were a traveling Negro league baseball team that played from about 1928 to 1936 featuring players primarily from Cuba.
William Cradock, or Craddock could refer to:
The 1924 Kansas City Monarchs baseball team competed in the Negro National League during the 1924 baseball season. The Monarchs compiled a 57–22 (.722) record and won the Negro National League championship. The team played its home games at Muehlebach Field in Kansas City, Missouri.
William Henry Hubert, nicknamed "Bubber", was an American Negro league pitcher between 1939 and 1946.
William Henry Campbell, nicknamed "Bullet" and "Zip", was an American Negro league pitcher in the 1920s.
William Walker was a professional baseball center fielder in the Negro leagues. He played with the St. Louis Stars in 1937.
William Fuller was an American Negro league second baseman in the 1910s.