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  2. Apr 13, 2017 · A turning point for Black baseball came in 1920, when Rube Foster founded the Negro National League. It launched with eight teams: Chicago American Giants, Chicago Giants, Cuban Stars, Dayton ...

  3. History of the Negro leagues. Amateur era. Professional baseball. Frank Leland. Rube Foster. Golden age. Satchel Paige, Josh Gibson, and Gus Greenlee. World War II. Integration era. End of the Negro leagues. Major Negro leagues. Colored and Negro World Series. Minor Negro leagues. The Negro leagues and the Hall of Fame. Last Negro leaguers.

  4. Mar 31, 2024 · Negro league, any of the associations of African American baseball teams active largely between 1920 and the late 1940s, when Black players were at last contracted to play major and minor league baseball. The principal Negro leagues were the Negro National League (1920–31, 1933–48), the Eastern Colored League (1923–28), and the Negro ...

    • Robert W. Peterson
  5. Negro League Baseball remained wildly popular through the 1930s and early 1940s, with an estimated 3 million fans coming to ballparks during the ’42 season. The only event that halted the Negro Leagues’ run of success was something many Black players had desired all along: an invitation to prove themselves in the Majors.

  6. The 32 featured players below were selected after consultation with John Thorn, the Official Historian for MLB, and other Negro Leagues experts. More players will be added regularly as we seek to preserve and honor those who helped define the Negro Leagues, and its impact on the game. History of Negro League players and teams.

  7. Feb 13, 2020 · A century ago, on February 13, 1920, teams from eight cities formally created the Negro National League. Three decades of stellar play followed, as the league affirmed black competence and...

  8. Aug 21, 2021 · In its first two decades the sport was racially integrated but after the Civil War, African American baseball players were banned from the National Association of Amateur Baseball Players in 1867. This led to the creation of the first all-black team, the Cuban Giants of Babylon, NY, in 1885.

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