Salute to the Negro Leagues: The Great Pittsburgh Crawfords!

Salute to the Negro Leagues: The Great Pittsburgh Crawfords!



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Salute to the Negro Leagues: The Great Pittsburgh Crawfords

To start off our February month-long salute to the Negro Leagues, here’s a repost of a nice photo of the Pittsburgh Crawfords, along with a a few words about their history:

Many of us have heard that the Pittsburgh Crawfords in the 1930’s were some of the greatest teams of all time, with stars Satchel Paige, Josh Gibson, “Cool Papa” Bell, Judy Johnson, and Oscar Charleton, among others. If you’re like me, you probably didn’t know much more about them. So here’s a few words about the history of this great Negro League team.

The Pittsburgh Crawfords were named after the Crawford Grill, a club in the Hill District of Pittsburgh owned by Gus Greenlee. Satchel Paige and Josh Gibson often hung out there and it became one of black Pittsburgh’s favorite night spots. Black stars like Lena Horne and Bill “Bojangles” Robinson were some of the top-notched entertainers that the club regularly featured.

Greenlee bought the team in 1931, following the demise of many of the major Negro leagues of the 1920s, including the Negro National League and the Eastern Colored League. Upon acquiring the team, Greenlee signed the top African-American star, Satchel Paige. The next year, 1932, Greenlee hired Oscar Charleston as player-manager, and added top Negro league stars Josh Gibson, Judy Johnson, and Cool Papa Bell. Other notable signings included William Bell, Rap Dixon, and Ted “Double Duty” Radcliffe. Thanks to Greenlee, the now-stacked Crawfords immediately established themselves as the best black team in the country.

In 1933, Greenlee founded a new Negro National League, with the Crawfords as charter members. The league was structured with a first-half winner and a second-half winner.The two teams played at the end of the season for the Negro National League pennant. The Crawfords narrowly lost the first-half title to the Chicago American Giants and the pennant that year was never officially decided. The next season, 1934, with Gibson leading the league with 16 home runs and Paige winning 20 games, the Crawfords were near the top of the overall standings, but won neither half, even though they had the best overall record.

In 1935 Paige skipped most of the Negro National League season to play for a semipro team in Bismark, North Dakota. Even without their ace pitcher, the Crawfords finally lived up to their promise, taking the first-half title with a 26–6 record, then defeating the New York Cubans in a close seven-game series for their only undisputed Negro National League pennant. Manybaseball historians consider this 1935 edition of the Crawfords to be the greatest Negro league team of all time, featuring the four Hall of Famers, Charleton, Bell, Gibson, and Johnson, plus left-handed pitcher Leroy Matlock, who went 18-0.

In 1937, Paige led several Crawfords players, including Gibson and Bell, to the Dominican Republic to play for the dictator Rafael Trujillo’s team. The Crawfords plunged to fifth place out of six teams with a 12–16 record. They partly recovered the next season, finishing third with a 24–16 record, but, with the exception of the 41-year-old Charleston, the heart of the old Crawfords’ team — Paige, Gibson, Bell — had all moved on to other teams.

The Crawfords might have survived these losses, but their attendance flatlined after the white members of the team’s board forced Greenlee to shut out blacks from jobs at Greenlee Field (ushers, ticket-takers, etc.). Greenlee Field was one of the few parks built and owned by a Negro league team. Greenlee then sold the club, Greenlee Field was demolished, and the Crawfords moved to Toledo, becoming the Toledo Crawfords, for the 1939 season, and then to Indianapolis, becoming the Indianapolis Crawfords for the 1940 season.

-Gary Livacari

Photo Photo Credits: American Photo Colorizing; “When the Game Was Black and White” by Bruce Chadwick; and Public Domain

Information: Excerpts edited from the Pittsburgh Crawford Wikipedia page

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I'm a baseball historian who also enjoys writing. My forte is identifying ballplayers in old photos, and my special interest is the Dead Ball Era.

3 Comments

  1. Tom Van Hyning · February 11, 2018 Reply

    Thanks for sharing this, Gary. My favorite Pittsburgh Crawford player was switch-hitting 3B Howard Easterling from Mt. Olive, Mississippi.

  2. Talib · February 1, 2021 Reply

    My great grandfather (Chester Williams) played for Pittsburg. Do you have any posts about him?

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