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Southern League (1885–1899)

The Southern League was a Class B and Class C minor league baseball league which operated intermittently in the Southern United States from 1885 to 1899. Financial problems plagued the league and its member teams throughout their existence. It was not unusual for teams to depart the league during the season or for the league to cease operations without completing the season. It was this lack of financial support which ultimately caused the league to permanently disband in 1889. In 1901, a new league, called the Southern Association, was created from its remnants.

Southern League
SportBaseball
Founded1885
Ceased1899
CountryUnited States
Most titlesNew Orleans Pelicans (3)

History edit

The original Southern League was formed on February 11, 1885, in Atlanta.[1] It was the first professional league to operate in the South.[2] Henry W. Grady, managing editor of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, was selected as the league's first president.[3] The eight-team circuit included the Atlanta Atlantas, Augusta Browns, Chattanooga Lookouts, Columbus Stars, Memphis Reds, Nashville Americans, and unnamed teams from Birmingham, Alabama, and Macon, Georgia.[4] Each team was scheduled to play 100 games during the season, but few would reach that mark as the Birmingham, Chattanooga, and Columbus clubs quit the league in the final two weeks of the season.[1][5] Atlanta captured the Southern League's first pennant with their 66–32 (.673) season record.[1] Nashville's Len Sowders was the league's first batting champion with a .309 batting average.[1]

Financial insolvency, a perpetual problem in the league,[3] forced the teams from Augusta and Chattanooga to drop out of the league in July 1886.[1] Atlanta repeated their previous winning season by capturing the 1886 league pennant with a 64–28 (.696) record.[1] Lefty Marr, mirroring Nashville teammate Len Sowders' feat from the previous season, was the league's batting champion with a .327 batting average.[1] Charleston Seagulls pitcher Gus Wehling had the lowest earned run average (0.78) for the season.[1] A new entrant to the league, the New Orleans Pelicans, won the 1887 league pennant with a 74–40 (.649) record.[1] Of the seven teams fielded during the 1887 season, only three (Charleston, Memphis, and New Orleans) made it to the end of the season on October 11; financial problems forced the others to drop out of the league.[6] Wally Andrews of Memphis was the league's batting champion (.413).[7]

Only four teams were able to compete during the 1888 season.[8] The season opened on April 7, was halted by early July.[9] The league champion Birmingham Maroons compiled a 32–19 .(627) season.[1] Memphis' John Sneed led the league with his .354 batting average.[9] The league played again in 1889 but only fielded four teams, which was partially to blame for the failure of the 1888 season.[10] After the first week or two of play, the Southern League reorganized by adding three other teams.[10] The league collapsed again that season after only three teams remained active by the middle of the season.[3] New Orleans (46–9, .836) was in first place at the time the league dissolved.[1] The circuit was non-operational from 1890 to 1891.[5]

The Southern League started up again in 1892, and the Birmingham Grays (73–50, .593) won the league pennant.[1] The 1893 Southern League featured the largest circuit in the league's history. The 12-team league was hampered by a poorly-designed schedule and insufficient financing which forced the owners of the Birmingham club, Charleston Seagulls, and Nashville Tigers to turn control of their teams over to the league, which continued to operate the clubs.[1][11] A meeting was held on July 1, at which the league's president, Hart, resigned despite those in attendance asking him to reconsider.[11] J.B. Nicklin of Chattanooga was elected as the new league president six days later.[11] Between mid July and early August, The Birmingham team transferred to Pensacola, Florida, but soon found themselves quarantined from the rest of the league due to an outbreak of yellow fever.[11] This development, in addition to ongoing financial debacles, caused the league to end the season on August 12.[11] The Augusta Electricians were awarded the pennant for the first part of the season, and the Macon Central City/Hornets were awarded the pennant for the second half.[1][11] Charlie Frank of Memphis won the league batting title with a .390 average.[12]

In 1894, some teams were forced to sell their players to other clubs in order to stay financially solvent, while others refused to continue play in the second half. Only Nashville, Mobile, New Orleans, and Memphis competed after the season's midpoint.[13] This prompted the Southern League to call the rest of the season off nine games into the second half on July 7, 1894, as the result of league-wide financial instability brought on by the expense of travel and poor attendance.[14][15] Memphis was awarded the pennant for having the best overall record.[16]

In the ensuing months, baseball leaders across the South considered which cities to include in the next iteration of the league.[17] Representatives met at The Read House Hotel in Chattanooga on January 14 to reorganize for the 1895 season.[18] Membership was granted to clubs in Atlanta, Chattanooga, Evansville, Little Rock, Memphis, Montgomery, Nashville, and New Orleans, thus lessening the expense of travel incurred in the past with the inclusion of cities such as Charleston and Savannah.[19] Each of the eight teams paid a US$1,000 deposit to guarantee they would play the entire season.[20] They also pledged to pay dues of $100 per month plus 3% of total gate receipts for a sinking fund.[20] Player salaries were capped at $1,000 per team.[20]

 
The 1895 champion Nashville Seraphs

The 1895 season saw the Chattanooga franchise being transferred to Mobile on June 19,[21] Memphis disbanding on July 23,[22] and Little Rock dropping out on July 27.[23] Though the Atlanta Crackers and Nashville Seraphs ended the 1895 season tied for first place, a meeting of the league's directors resulted in the nullification of an August 10 game between the two in which the umpire improperly made an out call following fan interference. This ruling caused the Seraphs' winning percentage to rise to .676 (71–34) and Atlanta's to fall to .667 (68–34), making Nashville the pennant winner.[24][25] Chattanooga/Mobile's Lew Whistler won the league batting title with a .404 batting average.[26]

The New Orleans Pelicans (67–30, .744) won their third league pennant in 1896, giving them more championships in the original Southern League than any other club.[1] The league was in-operational in 1897 due to the lack of financial support.[1] In 1898, the league made it as far as July 4 before shutting down again. The Augusta, Georgia, club was in first place at the time with a 20–8 (.714) record.[1] The Southern League consisted of only four teams during its 1899 season.[27] The Mobile Blackbirds (23–16, .590) were in first place when the league suspended operations on May 1.[1] This was the final season of competition for the original Southern League—a lack of interest and financial support caused the league to fold for good.[5] Two years later, in 1901, the Southern Association was created by Abner Powell, Charley Frank, and Ike Fisher out of the remnants of the Southern League.[1]

Teams edit

Team nicknames were not official for most teams in the 19th century. Names were often bestowed by local sportswriters or civic leaders.[28] As such, some records only provide the city a team represented with no moniker.

Notes
  • a In 1889, Atlanta and Charleston were the same team.
  • b In 1889, Birmingham and Mobile were the same team.
  • c In 1893, Birmingham and Pensacola were the same team.
  • d In 1894, the Mobile Bluebirds and Atlanta Atlantas were the same team.
  • e In 1895, the Chattanooga Warriors and Mobile Bluebirds were the same team.
  • f In 1895, Memphis's team was called both the Giants and the Lambs.
  • g In 1896, the Columbus Babies and Columbus River Snipes were the same team.
  • h In 1899, the Montgomery Senators and Dallas Steers were the same team.

City timeline edit

League champions edit

  • 1885: Atlanta Atlantas
  • 1886: Atlanta Atlantas
  • 1887: New Orleans Pelicans
  • 1888: Birmingham Maroons
  • 1889: New Orleans Pelicans
  • 1890: non-operational
  • 1891: non-operational
  • 1892: Birmingham Grays
  • 1893: Augusta Electricians (1st half) / Macon Central City/Hornets (2nd half)
  • 1894: Memphis Grays
  • 1895: Nashville Seraphs
  • 1896: New Orleans Pelicans
  • 1897: non-operational
  • 1898: Augusta
  • 1899: Mobile Blackbirds

References edit

General
  • O'Neal, Bill (1994), The Southern League: Baseball in Dixie, 1885–1994, Eakin Press, ISBN 0890159521
Specific
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s "Timeline" (PDF). Southern Association Baseball. Retrieved February 1, 2015.
  2. ^ O'Neal, p. 2
  3. ^ a b c Darnell, Tim (November 30, 2007). "Southern League". New Georgia Encyclopedia. Georgia Humanities Council and the University of Georgia Press. Retrieved February 1, 2015.
  4. ^ "1885 Southern League Statistics". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved February 1, 2015.
  5. ^ a b c "League history". Southern League. Minor League Baseball. Retrieved February 1, 2015.
  6. ^ O'Neal, p. 6
  7. ^ O'Neal, pp. 6–7
  8. ^ "1888 Southern League Statistics". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved February 1, 2015.
  9. ^ a b O'Neal, p. 8
  10. ^ a b O'Neal, p. 11
  11. ^ a b c d e f "The Southern League". Reach's Official Base Ball Guide for 1894. A. J. Reach Co. 1894. pp. 36–41. Retrieved February 2, 2015.
  12. ^ O'Neal, p. 13
  13. ^ "1894 Southern Association Statistics". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved January 29, 2015.
  14. ^ "The Season Ended". Nashville Banner. Nashville. July 9, 1894. p. 3. Retrieved February 26, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  15. ^ Traughber, Bill (2017). Nashville Baseball History: From Sulphur Dell to the Sounds. South Orange, New Jersey: Summer Games Books. p. 24. ISBN 978-1-938545-83-2.
  16. ^ O'Neal, p. 15
  17. ^ "Figuring on Base Ball". Chattanooga Daily Times. Chattanooga. November 25, 1894. p. 5. Retrieved February 26, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  18. ^ "The Southern League". Nashville Banner. Nashville. January 14, 1895. p. 1. Retrieved February 26, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  19. ^ "Protection Acquired". The Nashville American. Nashville. January 5, 1895. p. 6. Retrieved February 26, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  20. ^ a b c "We'll Have Base Ball". Chattanooga Daily Times. Chattanooga. January 15, 1895. p. 5. Retrieved February 26, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  21. ^ "John Kelly Gets It". The Nashville American. Nashville. July 16, 1895. p. 6. Retrieved March 2, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  22. ^ Fresh, Johnny (July 24, 1895). "Six Straight Games". The Nashville American. Nashville. p. 6. Retrieved March 2, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  23. ^ Fresh, Johnny (July 28, 1895). "Stallings' Dander Up". The Nashville American. Nashville. p. 6. Retrieved March 6, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  24. ^ "The Solid Three". The Atlanta Constitution. Atlanta. September 9, 1895. p. 2. Retrieved March 5, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  25. ^ "Will Fly the Pennant". The Nashville American. Nashville. December 23, 1895. p. 5. Retrieved March 5, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  26. ^ O'Neal, p. 16
  27. ^ "1899 Southern League Statistics". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved February 1, 2015.
  28. ^ Nipper, Skip (October 1, 2013). "Name That Team". 262 Down Right. Retrieved February 1, 2015.

southern, league, 1885, 1899, this, article, about, original, southern, league, that, operated, from, 1885, 1899, double, minor, league, that, operated, from, 1964, 2020, southern, league, 1964, 2020, successor, this, league, that, operated, from, 1901, 1961, . This article is about original Southern League that operated from 1885 to 1899 For the Double A minor league that operated from 1964 to 2020 see Southern League 1964 2020 For the successor of this league that operated from 1901 to 1961 see Southern Association The Southern League was a Class B and Class C minor league baseball league which operated intermittently in the Southern United States from 1885 to 1899 Financial problems plagued the league and its member teams throughout their existence It was not unusual for teams to depart the league during the season or for the league to cease operations without completing the season It was this lack of financial support which ultimately caused the league to permanently disband in 1889 In 1901 a new league called the Southern Association was created from its remnants Southern LeagueSportBaseballFounded1885Ceased1899CountryUnited StatesMost titlesNew Orleans Pelicans 3 Contents 1 History 2 Teams 2 1 City timeline 3 League champions 4 ReferencesHistory editThe original Southern League was formed on February 11 1885 in Atlanta 1 It was the first professional league to operate in the South 2 Henry W Grady managing editor of The Atlanta Journal Constitution was selected as the league s first president 3 The eight team circuit included the Atlanta Atlantas Augusta Browns Chattanooga Lookouts Columbus Stars Memphis Reds Nashville Americans and unnamed teams from Birmingham Alabama and Macon Georgia 4 Each team was scheduled to play 100 games during the season but few would reach that mark as the Birmingham Chattanooga and Columbus clubs quit the league in the final two weeks of the season 1 5 Atlanta captured the Southern League s first pennant with their 66 32 673 season record 1 Nashville s Len Sowders was the league s first batting champion with a 309 batting average 1 Financial insolvency a perpetual problem in the league 3 forced the teams from Augusta and Chattanooga to drop out of the league in July 1886 1 Atlanta repeated their previous winning season by capturing the 1886 league pennant with a 64 28 696 record 1 Lefty Marr mirroring Nashville teammate Len Sowders feat from the previous season was the league s batting champion with a 327 batting average 1 Charleston Seagulls pitcher Gus Wehling had the lowest earned run average 0 78 for the season 1 A new entrant to the league the New Orleans Pelicans won the 1887 league pennant with a 74 40 649 record 1 Of the seven teams fielded during the 1887 season only three Charleston Memphis and New Orleans made it to the end of the season on October 11 financial problems forced the others to drop out of the league 6 Wally Andrews of Memphis was the league s batting champion 413 7 Only four teams were able to compete during the 1888 season 8 The season opened on April 7 was halted by early July 9 The league champion Birmingham Maroons compiled a 32 19 627 season 1 Memphis John Sneed led the league with his 354 batting average 9 The league played again in 1889 but only fielded four teams which was partially to blame for the failure of the 1888 season 10 After the first week or two of play the Southern League reorganized by adding three other teams 10 The league collapsed again that season after only three teams remained active by the middle of the season 3 New Orleans 46 9 836 was in first place at the time the league dissolved 1 The circuit was non operational from 1890 to 1891 5 The Southern League started up again in 1892 and the Birmingham Grays 73 50 593 won the league pennant 1 The 1893 Southern League featured the largest circuit in the league s history The 12 team league was hampered by a poorly designed schedule and insufficient financing which forced the owners of the Birmingham club Charleston Seagulls and Nashville Tigers to turn control of their teams over to the league which continued to operate the clubs 1 11 A meeting was held on July 1 at which the league s president Hart resigned despite those in attendance asking him to reconsider 11 J B Nicklin of Chattanooga was elected as the new league president six days later 11 Between mid July and early August The Birmingham team transferred to Pensacola Florida but soon found themselves quarantined from the rest of the league due to an outbreak of yellow fever 11 This development in addition to ongoing financial debacles caused the league to end the season on August 12 11 The Augusta Electricians were awarded the pennant for the first part of the season and the Macon Central City Hornets were awarded the pennant for the second half 1 11 Charlie Frank of Memphis won the league batting title with a 390 average 12 In 1894 some teams were forced to sell their players to other clubs in order to stay financially solvent while others refused to continue play in the second half Only Nashville Mobile New Orleans and Memphis competed after the season s midpoint 13 This prompted the Southern League to call the rest of the season off nine games into the second half on July 7 1894 as the result of league wide financial instability brought on by the expense of travel and poor attendance 14 15 Memphis was awarded the pennant for having the best overall record 16 In the ensuing months baseball leaders across the South considered which cities to include in the next iteration of the league 17 Representatives met at The Read House Hotel in Chattanooga on January 14 to reorganize for the 1895 season 18 Membership was granted to clubs in Atlanta Chattanooga Evansville Little Rock Memphis Montgomery Nashville and New Orleans thus lessening the expense of travel incurred in the past with the inclusion of cities such as Charleston and Savannah 19 Each of the eight teams paid a US 1 000 deposit to guarantee they would play the entire season 20 They also pledged to pay dues of 100 per month plus 3 of total gate receipts for a sinking fund 20 Player salaries were capped at 1 000 per team 20 nbsp The 1895 champion Nashville SeraphsThe 1895 season saw the Chattanooga franchise being transferred to Mobile on June 19 21 Memphis disbanding on July 23 22 and Little Rock dropping out on July 27 23 Though the Atlanta Crackers and Nashville Seraphs ended the 1895 season tied for first place a meeting of the league s directors resulted in the nullification of an August 10 game between the two in which the umpire improperly made an out call following fan interference This ruling caused the Seraphs winning percentage to rise to 676 71 34 and Atlanta s to fall to 667 68 34 making Nashville the pennant winner 24 25 Chattanooga Mobile s Lew Whistler won the league batting title with a 404 batting average 26 The New Orleans Pelicans 67 30 744 won their third league pennant in 1896 giving them more championships in the original Southern League than any other club 1 The league was in operational in 1897 due to the lack of financial support 1 In 1898 the league made it as far as July 4 before shutting down again The Augusta Georgia club was in first place at the time with a 20 8 714 record 1 The Southern League consisted of only four teams during its 1899 season 27 The Mobile Blackbirds 23 16 590 were in first place when the league suspended operations on May 1 1 This was the final season of competition for the original Southern League a lack of interest and financial support caused the league to fold for good 5 Two years later in 1901 the Southern Association was created by Abner Powell Charley Frank and Ike Fisher out of the remnants of the Southern League 1 Teams editTeam nicknames were not official for most teams in the 19th century Names were often bestowed by local sportswriters or civic leaders 28 As such some records only provide the city a team represented with no moniker Atlanta 1889 a Atlanta Atlantas 1885 86 1894 d Atlanta Colts 1898 Atlanta Crackers 1895 96 Atlanta Firecrackers 1892 Atlanta Windjammers 1893 Augusta 1898 Augusta Browns 1885 86 Augusta Electricians 1893 Birmingham 1885 1889 1893 b c Birmingham Barons 1896 Birmingham Grays 1892 Birmingham Ironmakers 1887 Birmingham Maroons 1888 Birmingham Reds 1898 Charleston 1889 a Charleston Seagulls 1886 88 1893 94 1898 Chattanooga 1889 Chattanooga Chatts 1892 Chattanooga Lookouts 1885 86 Chattanooga Warriors 1893 1895 e Columbus Babies 1896 g Columbus River Snipes 1896 g Columbus Stars 1885 Dallas Steers 1899 h Evansville Blackbirds 1895 Little Rock Travelers 1895 Macon 1885 86 Macon Central City 1892 1893 Macon Hornets 1893 1894 Memphis 1889 Memphis Browns 1887 Memphis Fever Germs 1893 Memphis Giants 1892 1894 1895 f Memphis Grays 1886 1888 Memphis Lambs 1895 f Memphis Reds 1885 Mobile 1889 b Mobile Blackbirds 1892 1993 1896 1898 1899 Mobile Bluebirds 1894 1895 d e Mobile Swamp Angels 1887 Montgomery Colts 1893 1896 Montgomery Grays 1895 Montgomery Lambs 1892 Montgomery Senators 1898 1899 h Nashville Americans 1885 1886 Nashville Blues 1887 Nashville Seraphs 1895 Nashville Tigers 1893 1894 New Orleans Pelicans 1887 1889 1892 1896 1898 1899 Pensacola 1893 c Savannah 1886 1887 1898 Savannah Electrics 1893 Savannah Modocs 1894 Shreveport Tigers 1899 Notesa In 1889 Atlanta and Charleston were the same team b In 1889 Birmingham and Mobile were the same team c In 1893 Birmingham and Pensacola were the same team d In 1894 the Mobile Bluebirds and Atlanta Atlantas were the same team e In 1895 the Chattanooga Warriors and Mobile Bluebirds were the same team f In 1895 Memphis s team was called both the Giants and the Lambs g In 1896 the Columbus Babies and Columbus River Snipes were the same team h In 1899 the Montgomery Senators and Dallas Steers were the same team City timeline edit Atlanta Atlanta Atlantas 1885 1886 Atlanta 1889 Atlanta Firecrackers 1892 Atlanta Windjammers 1893 Atlanta Atlantas 1894 Atlanta Crackers 1895 1896 Atlanta Colts 1898 Augusta Georgia Augusta Browns 1885 1886 Augusta Electricians 1893 Augusta 1898 Birmingham Alabama Birmingham 1885 Birmingham Ironmakers 1887 Birmingham Maroons 1888 Birmingham 1889 Birmingham Grays 1892 Birmingham 1893 Birmingham Barons 1896 Birmingham Reds 1898 Charleston South Carolina Charleston Seagulls 1886 1888 Charleston 1889 Charleston Seagulls 1893 1894 1898 Chattanooga Tennessee Chattanooga Lookouts 1885 1886 Chattanooga 1889 Chattanooga Chatts 1892 Chattanooga Warriors 1893 1895 Columbus Georgia Columbus Stars 1885 Columbus Babies River Snipes 1896 Dallas Texas Dallas Steers 1899 Evansville Indiana Evansville Blackbirds 1895 Little Rock Arkansas Little Rock Travelers 1895 Macon Georgia Macon 1885 1886 Macon Central City 1892 1893 Macon Hornets 1893 1894 Memphis Tennessee Memphis Reds 1885 Memphis Grays 1886 Memphis Browns 1887 Memphis Grays 1888 Memphis 1889 Memphis Giants 1892 Memphis Fever Germs 1893 Memphis Giants 1894 Memphis Lambs Giants 1895 Mobile Alabama Mobile Swamp Angels 1887 Mobile Blackbirds 1892 1893 Mobile Bluebirds 1894 95 Mobile Blackbirds 1896 1898 1899 Montgomery Alabama Montgomery Lambs 1892 Montgomery Colts 1893 Montgomery Grays 1895 Montgomery Colts 1896 Montgomery Senators 1898 1899 Nashville Tennessee Nashville Americans 1885 1886 Nashville Blues 1887 Nashville Tigers 1893 1894 Nashville Seraphs 1895 New Orleans Louisiana New Orleans Pelicans 1887 1889 1892 1896 1898 1899 Pensacola Florida Pensacola 1893 Savannah Georgia Savannah 1886 1887 Savannah Electrics 1893 Savannah Modocs 1894 Savannah 1898 Shreveport Louisiana Shreveport Tigers 1899 League champions edit1885 Atlanta Atlantas 1886 Atlanta Atlantas 1887 New Orleans Pelicans 1888 Birmingham Maroons 1889 New Orleans Pelicans 1890 non operational 1891 non operational 1892 Birmingham Grays 1893 Augusta Electricians 1st half Macon Central City Hornets 2nd half 1894 Memphis Grays 1895 Nashville Seraphs 1896 New Orleans Pelicans 1897 non operational 1898 Augusta 1899 Mobile BlackbirdsReferences editGeneralO Neal Bill 1994 The Southern League Baseball in Dixie 1885 1994 Eakin Press ISBN 0890159521Specific a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Timeline PDF Southern Association Baseball Retrieved February 1 2015 O Neal p 2 a b c Darnell Tim November 30 2007 Southern League New Georgia Encyclopedia Georgia Humanities Council and the University of Georgia Press Retrieved February 1 2015 1885 Southern League Statistics Baseball Reference com Retrieved February 1 2015 a b c League history Southern League Minor League Baseball Retrieved February 1 2015 O Neal p 6 O Neal pp 6 7 1888 Southern League Statistics Baseball Reference com Retrieved February 1 2015 a b O Neal p 8 a b O Neal p 11 a b c d e f The Southern League Reach s Official Base Ball Guide for 1894 A J Reach Co 1894 pp 36 41 Retrieved February 2 2015 O Neal p 13 1894 Southern Association Statistics Baseball Reference com Retrieved January 29 2015 The Season Ended Nashville Banner Nashville July 9 1894 p 3 Retrieved February 26 2020 via Newspapers com Traughber Bill 2017 Nashville Baseball History From Sulphur Dell to the Sounds South Orange New Jersey Summer Games Books p 24 ISBN 978 1 938545 83 2 O Neal p 15 Figuring on Base Ball Chattanooga Daily Times Chattanooga November 25 1894 p 5 Retrieved February 26 2020 via Newspapers com The Southern League Nashville Banner Nashville January 14 1895 p 1 Retrieved February 26 2020 via Newspapers com Protection Acquired The Nashville American Nashville January 5 1895 p 6 Retrieved February 26 2020 via Newspapers com a b c We ll Have Base Ball Chattanooga Daily Times Chattanooga January 15 1895 p 5 Retrieved February 26 2020 via Newspapers com John Kelly Gets It The Nashville American Nashville July 16 1895 p 6 Retrieved March 2 2020 via Newspapers com Fresh Johnny July 24 1895 Six Straight Games The Nashville American Nashville p 6 Retrieved March 2 2020 via Newspapers com Fresh Johnny July 28 1895 Stallings Dander Up The Nashville American Nashville p 6 Retrieved March 6 2020 via Newspapers com The Solid Three The Atlanta Constitution Atlanta September 9 1895 p 2 Retrieved March 5 2020 via Newspapers com Will Fly the Pennant The Nashville American Nashville December 23 1895 p 5 Retrieved March 5 2020 via Newspapers com O Neal p 16 1899 Southern League Statistics Baseball Reference com Retrieved February 1 2015 Nipper Skip October 1 2013 Name That Team 262 Down Right Retrieved February 1 2015 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Southern League 1885 1899 amp oldid 1114321469, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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