Northern Association
ClassificationClass D (1910)
SportMinor League Baseball
Inaugural season1910
CeasedJuly 19, 1910
PresidentC.A. Burton (1910)
No. of teams8
CountryUnited States of America
Most titles1
Elgin Kittens (1910)
Related
competitions
Bi-State League

The Northern Association was a Class D level minor league baseball league. The eight-team league had franchises based in Illinois and Iowa. The league began and ended play in 1910, disbanding on July 19, 1910. The Joliet Jolly-ites moved to Sterling on June 21. The Clinton and Freeport teams disbanded on June 28; The Elgin and Kankakee franchises disbanded on July 11.

Baseball Hall of Fame member Casey Stengel and Fritz Maisel were two league players who reached Major League Baseball after playing in the Northern Association.[1]

Cities represented

Standings & statistics

1910 Northern Association

Team standingsWLPCTGBManagers
Elgin Kittens[upper-roman 1]3720.649-Mal Kittridge
Muscatine Pearl Finders3721.6380.5Lou Walters
Kankakee Kays[upper-roman 1]3424.5863.5Dan Collins
Jacksonville Jacks3231.5088.0Pants Rowland
Decatur Commodores3032.4849.5Del Williams /
Charles O'Day / McGrew
Joliet Jolly-ites /
Sterling Infants[upper-roman 2]
2434.41413.5Hunkey Hines
Freeport Pretzels[upper-roman 3]2225.468NAForrest Plass
Clinton Teddies[upper-roman 3]1039.204NATed Sullivan / John Marmen
  1. 1 2 Elgin and Kankakee disbanded July 11.
  2. Joliet (21-18) moved to Sterling June 21.
  3. 1 2 Freeport and Clinton disbanded June 28.

The league disbanded July 19.

Player statistics
PlayerTeamStatTotPlayerTeamStatTot
Phil NadeauJoliet/SterlingBA.333Pop EylerMuscatineW11
Fritz MaiselElginRuns49Thomas McTigueKankakeeW11
Harmony Van DineJacksonvilleHits80Archie HickmanJoliet/SterlingW11
Buck HopkinsElginHR7Thomas McTigueKankakeePct.786; 11-3

[2]

Further reading

  • The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball: Second and Third Editions.

References

  1. Maisel, Bob (12 December 1990). "Tale-gating Stengel was enjoyable way for writer to follow a storied career". Baltimore Sun. Baltimore, Maryland.
  2. The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball. Lloyd Johnson & Miles Wolff, editors (Third ed.). Baseball America. 2007. ISBN 978-1932391176.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.