Good Seats Still Available

164: Negro League Baseball’s Atlantic City Bacharach Giants – With Jim Overmyer


Listen Later

The curious story of baseball’s Atlantic City (NJ) Bacharach Giants originates from a unique intersection of racism, tourism, and politics.

In 1915, an independent semi-pro “Atlantic City Colored League” was formed to provide an entertainment outlet for the city’s 11,000+ black residents – with the hope being they would attend the games and stay off the boardwalk, a then-booming summer haven for white tourists.  

Two black businessmen active in the local Republican political machine asked an existing area team to join the league and promotionally rename itself after politician Harry Bacharach, the once-and-future mayor of Atlantic City.  When the team refused, the duo travelled south and convinced eight members of the Duval Giants, a black amateur team in Jacksonville, Florida, to venture north and create the foundation for a new independent club instead.

The “Bacharach Giants” largely dominated whatever opponents came their way during the late 1910s, despite persistent financial wobbliness.  In 1920, the team began a three-year stint as an associate member of Rube Foster’s new Negro National League (NNL) – allowing them to retain official independence, but also to coordinate non-league games with the teams from Foster’s largely Midwest-based circuit. 

In 1923, Atlantic City broke from the NNL to help start the rival Eastern Colored League (ECL), where they achieved their greatest success – including winning two league pennants in 1926 and 1927 – though losing both times in subsequent Negro League World Series play to the NNL’s Chicago American Giants.

Beset by rancorous squabbles over player contracts, the ECL folded in 1928.  Five of its clubs – including the Bacharach Giants – formed the bulk of a new American Negro League for 1929, only to see both the league and its team from Atlantic City fold by the end of the season. 

Author/historian Jim Overmyer (Black Ball and the Boardwalk: The Bacharach Giants of Atlantic City) joins to discuss the history of the club, and some of the legends that emanated from it, including Negro League standouts Dick Lundy, Oliver Marcell, Dick Redding, “Nip” Winters, Chanel White, “Rats” Henderson, Claude Grier, and Luther Farrell – and National Baseball Hall of Famer John Henry "Pop" Lloyd.

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Good Seats Still AvailableBy Tim Hanlon

  • 4.7
  • 4.7
  • 4.7
  • 4.7
  • 4.7

4.7

102 ratings


More shows like Good Seats Still Available

View all
Stuff You Should Know by iHeartPodcasts

Stuff You Should Know

77,754 Listeners

Hang Up and Listen by Slate Podcasts

Hang Up and Listen

998 Listeners

WTF with Marc Maron Podcast by Marc Maron

WTF with Marc Maron Podcast

29,279 Listeners

Effectively Wild: A FanGraphs Baseball Podcast by Ben Lindbergh, Meg Rowley

Effectively Wild: A FanGraphs Baseball Podcast

2,583 Listeners

Alexi Lalas’ State of the Union Podcast by FOX Sports

Alexi Lalas’ State of the Union Podcast

1,113 Listeners

The Bill Simmons Podcast by The Ringer

The Bill Simmons Podcast

29,981 Listeners

The Press Box by The Ringer

The Press Box

3,114 Listeners

Shat the Movies: 80's & 90's Best Film Review by Shat on Entertainment

Shat the Movies: 80's & 90's Best Film Review

1,425 Listeners

Sports' Forgotten Heroes by Warren Rogan

Sports' Forgotten Heroes

28 Listeners

The Rewatchables by The Ringer

The Rewatchables

13,808 Listeners

Sports Media with Richard Deitsch by Audacy

Sports Media with Richard Deitsch

748 Listeners

Everything 80s by Jamie Logie | 1980s Pop Culture & Nostalgia

Everything 80s

343 Listeners

60 Songs That Explain the '90s by The Ringer

60 Songs That Explain the '90s

1,055 Listeners

Men in Blazers: Early Kick Off by Men in Blazers Media Network

Men in Blazers: Early Kick Off

396 Listeners

Is This A Great Game, Or What? by Tim Kurkjian, Jeff Kurkjian

Is This A Great Game, Or What?

218 Listeners