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Spring-1893:
The somberness of the past winter begins to melt away as the flowers begin to bloom, but all is not well in the nation. In the last days of his presidency, Benjamin Harrison, sat back as the Reading Railroad, went into receivership. That collapse was soon magnified by the failure of hundreds of banks and businesses dependent upon the Reading and other railroads. The stock market reacted with a dramatic plunge. Fearing further collapse, European investors pulled their funds from the United States, but depression soon gripped the other side of the Atlantic as well. An ongoing agricultural depression in the West and South deepened, spreading the misery to those regions as well. The Mid-Western United States, largely reliant on customers and suppliers in their region largely remained unaffected outside of some of the cities along contact points with other regions most notably Pittsburgh and Cincinnati.
The league meets to discuss financial situations, and despite no team currently suffering any serious issues, some worry that this season or next could be their last. Regardless of this, the league agrees to move forward with the season with a few minor changes to the structure of the league;
Last edited by HooiserAltHistorian (12/27/2019 10:58 pm)
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Summer-1893:
The season starts off smoothly with each team playing their exhibition games including another match-up between the Fort Wayne Generals and Fort Wayne Kekiongas, this year the Generals win 2 to 1 with clutch performances by their entire outfield to seal the game for them. Following the game, Linus speaks with Charles Bonnaire of the Kekiongas about creating a trophy for the annual game between them, and after some initial hesitation, Charles agrees. The Three Rivers Classic is formed from this conversation, and will be a staple of Fort Wayne sports for years to come. Elsewhere in the league, the Chicago Braves also play against their city's negro team; the Chicago Lakers, losing in the match-up 4 to 2 in a tied up until the 9th inning.
As the regular season begins, the country while hurting financially is beginning to already show signs of recovery, particularly in the northeast as trade with Canada and the UK starts to return. Early season favorites are the Braves in the west and the Admirals in the east with both starting the season off very well. Unfortunately for the Admirals, their southern rival in New York showed the entire league why they're The Empire City. As the season approaches the end, the 4 teams left are the Giants, Brown Stockings, Braves, and Red Stockings.
1893 Final Regular Season Standings:
West Division:
1. Chicago Braves (35 - 17)
2. Cincinnati Red Stockings (31 - 21)
3. Fort Wayne Generals (27 - 25)
4. St Louis Malt-Men (22 - 30)
5. Milwaukee Brewers (18 - 34)
6. Indianapolis Greys (15 - 37)
East Division:
1. New York Giants (42 - 10)
2. Detroit Brown Stockings (35 - 17)
3. Boston Admirals (28 - 24)
4. Cleveland Spiders (25 - 27)
5. Philadelphia Athletics (22 - 30)
6. Pittsburgh Burghers (12 - 40)1893
Post-Season:
Western Divisional Series:
1. Braves 1 Red Stockings 0 @ Chicago
2. Red Stockings 2 Braves 1 @ Cincinnati
3. Braves 4 Red Stockings 1 @ Chicago
Eastern Divisional Series:
1. Giants 4 Brown Stockings 0 @ New York
2. Giants 7 Brown Stockings 3 @ Detroit
League Title Series:
1. Braves 4 Giants 3 @ New York
2. Giants 6 Braves 4 @ Chicago
3. Braves 11 Giants 7 (12 innings) @ New York
Central League Champion: Chicago Braves, 2nd yr in a row
The Braves show the people of New York who runs baseball in this country after a 12 inning slug-fest culminating in "Grand Slam" by Braves star 1B Justyn Grocki and a shut-out in the bottom of the inning by star P James Wilson.
Top Players:
1. James Wilson, P, Chicago Braves
2. Justyn Grocki, 1B, Chicago Braves
3. Aladino Melfi, 2B, New York Giants
4. Joseph Roche, SS, Boston Admirals
5. William Zhihao, P, St Louis Malt-Men (only played against Western Division teams due to objection from Eastern Division teams on racial grounds)
Revenue => Profit Per Team:
1. New York Giants: $65,000 => $12,150
2. Boston Admirals: $58,500 => $9,800
3. Chicago Braves: $44,750 => $10,500
4. Cleveland Spiders: $32,400 => $8,300
5. Detroit Brown Stockings: $30,900 => $7,800
6. Philadelphia Athletics: $28,650 => $5,450
7. St Louis Malt-Men: $27,300 => $6,150
8. Cincinnati Red Stockings: $26,250 => $4,350
9. Milwaukee Brewers: $23,500 => $6,750
10. Fort Wayne Generals: $22,550 => $5,400
11. Indianapolis Grays: $20,750 => $4,800
12. Pittsburgh Burghers: $19,350 => $4,000
- Total League Revenue = $399,900
- Total League Profit = $85,450
Despite the nation hurting, the league managed to increase their profits mostly due to an extended playoffs and addition of big market teams.
Stay tuned for the 1893 off-season and other developments........
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Glad to see another installment. Is Pittsburgh hampered by their tiny park in generating more income?
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Steelman wrote:
Glad to see another installment. Is Pittsburgh hampered by their tiny park in generating more income?
^ At this time, the Burghers are pretty bad and don't attract much of a crowd.
Fall-1893:
Following yet another season of poor attendance and horrible play, Ned Hanlon opted to sell his team to Denny McKnight of the Pittsburgh Allegheny's baseball club, commonly called the Pirates. They'd been a club who sought professional league status, but due to the Burghers, hadn't been able to break through. With the sale complete, both clubs were combined into the new club the Pittsburgh Pirates, with the promise from McKnight to build a new ballpark in the heart of the city. The league, having dealt with the Burghers' incompetence for 3 seasons, more than welcomed the move to bring competition to such an important market. While not as un-competitive, the Indianapolis Greys owners also began to express a desire to transition to a minor-league, however the league denied the request and then put pressure on the owners to sell to a more involved owner, as the league accused the Kingan brothers of cutting costs and intentionally running their team poorly. After several tense meetings, the Greys were sold to the wealthy pharmaceutical man, Eli Lilly, a well known figure in the city and a fan of the team since it they first started playing. The Greys would also formally adopt their nickname as well and become the Indianapolis Indians.
In other league news, the owner's began discussions with the failing professional Appalachian League to absorb its teams in Baltimore, Washington, Louisville, and Charlotte. All these cities were fertile ground for expansion, and the league was starting to believe in the idea of becoming the only professional baseball league in the United States.
The nation is still hurting from the economic turmoil of the beginning of the year, but with quick response from the Cleveland administration, the actual fallout of the turmoil was greatly scaled back. They addressed the growing number of unstable large companies by forming a bipartisan business council to create sensible regulation against unsustainable growth. Many in the railroad industry feared an overreach, but those fears were put to rest when the administration assured them that not only were railroads vital for growth but were synonymous with American exceptionalism.
During all of this, Linus Gerzberg becomes a sitting board member of the Wabash Railroad after a sizable stock purchase. His intentions are to utilize the company's reach to expand his industrial shipping business to include Chicago, Detroit, and Cleveland. His son, Frederick begins school in the fall as well, and Linus notices that Frederick is exceptionally bright for such a young age. Perhaps the apple doesn't fall far from the tree.
Stay tuned for the Winter-1893/4, Spring-1894, and the 1894 Season........
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Winter-1893/4 => Spring-1894:
Following a tumultuous fall for the league in terms of owner disagreements, things begin to settle down as talks with the Appalachian League finalize in the early days of the new year. The league agrees to admit the teams from Baltimore and Washington, with the intention to expand to Louisville and Charlotte once a stable owner is found, as both cities had experienced 4 different clubs in the 4 seasons of the Appalachian League. The new teams to be admitted in the 1894-Season are;
1. Washington Senators: a team with a nickname that has been carried by multiple clubs, but with their new ownership under J. Earl Wagner, they look to be a stable and competitive club. They will play their games at Boundary Field which is on the city's limits, giving the club room to expand the field from it current capacity of 3,500.
2. Baltimore Orioles: another causality of the American Association folding 5 years prior, this club had been reduced to the barely professional App. League. Owned by the brilliant financier Harry Von der Horst , the team, much like the Senators, is ready to compete in a new league with the opportunity to bring success to the city. The will play their games at Union Park in heart of Baltimore whose capacity of 5,000 will suit the city very well.
With expansion set and ready the league owners all meet to discuss the format of the season and changes to the league structure:
- The name of the league will officially change to the National Professional Baseball League (NPBL), to reflect its ever growing region of play
- The league's schedule will increase to 81 games
- Elimination of required 2 exhibition games, but pre-season exhibitions are still encouraged
- Elimination of specific day requirements
- 60 games against division teams, 5 home & 5 away for each team
- 21 games against other divisions' teams, 3 home & 3 away for each team
- Series of games are encouraged in 2 or 3 game pairs to avoid excessive travel
- Post-season will stay at top 2 teams in each division playing a 3 game series to determine division winner
- Final series between division winners will remain as 3 games as well=12px- Detroit moves to western division as Baltimore & Washington join the eastern division=12px- League fee for teams increased to $3,250 to cover purchase of league's first headquarters building in Cleveland and to expand advertising efforts
League as of 1894 Season:
Western Division:
1. Chicago Braves: owned by William Hulbert, plays at Memorial Field (capacity of 3,000)
2. St Louis Malt-Men: owned by the Busch Family, plays at Busch Field (capacity of 2,000)
3. Fort Wayne Generals: owned by Linus Gerzburg, plays at Gerzburg Field (capacity of 1,300)
4. Indianapolis Indians: owned by Eli Lilly, plays at the newly renamed and expanded Lilly Park (capacity of 3,000)
5. Milwaukee Brewers: owned by Rolf Stoiber, plays at Athletic Park (capacity of 2,150)
6. Cincinnati Red Stockings: owned by James Kenton, plays at League Park (capacity of 4,000)
7. Detroit Brown Stockings: owned by Frederick K. Stearns, plays at Recreation Park (capacity of 2,500)
Eastern Division:
1. New York Giants: owned by John B. Day, plays at Manhattan Field (capacity of 10,000)
2. Cleveland Spiders: owned by Francis "Frank" Robinson, plays at Riverside Field (capacity of 5,000)
3. Boston Admirals: owned by James O'Cahill, plays at the Congress Street Grounds (capacity of 8,000)
4. Pittsburgh Pirates: owned by Denny McKnight, plays at the temporarily expanded Exposition Park (capacity of 2,750) as new ballpark is being built with intentions of opening mid-1894
5. Philadelphia Athletics: owned by William A. Sharsig, plays at the Jefferson Street Grounds (capacity of 9,500)
6. Washington Senators: owned by J. Earl Wagner, plays at Boundary Field (capacity of 3,500)
7. Baltimore Orioles: owned by Harry Von der Horst, plays at Union Park (capacity of 5,000)
Last edited by HooiserAltHistorian (1/27/2020 10:18 pm)
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1894 Season:
The season starts with the annual Three Rivers Classic, where once again the Fort Wayne Generals beat the Fort Wayne Kekiongas in a 6 - 2 offensive showcase. Favorable weather allows the league to stay on schedule, and the early season favorites to win after strong showings are the Cleveland Spiders and the reinvigorated Indianapolis Indians.
As the season continues, the Indians maintain strong play but still can't keep up with the Chicago Braves who are determined to win the title again. In the east the Spiders slide from the top of the division after a few weeks of mediocre pitching. This allows the Giants reclaim the top spot, despite losing 5 games straight to end the regular season. As the regular season comes to a close, the remaining teams are the Chicago Braves, New York Giants, Cleveland Spiders, and the Indianapolis Indians (narrowly beating out Fort Wayne).
1894 Regular-Season:
West Division:
1. Chicago Braves (60 - 21)
2. Indianapolis Indians (48 - 33)
3. Fort Wayne Generals (47 - 34)
4. Milwaukee Brewers (40 - 41)
5. Cincinnati Red Stockings (34 - 47)
6. Detroit Brown Stockings (32 - 49)
7. St Louis Malt-Men (29 - 52)
East Division:
1. New York Giants (57 - 24)
2. Cleveland Spiders (51 - 30)
3. Boston Admirals (46 - 35)
4. Baltimore Orioles (40 - 41)
5. Pittsburgh Pirates (30 - 51)
6. Washington Senators (28 - 53)
7. Philadelphia Athletics (24 - 57)
1894 Post-Season:
West Division Title Series:
1. Indians 4 Braves 3 (10 innings) @ Chicago
2. Braves 2 Indians 0 @ Chicago
3. Braves 3 Indians 2 (13 innings) @ Indianapolis
After the grueling 13 innings, the Braves end the hopes of the Indians in front of a sold-out crowd in Lilly Park. After the game, the team's owner William Hulbert announces to the crowd outside of Union Depot as the team gets off the train, that he will build a new 11,000 seat along the lakefront in the still rebuilding downtown, to celebrate 3 years of amazing support.
East Division Title Series:
1. Spiders 4 Giants 0 @ New York
2. Giants 3 Spiders 1 @ New York
3. Spiders 7 Giants 2 @ Cleveland
The Spiders quiet the few fans of the Giants in front of the 5,000+ at Riverside Field. The team celebrates their return to the title series with an evening of drinking on the field.
NPBL Title Series:
1. Braves 6 Spiders 0 @ Chicago
2. Spiders 3 Braves 1 @ Chicago
3. Spiders 5 Braves 2 @ Cleveland
After an embarrassing 1st game in Chicago, the Spiders rally to win the next two games and secure the league title. With this series ending, the season comes to a close.
National Professional Baseball League Champion: Cleveland Spiders
Top Players:
1. James Wilson, P, Chicago Braves
2. Herbert Kempf, OF, Cleveland Spiders
3. Justyn Grocki, 1B, Chicago Braves
4. Aladino Melfi, 2B, New York Giants
5. William Zhihao, P, Indianapolis Indians (traded to the Indians early, plays rest of season with backing of Eli Lilly against racist objections to his presence in the league)
Revenue => Profit Per Team:
1. New York Giants: $66,450 => $15,450
2. Boston Admirals: $62,500 => $12,300
3. Chicago Braves: $52,000 => $13,200
4. Baltimore Orioles: $47,750 => $9,500
5. Cleveland Spiders: $44,600 => $12,800
6. Detroit Brown Stockings: $39,750 => $11,650
7. Pittsburgh Pirates: $37,300 => $8,750
8. Philadelphia Athletics: $34,500 => $9,500
9. Indianapolis Indians: $33,950 => $5,650
10. St Louis Malt-Men: $32,750 => $8,500
11. Cincinnati Red Stockings: $31,500 => $7,500
12. Milwaukee Brewers: $29,800 => $8,500
13. Fort Wayne Generals: $28,400 => $6,850
14. Washington Senators: $27,950 => $3,150
- Total League Revenue = $539,400
- Total League Profit = $133,300
For the first time in history, professional sports makes such a large splash with the amount of money this league brings in, it stirs massive interest from cities and investors around the country. As the league pauses to enjoy that through smart planning and well organized teams, the idea of a professional sports league is not only viable, but also fairly profitable.
Stay tuned for Fall-1894 and Winter 1894/5..........
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Fall-1894:
Following what a consensus of league owners called the most successful season the league has ever had, it came as a shock when J. Earl Wagner informed the league that he was folding the Washington Senators after just one season in the league. What he had failed to tell the league prior to joining it was his large amount of debt he'd accumulated in the years before joining while the team had no league to play in. They had essentially been operating off of large loans on the speculation of joining a professional league. Wagner then defaulted on his loans at the end of the season, and the bank seized his remaining assets causing the club to dissolve. The effects in the following weeks caused many of the owners to accuse one another of potentially hiding finances from one another in attempts to fraud the league. All of this came to a head when James Kenton (Red Stockings) accused John B. Day (Giants) of paying players under the table to avoid the salary cap. Linus Gerzberg had been suspicious of these dealings when the Giants had submitted their payroll to the league and it had been nearly $10,000 less then what it likely should have been.
In all this chaos, the league settled on a new system of accountability for the following season and beyond;
- All transactions regarding any franchise & league will be published bi-weekly to the entirety to league
- Any team caught paying players above the salary cap will be penalized $3,000 per player over the cap
- Any new team will have to submit substantial case of financial stability before joining the league
Later in the fall, Linus makes the decision to purchase the Fort Wayne Kekiongas from Charles Bonnaire and promises that they have a permanent home in Gerzberg Field. While not officially classified as professional or semi-professional, Linus makes it clear to the current team and to the lose association of negro teams in the region that he intends for his team to be the best. Linus received a letter from James Kenton informing him that he will not tolerate Linus's actions, and will formally leave the league to join the Southern Association which Kenton claims, "Holds the values of baseball closer than Linus does". Linus replies him in a letter with the one simple sentence, "James, I wish you luck in your experiment in the south".
Many in the north had heard of southern baseball, but no one was speaking of it like it was an actual professional league. They only had 4 teams that had lasted more than a season, and it looked like more of sustainability test than anything else to the team owners in the north. In its 3 seasons they'd managed to only keep these teams afloat;
- Atlanta Crackers
- Birmingham Bluebirds
- New Orleans Pelicans
- Memphis Egyptians
Perhaps now with the additional of the Cincinnati Red Stockings, the league would be more highly regarded, but most in the NPBL just hoped that this league would fail which would bring down Kenton as well.
Around the nation, economic recovery continues as several potential strikes have been averted to avoid another Homestead. The most shocking of all was the agreement between Pullman and the its workers that resulted in an increase in pay. Many around the area thought this would erupt into rioting, but all was calm when Pullman finally re-evaluated its importance to the still rebuilding Chicago.
Family life for Linus takes a turn for the worse when Amelia comes down with the flu in late October, pulling Linus away from everything for weeks while she recovered. During this time, both his son Frederick and his daughter Theresa also begin attending a private Catholic school on the north side of Fort Wayne, which shields then from witnessing their mother's sickness. Martha, his youngest child, is still too young to understand, and never knows a thing about all of it. The Hoosier Delivery Service is luckily staffed by the best workers Linus could find, and continues to operate with no problems while he is away from the company.
Mid-November Linus also receives a letter from the owner of Logansport Midways of the Mid-America League about a business partnership between the two leagues. Linus goes to Logansport the following week and is intrigued by the pitch he hears. He heads back home and prepares the same pitch to give to the owners of the NPBL in the coming weeks.
Winter-1894/5:
In the last remaining weeks of year, Linus meets with each owner in the league regarding the pitch about the Mid-America League. Affiliate semi-pro teams for player development; aka each team would have a regional team to assist in finding players from the area to join the professional teams. The pitch included several ideas for the obligations between the teams, and while nothing was set in stone all the owners seemed intrigued by the idea. Linus was the most enthused due to his friendship with the Midway's owner.
Following these meetings, Amelia Gerzberg also began to show signs of recovery from the strain of the flue she contracted, allowing Linus to fully return to his duties at his business. Things had been running fairly smoothly since the delivery service had begun operations, but Linus had hit a brick wall trying to expand the business further due to limitations on the versatility of transport vehicles at the time. His leverage as a board member for the Wabash Railroad hadn't given him the access to new markets that he had hoped for when agreeing to take the position. Frustrated with the situation, Linus settles in for the Christmas season to celebrate with his family.
After the new year, the league meets in Cleveland to discuss what to do for the 1895 season. Having lost two teams, the decision to reduce the amount of scheduled games or quickly find fill in teams in the short-term. Luckily for the league, both the Busch family of the St Louis Malt-Men and Rolf Stoiber of the Milwaukee Brewers had been in talks with clubs in the cities close to them. After several weeks of meetings and negotiations it was decided that two teams would join the league on a "probationary" clause that would allow the league to terminate their membership at the end of the season if financial and attendance expectations were not met. The two teams that would join the league would be;
1. Kansas City Blues: a club that had initially been a member of the American Association but after the league folded, been relegated to the semi-pro Mid-America League playing mostly small industrial cities and barely making any profit. The team was recently bought by the stockyard king, Wilfrid Portier whose ambitions had been fulfilled thanks to the invitation from the NPBL. The team will play its games at Exposition Park, capacity of 3,500, located in the heart of the black community sharing the field with the negro team the Kansas City Monarchs.
2. Minneapolis Lions: The semi-pro Millers were initially approached to join the league, but due to the club's financial instability, the league chose to persuade several local industrialists to form a team. After its creation, Oluf Lind bought out the other industrialists to claim sole ownership of the team. Oluf was a native of city, but born of Danish immigrants who had started their own sawmill. He chose to name the team after the a symbol of Denmark to help draw in interest of the large amount of Danish immigrants in the city, even going so far as to adopt the colors of the crest of Denmark (yellow and blue) for the team uniforms. The team will play its games at Athletic Park, capacity of 2,500, located just slightly northwest of the city's center.
With the league back up to 14 teams, the league ended its winter meetings and would again meet in the spring to discuss the realignment of the league.
1895 Populations of League Cities:
1. New York City (5 boroughs) => 2,495,000 + surrounding region ≈ 2,795,000
2. Philadelphia => 1,186,000 + surrounding region ≈ 1,265,000
3. Chicago => 868,000 + surrounding region ≈ 1,024,000
4. St Louis => 585,000 + surrounding region ≈ 645,000
5. Boston => 538,000 + surrounding region ≈ 725,000
6. Baltimore => 496,000 + surrounding region ≈ 615,000
7. Cleveland => 329,000 + surrounding region ≈ 473,000
8. Pittsburgh => 315,000 + surrounding region ≈ 391,000
9. Detroit => 273,000 + surrounding region ≈ 317,000
10. Milwaukee => 270,000 + surrounding region ≈ 308,000
11. Minneapolis => 195,000 + surrounding region ≈ 213,000
12. Indianapolis => 163,000 + surrounding region ≈ 188,000
13. Kansas City => 157,000 + surrounding region ≈ 174,000
14. Fort Wayne => 58,000 + surrounding region ≈ 89,000
Stay tuned for Spring-1895 & the 1895 Preseason.....
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Just found and caught up on this, I’m so hooked I was sad to see it’s last post was from 2020….
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RaysUp wrote:
Just found and caught up on this, I’m so hooked I was sad to see it’s last post was from 2020….
I've tried to start it back up several times; but my creative juice on it seems to have dried up. Recently I've been interested in it again though; so we'll see where that takes me.
It was kind of a bummer when I ran out of motivation on it because I had started working on some logos & uniforms.
Last edited by HooiserAltHistorian (10/28/2022 5:43 am)
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So it's been a long time, huh? Well, recently I've been reading over this alternate history I crafted and it's been intriguing me to start it up again.
The goal of this story has always been to support an alternate history in which my home city of Fort Wayne becomes a much larger city than it is, and while crafting divergence points for it & the league's growth is fun; it is rather challenging.
That being said, I've decided that I'd like to give it a try again and will be looking to have an update for this story sometime in the next few weeks.
Author's Note: I'll also add that I'm not a graphic designer, and don't really have the time to become good at it; so if anyone would interested in helping me develop visuals for this story, let me know!
Last edited by HooiserAltHistorian (10/05/2024 7:41 am)