Muskegon Reds
Muskegon Reds | |
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Major league affiliations | |
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Team data | |
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Ballpark | Marsh Field |
The Muskegon Reds was the primary name of the
minor league baseball franchise in Muskegon, Michigan
that existed on-and-off from 1890 to 1951.
History
Muskegon played in the
Michigan-Ontario League (1923–1924) and the Northwestern League (1884). The franchise was affiliated with the Detroit Tigers (1940–1941), Chicago White Sox (1948–1950) and the New York Yankees (1951).[1]
The team shared their Reds moniker with Muskegon High School.
The ballpark
Muskegon teams played at historic Marsh Field, built in 1916 and named a State of Michigan historic landmark.[2] The park is located at 1800 Peck Street Muskegon, MI 49441. Today, it is the home of the Muskegon Clippers, who revived the previous Muskegon moniker and play in the Great Lakes Summer Collegiate League.[3]
Notable Muskegon alumni
- Baseball Hall of Fame, 1975
- Red Ruffing (1949, MGR) Inducted Baseball Hall of Fame, 1967
- Bud Clancy (1924)
- Buck Crouse (1921-1923)
- Freddie Fitzsimmons (1920-1922) 217 MLB wins
- Alex Grammas (1949)
- Elston Howard (1950) 12 x MLB All-Star; 1963 AL Most Valuable Player
- Doc Lavan (1912)
- Johnny Lipon (1941)
- Stubby Overmire (1941)
- Doc White (1920) NL ERA Leader
Year-by-year records
Year | Record | Finish | Manager | Playoffs | Notes |
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1911 | 73–45 | 2nd | Arthur DeBaker | No playoffs held | |
1916 | 55–77 | 8th | Bade Myers | No playoffs held | |
1926 | 12–13 | 3rd | Curtis "Buck" Wheat | -- | Central League merged with Michigan–Ontario League June 13 to form Michigan State League |
39–56 | 6th | Curtis "Buck" Wheat | No Playoffs held | Michigan State League began on June 15 | |
1934 | 4–9 | -- | Cy Boothby | Team disbanded May 30 | |
1940 | 49–57 | 5th | Jack Tighe | No playoffs held | |
1941 | 61–57 | 4th | Jack Tighe | No playoffs held | |
1951 | 86–54 | 2nd | Jim Gleeson | No playoffs held |
References
- ^ "Muskegon, Michigan Encyclopedia".
- ^ "History | GLCBL: Muskegon Clippers - Pointstreak Sites".
- ^ "Home". historicmarshfield.com.
- ISBN 978-1932391176.