The National Colored Base Ball League (NCBL), the National Colored League, or the League of Colored Baseball Clubs was the subsequent attempt, after the Southern League of Colored Base Ballists, [1] to have a league consisting of all-black teams. It predated Rube Foster 's Negro National League by over three decades. When the Colored League collapsed, Davis launched a tenacious campaign to supplant the Cuban Giants, culminating in 1891, when he signed most of their best players, and renamed his team the Big Gorhams.
Sol White judged them the best team in 19th. The National Colored Base Ball League or the League of Colored Baseball Clubs was the second attempt to have a league consisting of all-black teams, predating the Negro National League by over three decades. The Gorhams beat the Keystones 11-8 in the opener on May 6, 1887.
Philadelphia and New York disbanded on May 18. Cincinnati and Washington were admitted on May 6, after the season started. Lasting two short weeks, the National Colored Base Ball League embodied much of the Black baseball experience in the 1800s.
National Colored Baseball League (Negro) Encyclopedia and History League History About the Register Data Historical performance data for professional leagues (affiliated minor leagues, independent minor leagues, fall/winter leagues, and other international leagues) is provided by and licensed from 24. The League of Colored Base Ball Players, a.k.a. National Colored Baseball League or National League of Colored Base Ball Players, began fielding teams in 1887 after accessing the success of the original Cuban Giants barnstorming club (the first all-black professional team, formed in 1885.) It had been formed over the winter in Baltimore in the image of the established National League.
During the formative years of black baseball, the term "colored" was the established usage when referring to African-Americans. References to black baseball prior to the 1930s are usually to "colored" leagues or teams, such as the Southern League of Colored Base Ballists (1886), the National Colored Base Ball League (1887) and the Eastern Colored League (1923), among others. By the 1920s or.
Batting, pitching, and fielding stats for the 1887 National Colored Baseball League. New research resource: Guide to the 1887 National Colored League SABR member Ken Mars, with contributions from Mark Aubrey and John Thorn, has put together a new collection of articles about the first African American professional baseball league: the National Colored League in 1887.