The Hartford Chiefs was the final name of the American minor league baseball franchise representing Hartford, Connecticut, that played in the Eastern League (then Class A) between 1938 and 1952.
Hartford Chiefs | |
---|---|
Minor league affiliations | |
Previous classes | A (1938–1952) |
League | Eastern League (1938–1952) |
Major league affiliations | |
Previous teams | Boston Bees/Braves (1938–1952) |
Team data | |
Previous names |
|
Previous parks | Bulkeley Stadium |
The Hartford team, which played at Bulkeley Stadium, was known as the Bees from 1939–43 and in 1945; it was called the Laurels in 1938 and 1944[1] (although Baseball America's Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball calls the 1938 team the "Bees");[2] and then renamed the "Chiefs" for the final seven years of its existence, 1946–52. It was affiliated for all 15 of its seasons with the Boston Braves, and the Bees/Chiefs nickname switch for the Hartford club is probably a result of the parent team's temporary and unsuccessful renaming as the Boston Bees from 1936–40. The 1944 Laurels were recognized as one of the 100 greatest minor league teams of all time.[3]
Long baseball tradition
editThe Connecticut capital had been in organized baseball since the Hartford Dark Blues were a charter member of the National League in 1876–77. After those two years in Major League Baseball, Hartford was represented in eleven different minor leagues — including three earlier versions of the "Eastern League."[4] When the Class B Northeastern League folded after the 1934 season during the depths of the Great Depression, Hartford was without professional baseball for three seasons. Then it joined the Class A New York–Pennsylvania League of 1923–37. The arrival of franchises in Hartford and Trenton, New Jersey, caused the NYPL to change its identity to the Eastern League for 1938, with 2012 marking the 75th consecutive season the league has used the name.
Affiliate of Boston's NL franchise
editThe 1938 Laurels made the Eastern League playoffs and Hartford qualified for the postseason nine times in its 15-year history (including 1943–46 in succession), but the franchise never captured the league's playoff title. While the 1942 team included a future Baseball Hall of Fame pitcher, Warren Spahn, the Boston Bees/Braves of the era did not have an extensive player development system. Class A was prior to 1963 a higher-level circuit, close to today's Double-A ranking, and the Hartford franchise was the Braves' most advanced minor league affiliate through 1945. In 1946, however, the Braves began to build out their farm system, adding Triple-A and Double-A affiliates and expanding their presence in Classes B, C and D. They also worked with a second Class A farm club, the Denver Bears of the Western League, from 1949–51.
But after winning the 1948 National League pennant, the big-league Braves experienced a dramatic fall-off in attendance, and played their last season in Boston in 1952. The Hartford Chiefs did not survive them; the franchise was transferred to Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, as an unaffiliated team for 1953. Meanwhile, the MLB Braves moved to Milwaukee, Wisconsin, during spring training of 1953. They had two Class A affiliates that season: the Lincoln Chiefs of the Western League—inheritors of the Hartford team's nickname—and the Jacksonville Braves of the Sally League, whose star player in 1953 would be 19-year-old Henry Aaron.
Notable alumni
editBaseball Hall of Fame alumni
edit- Travis Jackson (1951) Inducted, 1982
- Warren Spahn Inducted, 1973
Notable alumni
edit- Bob Buhl 2 x MLB All-Star
- Ripper Collins (1949-1950) 3 x MLB All-Star
- Gene Conley 4 x MLB All-Star
- George Crowe MLB All-Star
- Dick Donovan 5× MLB All-Star ;1961 AL ERA Leader
- Ernie Johnson
- Don Liddle
- Catfish Metkovich
- Bama Rowell
- Sibby Sisti
- Frank Torre
- Whitey Wietelmann
Yearly record
editYear | Record | Finish Full Season |
Attendance | Manager | Postseason |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1938 | 67–67 | Fourth | 60,442 | Eddie Onslow | Lost to Hazleton in first round |
1939 | 58–82 | Seventh (tied) |
53,984 | Fresco Thompson | DNQ |
1940 | 72–66 | Third | 75,399 | Jack Onslow | Lost to Binghamton in finals |
1941 | 54–81 | Seventh | 66,529 | Jack Onslow Don Manno |
DNQ |
1942 | 62–78 | Seventh | 68,842 | Del Bissonette | DNQ |
1943 | 77–59 | Third | 54,854 | Del Bissonette | Lost to Scranton in first round |
1944 | 99–38 | First | 116,265 | Del Bissonette | Lost to Utica in first round |
1945 | 68–67 | Fourth | 97,557 | Merle Settlemire | Lost to Wilkes-Barre in first round |
1946 | 71–67 | Fourth | 140,249 | Dutch Dorman | Lost to Scranton in finals |
1947 | 58–82 | Sixth | 92,397 | Dutch Dorman | DNQ |
1948 | 74–67 | Fourth | 122,563 | Earl Browne | Lost to Albany in first round |
1949 | 66–74 | Fifth | 138,306 | Earl Browne Ripper Collins |
DNQ |
1950 | 80–59 | Third | 84,159 | Ripper Collins | Lost to Wilkes-Barre in first round |
1951 | 75–65 | Fourth | 106,801 | Tommy Holmes Travis Jackson |
Lost to Scranton in first round |
1952 | 59–79 | Seventh | 36,281 | Del Bissonette | DNQ |
2016 return to Eastern League
editIn 2015, after more than six decades without a team in organized baseball, Hartford officials led by then-mayor Pedro Segarra proposed building a new baseball stadium (to be known as Dunkin' Donuts Park)[5] in the city's North End to attract the nearby New Britain Rock Cats of the modern Double-A Eastern League. The renamed Hartford Yard Goats[6] debuted in 2016 but played the entire season on the road — with some games moved to Norwich, 40 miles (64 km) to the southeast — because of construction delays. [7][8] Despite continued problems in completing the stadium, the team began play in Hartford's new ballpark in 2017.[9]
References
edit- ^ a b "Hartford, Connecticut Encyclopedia". Baseball-Reference.com.
- ^ Johnson, Lloyd, and Wolff, Miles, eds., The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball, 3rd edition. Durham, North Carolina: Baseball America, 2007, p. 357
- ^ "Top 100 Teams". MiLB.com. 2001. Retrieved May 9, 2017.
- ^ Johnson, Lloyd, and Wolff, Miles, eds., The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball, 3rd edition. Durham, North Carolina: Baseball America, 2007, p. 62
- ^ "Hartford Stadium Will Be Dunkin' Donuts Park". NBC Connecticut. June 9, 2015. Retrieved September 6, 2019.
- ^ Keating, Christopher (April 20, 2015). "Lawmakers Clash on Hartford Baseball Stadium Financing". The Hartford Courant. Retrieved June 26, 2015.
- ^ Doyle, Paul (October 30, 2015). "Hartford Yard Goats' mascots: Chompers and Chew Chew". The Hartford Courant.
- ^ Ofgang, Erik (March 14, 2016). "Stadiums in CT: If You Build It, Headaches Will Come". Connecticut Magazine. Retrieved March 21, 2016.
- ^ Carlesso, Jenna (February 28, 2017). "Council Rejects Proposal to Sell Dunkin' Donuts Park". The Hartford Courant. Retrieved February 28, 2017.