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1. The St. Louis Cardinals
They started out in 1875 as the St. Louis Brown Stockings soon shortened to the Browns. It was part of the National Association which folded with the advent of the National League the next year. They were caught fixing games in 1877 and were expelled from the league after which they barnstormed semi-professionally. In 1882 saloon owner and grocer
Von der Ahe |
Louis Cardinals, while an American League team from Milwaukee came to town and took the name St. Louis Browns, and used their old ballpark. (If you don't demolish it, they will come). Von der Ahe went bankrupt in 1898 and had to sell the team.
Frank and Stanley Robison owned the team from 1898 to 1911. Frank and Stanley also owned the Cleveland Spiders and were responsible for naming the Browns the Perfectos and transferred all the best players the Spiders had to the Browns. As a result the Spiders became the worst team in Major league history, with a 20-134 record followed by oblivion.
Frank Robison |
Sam Breardon |
Branch Rickey |
Fred Saigh |
August Busch and wife |
William DeWitt Jr. |
2. Chicago Cubs.
The team started out as the Chicago White Stockings, a name they abandoned in 1889 for the Chicago Colts the name which they had until 1897.
Chicago Colts |
The turn of the century must have been a particularly fertile time for lame team names, and, as with the St. Louis Perfectos, the Chicago team took the name Chicago Orphans. From 1903 onward however, they took their present name, the Chicago Cubs.
Hulbert |
Spalding |
Not the inventor of baseball. |
Weeghman |
He built what was to become Wrigley Field in 1914 for the Federal League team he had founded, the Chicago Whales. He was also an enthusiastic supporter of the Ku Klux Klan and hosted a state-wide rally on his property in 1912. When the Whales and the Federal League went belly up, he along with William Wrigley bought the Cubs from Taft and
renamed the park (which had originally been "Weeghman Park") "Cubs Park". Afterwards, Weeghman, was eventually bought out by Wrigley and the park was renamed "Wrigley Field" in 1926, a name that has persisted to this day, even though the Wrigley family sold the Cubs in 1982. When Wrigley died in 1932, the team's ownership passed to his son Phillip K. Wrigley, and when he died in 1977, his son Willam Wrigley III inherited the team, but did not keep it long. When both his parents died within months of each other, he was forced to sell the team to pay inheritance taxes, and the Cubs were purchased by the Tribune Company in
1982. When the Tribune Company went into bankruptcy in 2009, the team was sold to current owner Tom Ricketts, son of the founder of Ameritrade, Inc. and an investment banker based on Chicago. The price was $900 million.
3. The Los Angeles Dodgers
The Los Angeles Dodgers had their beginning in 1890 as one of the venerable east coast teams, the Brooklyn Bridegrooms, named that because many of the players had recently gotten married. In their first major league season in the National Association, they had a winning season (86-43) and won the pennant.
When they went to play the American Association that year the game ended in a tie. Bad weather and the lack of stadium lights might have had something to do with that. In 1899 the manager of the Baltimore Orioles also became the manager of the Brooklyn team, and, raiding the best players of the Orioles, made the Bridegrooms a team to be reckoned with. In that year they also changed their name to the Brooklyn Superbas. The Superbas did not do well after the initial couple of seasons. They suffer as many National League teams did, from the demand for players to fill rosters in the American League. In 1911 they figure a new name might be in order, calling themselves the Trolley Dodgers, and then in 1913 they shortened it to just the Dodgers but the next year someone had a brain wave and decided to change the name to the Brooklyn Robins, and a play on the name of manager Wilbert Robinson, which would probably not be such a bad name considering the ornithological bent of team naming in that era.
Charles Ebbets |
Acting President Ed McKeever went to the funeral which was cold and windy. McKeever caught a cold and died a week later. Thus both principal owners of the team went to the other side in a single week.
Charles Byrne was one of the original founders of the team. He was in real estate. Byrne died in 1898. His partner Ferdinand Abell was a casino owner. No one at the time looked askance at an owner's involvement in gambling at that time or in the raiding the early Baltimore Orioles for talent when both teams were owned. He was eventually bought out by Charlie Ebbetts in 1907. Ebbetts was a draftsman and architect and designed a number of New York structures, but also managed the team for a while. He built the team's first stadium, Ebbets Field, in 1912 which remained the home of the Dodgers until they moved to Los Angeles in 1957. When Ebbetts and Ed McKeever died the team passed to the ownership of Grace Ebbetts, his widow and Stephen McKeever, Ed's brother, who was in the construction business. Grace was the other woman when Minnie Ebbetts sued her husband for divorce in 1922. Ed McKeever continued as owner until he died in 1938. Joseph Gilleaudeau was the grandson of Charlie Ebbetts and also had a part of the team. James and Dearie Mulvey, son in law and daughter of Stephen McKeever inherited his interest in the team.
Rickey |
In 1942 Branch Rickey arrives on the scene when he and Walter O'Malley buy the Dodgers. Rickey was a major influence on not only the Dodgers but a number of teams in Major League Baseball. He played for the St. Louis Browns and the New York Highlanders until 1914 when an arm injury ended his on-field career.
O'Malley |
Jackie Robinson |
In 1958 the Dodgers move to Los Angeles after lukewarm support from New York City Mayor Robert Wagner and opposition by Robert Moses to the construction of a new stadium to replace Ebbetts field.
Murdoch |
Magic Johnson |
4. The Atlanta Braves
The Atlanta Braves are one of the oldest if not the oldest franchise in Baseball history. They started out as the Cincinnati Red Stockings in 1869. The next year they moved to Boston and became the Boston Red Stockings, one of the two charter teams in the National Association, the other one being what is now the Chicago Cubs. In the early years of the National Association the Boston Red Stockings were dominant. Their name went through a number of unofficial changes before settling on the Braves. They were at various times called the "Red Caps", the Beaneaters,
the Rustlers, and the Doves, the last name for an all-white uniform they wore for a while and after their team owner. In 1936 a selection of sportswriters and fans voted for a new name, the Boston Bees, but that lasted only a few years, and did not go so far as to adopt anything resembling the stinging insect on their jerseys. By 1945 they were back to being the Braves.
Adams |
The team was founded by Ivers Whitney Adams when it was moved from Cincinnati to Boston in 1870. In 1872 it was sold to John Conkey, who sold it the next year to Charles Porter. Porter two years later sold it to Nicholas Apollonio. Apollonio sold it to Arthur Soden in 1876. Soden also owned the New York Giants, which was not considered a conflict of interest in those days.
Soden |
Dovey |
Emil Fuchs |
Lou Perini |
Bartholomay |
Ted Turner |
5. The San Francisco Giants.
The New York Gothams |
The San Francisco Giants started out as the New York Gothams baseball team. They were founded by tobacconist John B. Day
John B. Day |
John T. Brush |
Hempstead |
Stoneham |
Horace Stoneham and Jacob Ruppert |
In 1957, the same year that the Brooklyn Dodgers moved to Los Angeles, Stoneham moved his team to San Francisco. When Stoneham finally sold the team in 1976, it almost got moved back to Toronto, New York, or even Tampa Bay, but local businessman Bob Lurie purchased the team and kept it in San Francisco.
Bob Lurie |
Peter MacGowan |
Charles Bartlett Johnson |
6. Philadelphia Phillies.
The Phillies haven't done as much messing around with their name as other teams but there was some. When founded in 1883 they were known as the Philadelphia Quakers.
The team has been acquired from what was left of the Worchester, Massachusetts Worcesters an early National League team. As the Quakers they drifted into being called the Philadelphias, and finally the Phillies, until they were officially called the Phillies. In the 1940's the owner at the time tried to rename them the "Bluejays" but the name did not catch on.
After 1949 they were known as the Phillies, as they are today.
The Phillies took 77 years to win a world series and are now looking for their third such win. The Cubs of course won their first two in 1907 and 1908 and are still looking for their third. Alfred Reach who later made a fortune
Alfred Reach |
Shettsline |
Then in 1915 he went on to buy the Cubs as described above.
From 1913 to 1930 the team was owned by William Baker. Baker had a reputation for being cheap. The park where the Phillies played, the Baker Bowl kept the grass trimmed by allowing a flock of sheep to graze there. After the 1915 world series, where they lost, they had continuous losing seasons until 1930, when at a
Baker and wife |
Cox |
RRM Carpenter iii |
7. The Pittsburgh Pirates
The Pittsburgh Pirates started as the Alleghenys, in the then separate city across the Allegheny River from Pittsburgh, Allegheny City. This was in 1876, when they joined the American Association. When they joined the National league in 1877 and renamed themselves the Pittsburgh Alleghenies. It wasn't until a dispute over a player hired away from the Philadelphia led to accusations that the Pittsburgh club was "piratical" that the owners decided that, hey, that's a pretty good nickname and they became "The Pittsburgh Pirates" in 1891. Or the "Pittsburg" pirates, since The United States Board of Geographic Names, told the city to lose the "h". It was only in 1911 that the city of Pittsburgh got the terminal "h" back.
McKnight |
Dreyfuss |
B. Crosby |
Nutting |
8. Cincinnati Reds
In 1869 the Cincinnati Red stockings became the first all professional team in baseball. In 1876 the Reds became a charter member of the National League, but got in trouble almost immediately because of they insisted on playing ball on Sunday and serving beer at their stadium, two things dear to the hearts of its largely German fan base. After a couple of years in the wilderness, as it were, they formed the American Association to compete with the National League. Owing to a dispute with Browns owner Von Der Ahe about who was to become president of the American Association, the Reds along with the Brooklyn Bridegrooms (Dodgers) left the league and joined the National league in 1890.
Justus Thorner owned the Cincinnati team from 1882-1890 when it belonged to the American Association. John T. Brush who also owned the New York Giants bought it and moved it back to the National League whence it had been expelled years earlier.
August Herrmann |
Powel Crosley started out as the automobile manufacturer of the Crosley an inexpensive automobile, but later got into automobile accessories and radios and then broadcasting. His station Cincinnati's WLW was once so powerful it could be heard in Siberia. In sports he was the originator of night baseball games, receiving permission to hold night games under artificial light in 1935.
Dewitt |
Gamble fortune. He sold the team to William and James Williams in 1980, and the Williams brothers sold the team to Marge Schott in 1984.
Marge Schott was the heir to a lumber fortune and her husband owned automobile dealerships and other interests, so when he died in 1968 she inherited those as well.
Marge with Schottzie |
McSherry |
Bob Castellini and Pete Rose in 2011 |
9. Houston Astros
The Houston Astros were part of a National League expansion to the Houston area, and while they just this year moved to the American League, their first 51 years were with the National League so I am discussing them here.
They did not begin to play in major League Baseball until the 1962 season, and were known initially as the Houston Colt 45's. In 1965 they changed their name to the Houston Astros, in a salute to the fact that the US Space Program was headquartered in Houston. They also started play in their new stadium, the Astrodome, which was the first indoor stadium that was fully enclosed by a dome, which meant that weather was not a factor in the playing of games.
The Astrodome was also the first major stadium where games were played on an artificial turf surface, known originally as "Chemgrass" and later as "Astroturf".
The major owner of the group that originated the Houston Astros was Roy Hofheinz, who developed a series of radio and TV stations in Texas and was the driving force in developing both the
Roy Hofheinz |
Drayton McLane Jr. |
Crane Capital has most of its holdings in energy and in shipping and logistics. In 2013 they started playing as an American League team.
In 2000, the team moved to newly constructed Enron Field. Later when Enron collapsed and its shady business practices were exposed, the new field was re-named Minute Maid Park, after the purveyor of Orange juice, which is owned by Coca Cola. In contrast to the old Astrodome, the new field has a completely retractable
roof, allowing play in all weather conditions, but during pleasant weather it can retract so play can occur in the open air. The field has natural turf rather than the old "AstroTurf". AstroTurf has gained a reputation for increasing certain kinds of sports injuries, though the surface properties have been improved over the years.
10. New York Mets
The New York Mets were the other team created in the team expansions of 1962. They were created to replace the void left by the same-year departure of both the Dodgers and the Giants from New York. They played their first two seasons in a venerable old park known as "The Polo Grounds", which was replaced by Shea Stadium in 1964, and by their new stadium, Citi Field, in 2008.
Payson |
Wilpon |
purchased by Bertellsman, the German publishing giant, and then Doubleday and Fred Wilpon bought the team from them. In 2002 Wilpon bought out Nelson Doubleday's portion. Bill Maher, is a minority owner.
11. Washington Nationals
The Nationals, the third attempt to establish a baseball team in the nation's capital, started as an expansion team in 1969 as the Montreal Expos,
The M is a W upside down |
Bronfman |
The initial majority owner of the Expos was Charles Bronfman, who owned the Seagram distillery empire, and remained principal owner until 1990, which is when the Seagram empire began to unravel because of a series of bad business decisions. In 1991 Claude Brochu headed a group of investors who stepped in to keep the Expos from moving to Arizona, however in the wake of this
Premier Lucien Bouchard |
Jeffrey Loria |
Ted Lerner |
12. San Diego Padres
C. Arnhodt Smith |
His widow, Joan Kroc owned the team until 1990 when she sold it to TV producer Tom Werner. In 1994 Werner sold the team to John Moores a software company executive. In 2008 Moores and his wife filed for divorce and as part of that process he sold the team in 2012 to an investor group headed by John Fowler, who is CEO of a local beer distributor in the San Diego area.
13. Colorado Rockies
The Colorado Rockies were an expansion team announced in 1991. They began play in Mile High Stadium (home of the Denver Broncos) in 1993, while Coors Field was being built.
Pete Coors |
The Colorado Rockies are owned by an investment group led by Pete Coors, who is chairman of the Miller-Coors Brewing Company. Coors lost as the Republican candidate for US Senate from Colorado in 2004.
14. Miami Marlins
The Miami Marlins started out as the Florida Marlins in 1993, the same year as the Colorado Rockies. Until 2012, they played in the Sun Life Stadium which was home to the Miami Dolphins Football team.
Huizenga |
Jeffrey Loria |
15. Arizona Diamondbacks
The Arizona Diamondbacks are an expansion team founded in 1998 in Phoenix, Arizona. After only 4 seasons they won a world series championship in 2001 over the New York Yankees.
Jerry Colangelo |
16. Milwaukee Brewers
The Brewers switched from the American to the National league in 1998. Since that time they have clinched the National League Central Division title once, in 2011, but proceeded no farther. Miller Field was completed about the time they moved to the National League. For more on the Milwaukee Brewers see my article here.