Category: Piedmont League

Portsmouth Merrimacs Piedmont League

Portsmouth Merrimacs

The Portsmouth Merrimacs were a mid-1950’s Minor League Baseball entry from the southeastern Virginia. The Merrimacs replaced the long-running Portsmouth Cubs (1936-1952) club in the Class B Piedmont League, with the name change taking effect in February 1953.  The name ‘Merrimacs’ derived from the Merrimac iron clad steam frigate constructed at the Gosport Shipyard in Portsmouth during the American Civil War. In the Merrimacs’ first season, 1953, team owner Frank Lawrence effectively ended the Virginia-based Piedmont League’s 33-year history of racial exclusion. Lawrence signed several black ballplayers, including 45-year old former Negro League star Buck Leonard late in the summer. Leonard’s 10 games with the Merrimacs would be the only games that the future Hall-of-Famer played on an integrated team on American soil.

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Hagerstown Packets Piedmont League

Hagerstown Packets

The Hagerstown Packets were a farm team of the American League’s Washington Senators in 1954 and 1955. The Packets played in the Piedmont League (1920-1955), a Class B loop that included team from Maryland, Pennsylvania and Virginia. The Packets followed on the heels of the Hagerstown Braves (1950-1953) and the Owls (1941-1949) at the city’s Municipal Stadium, opened in 1930. Both the Hagerstown Packets and the Piedmont League itself went out of business after the 1955 season.

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Eddie Popowski on the cover of a 1946 Roanoke Red Sox baseball program from the Piedmont League

Roanoke Red Sox

The Roanoke Red Sox were a Class B farm of the Boston Red Sox that competed in the Piedmont League, a minor league circuit made up mostly of teams from Virginia and the Carolinas. The team was sometimes referred to as the “Ro-Sox” in press accounts of the early 1950’s. Roanoke won Piedmont League crowns in 1947 and 1950.

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Hagerstown Braves Baseball

Hagerstown Braves

The Hagerstown Braves were a powerhouse Class B farm club of the Boston/Milwaukee Braves during the early 1950’s. The Maryland-based club posted four straight winning seasons, won two Inter-State League pennants and one playoff championship. The Washington Senators replaced Milwaukee as the team’s parent club for the 1954 season and the team changed its name to the Hagerstown Packets.

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Norfolk Tars Piedmont League Baseball

Norfolk Tars

Piedmont League (1934-1955) Born: 1934 Folded: July 14, 1955 First Game: Last Game: Piedmont League Champions: 1934, 1936, 1937, 1943, 1951, 1953 1934-1940: Bain Field 1940-1955: High

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