Southeastern League Explained

Southeastern League
Sport:Minor League Baseball
President:Judge J. G. Bloodworth (1897)
J. H. O'Neill (1910–1911)
H. W. Roberts (1912)
Cliff Green (1926-1930)
Roy Williams (1932)
Maurice I. Bloch (1936)
Stuart X. Stephenson (1937–1941)
Pat Moulton (1942)
Stuart X. Stephenson (1946–1950)
James Gamble (2002–2003)
Inaugural:1897
Teams:28
Country:United States of America
Continent:or
Continents:-->
Folded:2003
Most Champs:4
Pensacola
Mobile
Classification:Independent (1897)
Class D (1910–1912)
Class B (1926–1930, 1932, 1937–1942, 1946–1950)
Independent (2002–2003)

The Southeastern League was the name of four separate baseball leagues in minor league baseball which operated in the Southeastern and South Central United States in numerous seasons between 1897 and 2003. Two of these leagues were associated with organized baseball; the third and most recent incarnation was an independent league that operated for two seasons in 2002 - 03.

History

Class D league (1910 - 12)

After playing a season in 1897, the Southeastern League reformed and lasted for three years, from through . At Class D, it was considered on the lowest rung of the minor league ladder, and had six clubs located in the American states of Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina and Tennessee. Stung by the midseason collapse of two of its six franchises, this league disbanded on August 2, 1912.

Class B league (1926 - 50)

In a new, Class B Southeastern League took the field, with six teams — representing Montgomery, Alabama; Jacksonville and St. Augustine, Florida; and Albany, Columbus and Savannah, Georgia. Although this league would be periodically shut down by the Great Depression and World War II, it continued as a Class B circuit, four levels below Major League Baseball, through .

Its lineup of teams in its final season included the champion Pensacola Fliers, Meridian Millers, Montgomery Rebels, Jackson Senators, Vicksburg Billies, Selma Cloverleafs, Gadsden Pilots and Anniston Rams. Both Gadsden and Anniston withdrew from the league before the end of the season.

Independent league (2002–03)

The most recent version of the Southeastern League was an independent circuit, with member teams were not affiliated with any Major League Baseball team.

The league began play in 2002 after the demise of the All-American Association. For its inaugural season, it placed teams in Montgomery, Ozark, and Selma, Alabama, along with Pensacola, Florida, Americus, Georgia, and Baton Rouge, Louisiana. The Ozark Patriots and Americus Arrows franchises folded at mid-season. The Pensacola Pelicans won the inaugural league championship.

After completing the season, the league added two franchises for 2003. The league had high hopes for its new team in Macon, Georgia, and Houma, Louisiana, along with the already successful clubs in Montgomery and Pensacola. However, after just two games the Selma Cloverleafs folded, forcing the league to operate the club as a road team for the duration of the season under the name "Southeastern Cloverleafs." The Macon Peaches also fared a lot worse than expected. Still, the league completed the year, with Pensacola compiling the league's best mark at 42-23 and Baton Rouge defeating Pensacola, 3 games to 1, in the league championship series.

Ultimately, the league could not survive the arrival of affiliated baseball to Montgomery. The Orlando Rays of the Southern League, who had played at Walt Disney World for four years, became the Montgomery Biscuits and effectively drove the Wings out of town. In addition, the Springfield/Ozark Mountain Ducks of the Central Baseball League moved to Pensacola and assumed the Pelicans name. As a result, the league folded prior to the 2004 season.

Cities represented

Member teams (2003)

Baton Rouge Riverbats

Houma Hawks

Macon Peaches

Montgomery Wings

Pensacola Pelicans

Selma/Southeastern Cloverleafs

1910-1912 (class D)

Anniston Models 1911-1912

Asheville Moonshiners 1910, moved to Appalachian League 1911-1912

Bessemer Pipemakers 1912

Decatur Twins 1911

Gadsden Steel Makers 1910-1912, moved to Georgia-Alabama League 1913-1914

Huntsville Westerns 1911; Huntsville Mountaineers 1912

Johnson City Soldiers 1910, moved to Appalachian League 1911-1913

Knoxville Appalachians 1910, moved to Appalachian League 1911-1914

Morristown Jobbers 1910, moved to Appalachian League 1911-1912

Rome Romans 1910; Rome Hillies 1911; Rome Romans 1912

Selma Centralites 1911-1912, moved to Cotton States League 1913

Talladega Highlanders 1912

1926-1930, 1932 (class B)

Albany Nuts 1926-1928

Columbus Foxes 1926-1930, 1932

Jackson Senators 1932, moved to Dixie League 1933

Jacksonville Tars 1926-1930

Macon Peaches 1932

Mobile Red Warriors 1932

Montgomery Lions 1926-1930; Montgomery Capitals 1932

Pensacola Pilots 1927; Pensacola Fliers 1928-1930

St. Augustine Saints 1926-1927

Savannah Indians 1926-1928

Selma Selmians 1927; Selma Cloverleafs 1928-1930, 1932

Tampa Krewes 1928; Tampa Smokers 1929-1930

Waycross Saints 1927

1937-1942, 1946-1950 (class B)

Anniston Rams 1938-1942, 1946-1950

Gadsden Pilots 1938-1941, 1946-1948; Gadsden Chiefs 1949; Gadsden Pilots 1950

Jackson Senators 1937-1942, 1946-1950, moved from Cotton States League 1936

Meridian Scrappers 1937-1939; Meridian Bears 1940; Meridian Eagles 1941-1942; Meridian Peps 1946-1948; Meridian Millers 1949-1950

Mobile Shippers 1937-1942

Montgomery Bombers 1937-1938; Montgomery Rebels 1939-1942, 1946-1950, moved to South Atlantic League 1951

Pensacola Pilots 1937-1942; Pensacola Fliers 1946-1950

Selma Cloverleafs 1937-1941, 1946-1950

Vicksburg Billies 1946-1949; Vicksburg Hill Billies 1950

References