Description
The West Coast Negro
Baseball Association was formed on March 9, 1946 at a meeting of the High Marine Social Club at the Elks Clubhouse in Oakland, California.
The
baseball league was spearheaded by two Berkeley firemen, Eddie Harris and David P. Portlock, who pitched the idea of forming a Negro
baseball league on the West Coast that would use Pacific Coast League parks while teams were away. The West Coast Negro
Baseball Association Collection includes correspondence, meeting minutes, financial records, by-laws, photographs, and ephemera related
to the creation and operation of the West Coast Negro
Baseball Association and the Oakland Larks.
Background
The West Coast Negro
Baseball Association was formed on March 9, 1946 at a meeting of the High Marine Social Club at the Elks Clubhouse in Oakland, California.
The
baseball league was spearheaded by two Berkeley firemen, Eddie Harris and David P. Portlock, who pitched the idea of forming a Negro
baseball league on the West Coast that would use Pacific Coast League parks while teams were away. Abe Saperstein, founder of the
Harlem Globetrotters, was elected president of the association with track star Jessie Owens serving as vice-president, and
David Portlock as secretary. The league consisted of six teams: San Francisco Sea Lions, Seattle Steelheads, Portland Rosebuds,
Oakland Larks, San Diego Tigers, and Los Angeles White Sox. The league's first official game was between the Oakland Larks
and the San Diego Tigers on May 12, 1946 at Fresno Midget Auto Racing Park. The league played only one season, disbanding
after the final game in July, 1946, though the Oakland Larks
baseball team would continue to play as a barnstorming club through 1947.
Extent
.75 linear feet
(2 boxes)
Restrictions
Permission to publish from the West Coast Negro Baseball Association Collection must be obtained from the African American
Museum & Library at Oakland.
Availability
No access restrictions. Collection is open to the public.