STYLE: Barnstorming, Leasing
The Hilldale Athletic Club (informally known as Darby Daisies were an American professional Negro League baseball team based in Darby, Penns...
STYLE: Barnstorming, Leasing
The Hilldale Athletic Club (informally known as Darby Daisies) were an American professional Negro League baseball franchise operating out of Darby, Pennsylvania, west of Philadelphia, born and raised.
Established as a boys team in 1910, the Hilldales were developed by their early manager, then owner Ed Bolden to be one of the powerhouse Negro league baseball teams.
They won the first three Eastern Colored League (ECL) beginning in 1923 and in 1925 won the second Colored World Series.
Hall of Fame player Judy Johnson was a Hilldale regular for most its professional era with 12 seasons in 15 years (1918–1932).
Pitcher Phil Cockrell played for Hilldale throughout those years. Oscar Charleston, Biz Mackey, Louis Santop, Chaney White, and Jesse "Nip" Winters were also important Hilldale players in the 1920s.
Ed Bolden established the team in 1910 as an amateur athletic club for local young men.
Devere Thompson became the first manager of the Hilldale Club, but Bolden would later take over as manager himself before the end of the club's first season. [1]
The Hilldale Athletic Club incorporated in November of 1916, simply referred to as the Hilldale Baseball and Exhibition Company, and soon they began to hire established Negro League players.
For instance, Spot Poles and Bill Pettus led the 1917 team to a 23-15-1 record.
Hilldale and the Atlantic City Bacharach Giants played as eastern "Associates" of the western Negro National League I (NNLI) in 1920 and 1921.
Late in the season the Hilldale Club held a four game series at the start of September. Their successful season set the team to face the winner of the Negro National League I (NNLI) championship, the Chicago American Giants.
After both teams won two games, the American Giants traveled east to play one series each. Chicago defeated the Bacharach Giants 2-1-1 but Hilldale beat Chicago 3-2-1. [4]
Hilldale was a charter member of the Eastern Colored League in 1923 and won the first-place pennants in 1923, 1924, and 1925.
They lost the inaugural, 1924 Colored World Series to the Kansas City Monarchs five games to four (with one tie). Next season they won a rematch with the Monarchs five games to one.
The 1925 club featured star catcher and cleanup hitter Biz Mackey, third baseman Judy Johnson, and outfielder Clint Thomas.
Player-manager Frank Warfield's pitching staff was led by left-handed ace Nip Winters and spitballer Phil Cockrell. Hilldale dropped to third in 1926 and fifth in 1927. [1]
Frustrated by the league's lack of organization, Bolden withdrew his club from the Eastern Colored League (ECL) prior to the 1928 season.
When the American Negro League (ANL) was organized in 1929, Hilldale joined, but the league lasted only one season.
Bolden was subsequently forced out of club management, and Hilldale corporation member Lloyd Thompson assumed control of the club in 1930.
He had been the a 14-year-old infielder on the original boys team twenty years earlier, when his older brother had been the manager.[5]
After a single season, the team was purchased by John Drew, who ran the club until its final collapse in 1932.[6]
During the Great Depression, Black urban unemployment hit as high as 50%. This negatively impacted attendance in the Negro Leagues in the 1930s.
Howeever, management made the discision to dissolve the team in July 1932, after the combined attendance of two subsequent Saturday afternoon games at Hilldale Park totaled 295. [6]
The Negro National Nealgue (NNLI) was formed in 1920. An official League business-card from that year lists the club as one of two "Associated Members" and identifies the club as "Hilldale, Darby, Pa."
Unlike other teams listed with both location and team-name, no nickname is identified with Hilldale. (Hilldale was the club name, Darby the locale.)
While various nicknames were informally applied to the club, including "Darby Daisies" and "Clan Darbie", the team was most commonly known simply as Hilldale or the Hilldales.
Hilldale did not have an official team logo as professional and collegiate teams have today.
It was not common practice for teams to have such standardized team symbols in the 1910s and 1920s.
They wore red and white. Their jerseys in the 1920s had "Hilldale" across the front in the style shown above as the "team logo".
The club wore a red cap with a white plain-block capital H as seen above. [8]
The Negro Leagues Baseball Museum (NLBM) created a series of team logos in the 1990s for the well-known Negro league teams so that the NLBM could license such logos and collect royalties for their use on merchandise.
Such revenue helps sustain the museum. Hilldale was one such team for which a contemporary logo was created.
It is seen on NLBM-licensed Hilldale Giants merchandise and while it supports the educational efforts of the museum, it is not a historical logo. [9]
On October 14, 2006, Pennsylvania placed an historical marker was dedicated at the site of Hilldale's ballpark at McDade Boulevard and Cedar Streets in Yeadon.[ 11]
The ceremony was attended by Philadelphia Phillies hitting coach Milt Thompson, former Phillies player Garry Maddox, and Gene Dias, Phillies director of community relations.
Also attending were the four living members of the Negro League Philadelphia Stars, Bill Cash, Mahlon Duckett, Stanley Glenn, and Harold Gould, along with Ray Mackey, great grandnephew of former Hilldale and Stars player Biz Mackey. [11]
The marker is titled, "The Hilldale Athletic Club (The Darby Daisies)" and the text reads;
"This baseball team, whose home was here at Hilldale Park, won the Eastern Colored League championship three times and the 1925 Negro League World Series."
Darby fielded Negro League teams from 1910 to 1932. Notable players included baseball hall of fame members Pop Lloyd, Judy Johnson, Martin Dihigo, Joe Williams, Oscar Charleston, Ben Taylor, Biz Mackey, and Louis Santop. Owner Ed Bolden helped form the Eastern Colored League (ECL). [12]
The Darby Historical Commission constructed a Walk of Fame alongside the site of the Historical Marker.
The Walk of Fame honors former Hilldale owners Bolden and Drew, as well as team batboy and contemporary area-resident Ed Bacon. [13]
The African American Museum in Philadelphia maintains the "William Cash/Lloyd Thompson Collection" of Philadelphia Stars and Hilldale scorebooks, photographs, and correspondence. [14]