Chatham Coloured All-Stars
{{short description|Canadian amateur baseball team}}
{{Infobox baseball team
| name = Chatham Coloured All-Stars
| logo = 1935 Chatham Coloured All-Stars.jpg
| logo_caption = 1935 team photo
| league = Ontario Baseball Amateur Association
| division = Intermediate B
| location = Chatham, Ontario
| stadium =
| founded = 1932
| folded = 1939
| nickname =
| division_champs = 1934
| mascot =
| general_manager =
| president =
| owner =
| management =
| manager = Joe "Happy" Parker
| season =
| record =
| website =
}}
The Chatham Coloured All-Stars were Canadian amateur baseball team during the 1930s. The team included notable players such as Earl "Flat" Chase, Wilfred "Boomer" Harding, Ferguson Jenkins Sr., and Willie Shaugnosh. The 1934 edition of the team broke colour barriers as the first Black team to win a title in the Ontario Baseball Association, then known as the Ontario Baseball Amateur Association.{{cite web |url=http://cdigs.uwindsor.ca/BreakingColourBarrier/all-stars-history |title=A Brief Team History |website=uwindsor.ca |accessdate=March 27, 2022}}
History
The team was formed in 1932 as a group of friends playing baseball in Stirling Park in the east end of Chatham, Ontario. The following year in 1933, the team was noticed by Archie Stirling, a local business owner and representative for the Ontario Baseball Amateur Association (OBAA).{{cite web|url=http://cdigs.uwindsor.ca/BreakingColourBarrier/all-stars-history|title=A Brief Team History · Breaking the Colour Barrier|website=cdigs.uwindsor.ca}} This was significant because until the late 1940s black players were banned from major league baseball and were not always welcome onto white teams at the amateur level in Canada either. As the team was already barnstorming exhibition games in southern Ontario, Stirling brought them into the city league where they were able to compete against white teams. Quickly gaining in popularity, The Chatham Coloured All-Stars became known by many, including local reporters. In their second year playing in the league, they won the provincial championship, Intermediate B division, making them the first black team to win an OBAA title.
In 1935, the team won the city title as well as the Western Counties Baseball Association Championship, Intermediate A division. In 1939, the Chatham Coloured All-Stars reached the all-Ontario finals but there was a dispute regarding the game location and no title was awarded that year. After this, the team ultimately stopped playing as several team members went to serve in World War II. Some of these members included Wilfred "Boomer" Harding, Andy Harding and one of the coaches Lou Pryor. Although the team had been playing for more than a decade before Jackie Robinson entered the major league in 1947, none of the Chatham Coloured All-Stars had the opportunity to play in the major leagues.
= Challenges =
The team was faced with many challenges being an African-Canadian team playing predominantly white teams in the 1934-time frame. There was often discrimination both on and off the field resulting in situations ranging from questionable umpire decisions during games to being turned away from hotels in the area and having to stay in nearby towns. Threats of violence were common as well as deliberate injuries to the team members, stone throwing and taunts during games.{{cite web|url=http://cdigs.uwindsor.ca/cdigs-ohms-ccas/viewer.php?cachefile=00004.xml|title=Interview With: Wilfred|website=cdigs.uwindsor.ca}}
Aftermath
Throughout the 1940s and 1950s, former players joined different community teams. The Taylor ACs were formed in 1946, managed by Wilfred "Boomer" Harding and included former all-star teammates Andy Harding, Earl "Flat" Chase, King Terrell and Gouy Ladd.{{cite web |url=http://cdigs.uwindsor.ca/BreakingColourBarrier/chatham-coloured-all-stars |title=Roster |website=uwindsor.ca}} Years later, several sons of the original Chatham Coloured All-Stars joined this team including Earl "Flat" Chase's sons Earl Jr. and Horace and coach Louis Pryor's son Lloyd Pryor.
Awards and recognition
1984: 50th anniversary of 1934 OBAA win. The City of Chatham awarded commemorative plaques to surviving members Wilfred "Boomer" Harding, Hyle Robbins, Cliff Olbey, Sagasta Harding, Don Washington and Don Tabron."City Council Honors 50th Anniversary of Chatham Colored All-Stars OBA Victory" by Bill Reddick. Chatham Daily News, Oct 10, 1984.
2001: The Chatham Coloured All-Stars were honoured at a Toronto Blue Jays game with the team wearing replica jerseys of the All-Stars.{{cite news |url=https://beta.theglobeandmail.com/sports/big-league-honour-for-chatham-team/article18416279/ |title=Big-league honour for Chatham team |agency=CP |website=The Globe and Mail |date=July 14, 2001}} The two surviving members at the time, Don Tabron and Sagasta Harding as well as the son of Earl "Flat" Chase threw the first pitch at the game.
2016: Ontario Trillium Foundation awarded a grant to a team at the University of Windsor to develop an oral history project on the team as well as a range of resources to preserve and share this story.Mary Caton, "Wilfred Harding, our own 'Jackie Robinson,' broke several colour barriers." [https://windsorstar.com/news/local-news/wilfred-harding-our-own-jackie-robinson-broke-several-colour-barriers Windsor Star, May 16, 2016] The project is titled "Breaking the Colour Barrier: Wilfred “Boomer” Harding and the Chatham Coloured All-Stars (1932-1939)".{{cite web |url=http://cdigs.uwindsor.ca/BreakingColourBarrier/ |title=Wilfred "Boomer" Harding & the Chatham Coloured All-Stars (1932-1939) |website=uwindsor.ca}}
2022: The 1934 team of the Chatham Coloured All-Stars were awarded the Order of Sport, marking induction into Canada's Sports Hall of Fame in the Trailblazer category.{{Cite web |last=mkolozetti |date=2022-05-18 |title=Chatham Coloured All-Stars, Class of 2022, Trailblazer |url=https://orderofsport.ca/2022/05/chatham-coloured-all-stars/ |access-date=2023-03-06 |website=Order of Sport |language=en-CA}}
In early 2022, the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame was criticized for not inducting the Chatham Coloured All-Stars.{{cite web |url=https://chathamvoice.com/2022/02/10/opinion-all-star-snub/ |title=OPINION: All Star snub |website=Chatham Voice |location=Chatham-Kent, Ontario |date=February 10, 2022 |accessdate=March 27, 2022}}{{cite news |url=https://sports.yahoo.com/canadian-baseball-hall-of-fame-snubs-historic-all-black-team-for-5th-straight-year-175330905.html |title=Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame snubs historic all-Black team for 5th straight year |first=Ian |last=Kennedy |website=Yahoo! Sports |date=February 21, 2022 |accessdate=March 27, 2022}}{{cite news |url=https://blackburnnews.com/windsor/windsor-news/2022/03/22/hatfield-calls-black-teams-induction-canadian-baseball-hall/ |title=Hatfield calls for Black team’s induction to Canadian baseball hall |first=Mark |last=Brown |website=Windsor News Today |location=Windsor, Ontario |date=March 22, 2022 |accessdate=March 27, 2022}}
Roster
=Players=
{{div col}}
- Earl "Flat" Chase (Windsor): pitcher, set home run records across southern Ontario
- Andy Harding (Chatham): outfielder
- Len Harding (Chatham): centre-fielder; later managed the team
- Sagasta Harding (Buxton): left-handed batter
- Wilfred "Boomer" Harding (Chatham): first-baseman; also became the first black hockey player in the International Hockey League playing for Windsor Staffords in 1946
- Ferguson Jenkins Sr. (Windsor): centre-fielder; father of Hall of Fame pitcher Ferguson Jenkins
- Gouy Ladd (Chatham): outfielder
- Cliff Olbey (Chatham): outfielder
- Hyle Robbins (Buxton): outfielder
- Stanton Robbins (Buxton): left-handed pitcher
- Wellington "Willie" Shaugnosh (Walpole Island): pitcher
- Don Tabron (Detroit): shortstop
- Ross Talbot (Chatham): first-baseman
- King Terrell (Chatham): left-handed third-baseman
- Don Washington (Detroit): catcher
{{div col end}}
=Staff=
- Joe "Happy" Parker (manager)
- Percy Parker (third-base coach)
- Lou Pryor (coach)
- Jack Robinson (mascot and batboy)
References
{{Reflist}}
Further reading
- {{cite web |url=https://scholar.uwindsor.ca/hardingpub/1/ |title=The Chatham Coloured All-Stars 1933-34 |first=Daniel J. |last=Kelly |date=April 1977 |via=uwindsor.ca}}
- Jacobs, Heidi LM. 1934: the Chatham Coloured All-Stars' Barrier-Breaking Year. (2023: Biblioasis).
- Wright, Miriam. Sporting Justice: The Chatham Coloured All-Stars and Black Baseball in Southwestern Ontario, 1915–1958. (2023: Wilfrid Laurier University Press)
External links
- [http://cdigs.uwindsor.ca/BreakingColourBarrier/ Breaking the Colour Barrier] at the University of Windsor
{{Authority control}}
Category:1932 establishments in Ontario
Category:1939 disestablishments in Ontario
Category:Baseball teams established in 1932
Category:Baseball teams disestablished in 1939