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Birmingham Giants

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The Birmingham Giants were a Negro league baseball team, based in Birmingham, Alabama , from 1904 through 1909. They were the first black professional baseball team in the city.

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12-569: C. I. Taylor managed and played for the Giants. His brothers Candy Jim Taylor and Steel Arm Johnny Taylor also played for the team. This article about a baseball team in Alabama is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This Negro league baseball team article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Candy Jim Taylor James Allen "Candy Jim" Taylor (February 1, 1884 – April 3, 1948)

24-617: A "Laborer" for the Penn Freight House at Dela and Georgia Street in Indianapolis, Indiana. Taylor lists his current address as 645 Blackford Street in Indianapolis. He does not list any dependents and lists his closest relative as Charles Isaac Taylor at 446 Indiana Avenue. When the newly formed Negro National League started in 1920, Candy Jim worked as a player-manager for the Dayton Marcos . But he moved on to

36-553: A Championship Series, starting in 1925 (his third and final season in his first stint). That year, his team won the second half of the season and won the right to be matched against the Kansas City Monarchs . They lost that series four to three. Taylor returned in 1927 to St. Louis and managed them to their first championship in 1928 , doing so over the Chicago American Giants five games to four in

48-783: A player/manager until 1913. In 1914, he moved to the Indianapolis ABC's as a player/manager, and by 1916, he helped the Indianapolis ABC's to win the Black World Championship. During the War, Taylor seemed to rotate between three teams, the Indianapolis ABCs , Dayton Marcos , and the Detroit Stars . In 1918, 34 year-old Taylor registered for the WWI Draft. He lists his current occupation as

60-671: A position with the Birmingham Giants in 1904 where he played third base. That year, he played in 55 regular season games and only made three errors. Taylor continued with Birmingham until 1909, and moved to the St. Paul Colored Gophers for part of a season in 1910. He was named the captain of the team. Later in 1910, he was asked to play for the Chicago Giants, but played instead for the West Baden Sprudels as

72-658: A winning record, which saw him win three pennants and finish in second four times. He went 17–17 in postseason games. Taylor died at age 64 of a heart attack in Chicago and was interred in the Burr Oak Cemetery, Alsip, Illinois . He was buried in an unmarked grave which remained that way for nearly 54 years, until the Negro Leagues Baseball Grave Marker Project raised funds for a proper headstone in 2004. Taylor managed

84-612: The Cleveland Tate Stars in the next season. He also served as a vice chairman for the league during its tenure (his brother C.I. also served as one of the co-founders of the league and vice president). A disciplinarian and a master strategist, as manager Taylor led the St. Louis Stars to contention in the Negro National League, which coincided with the decision to match first half and second half champions for

96-589: The Championship Series. The Great Depression took its toll on the economics of the game, and while managing the 1933 Richmond All-Stars, Taylor was forced to sell the team bus, and later had to send the players home. In 1943 Taylor took over as manager for the Homestead Grays , which had been led by player-manager Vic Harris . After having won the NNL title for the previous three seasons,

108-706: The Grays were tasked to try and win it again for the right to advance to the newly created second incarnation of the Negro World Series title. They succeeded in winning the pennant and the World Series, for which they would repeat their success again the following year. Taylor managed in baseball until his death, which involved another stint as manager of the Chicago American Giants from 1945 to 1947. In 27 seasons, he managed eleven teams to

120-453: The responsibilities of manager, where he would manage 1,967 games for twelve teams. Described as one of the great strategists of his era, Taylor is the all-time winningest manager in the Negro league era, having 955 wins along with two Negro World Series titles and one additional pennant in 27 seasons as manager. He has the most seasons managed by an African American manager along with having

132-511: The seventh most for a manager in the history of baseball. Born in Anderson, South Carolina , Taylor was one of four brothers who played in the Negro leagues, along with Ben , C. I. and "Steel Arm" Johnny . Taylor began playing ball with an amateur club in Anderson, South Carolina in 1901, starting as a catcher . He played with several different clubs in 1902 and 1903, finally landing

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144-472: Was an American third baseman and manager in Negro league baseball . In a career that spanned forty years, he played as an infielder in the early years of the 20th century for over a dozen black baseball teams; by the mid-1920s, he would play less regularly (doing so as a pinch hitter), with his final game came at 58. In 1920, the same year of the start of the golden era of Negro league baseball, he would take on

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