The Buckeye League was a Class D level minor league baseball league that played briefly in the 1915 season. The six–team Buckeye League consisted of franchises based exclusively in Ohio . The Buckeye League played just a portion 1915 season before permanently folding. The Lima Boosters were the league champions in the shortened season.
21-475: The Buckeye League began play in the 1915 season, formed as a Class D level league, with Al Lawson serving as league president. The 1915 Buckeye League was a six–team league that began play on May 19, 1915. The league was formed with teams representing Akron Ohio ( Akron Rubbermen ), Canton, Ohio , ( Canton Giants ), Findlay, Ohio ( Findlay Finns ), Lima, Ohio ( Lima Boosters ), Marion, Ohio ( Marion Senators ) and Newark, Ohio ( Newark New Socks ). During
42-417: A buzz of positive press. The publicity allowed Lawson to secure an additional $ 1 million to build the 26-passenger Midnight Liner . The aircraft crashed on takeoff on its maiden flight. In late 1920, he secured government contracts for three airmail routes and to deliver ten warplanes. However, because of the fall 1920 recession, he could not secure the necessary $ 100,000 in cash reserves and had to decline
63-490: A guest of his far-flung acolytes. In 1952, he testified before a United States Senate investigative committee on allegations that his organization had bought war surplus machines and then sold them for a profit despite claiming non-profit status. His attempt to explain Lawsonomy to the senators ended in mutual frustration and bafflement. A farm near Racine, Wisconsin , is the only remaining university facility, although
84-578: A large commercial passenger plane could be built. The L-1 was a single pilot, 10 passenger biplane with twin Liberty 400 hp pusher engines. It was followed by the Lawson C.2 or L-2. The L-2 was a tractor biplane also with 400 hp engines, capable of carrying 26 passengers, and piloted by two pilots, with differential controls. Mr. Lawson took it on a 2000-mile multi-city tour to advocate commercial air travel. Some sources state Mr. Lawson himself as
105-490: A small following to this day. Lawson L-2 The Lawson L-2 was a 1920s American biplane airliner , designed and built by the Lawson Air Line Company of Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The Lawson Air Line Company designed and built a series of large biplane airliners for use on its planned airline routes. The initial Lawson "Aerial Transport" Lawson C1 or T-1 was built early in 1919 to demonstrate that
126-454: A tiny handful of churches may yet survive in places such as Wichita, Kansas . The large sign, formerly reading "University of Lawsonomy", was a familiar landmark for motorists in the region for many years and was visible from Interstate 94 about 13 miles (21 km) north of the Illinois state line, on the east side of the highway. A storm in the spring of 2009 destroyed the sign, although
147-518: The Great Depression , the populist economic theory of "Direct Credits", according to which banks are the cause of all economic woes, the oppressors of both capital and labor. Lawson believed that the government should replace banks as the provider of loans to business and workers. He predicted the worldwide adoption of Lawsonian principles once "everybody understands this subject". His rallies and lectures attracted thousands of listeners in
168-693: The Lawson Aircraft Company in Green Bay, Wisconsin , to build military training aircraft and later the Lawson Airplane Company in South Milwaukee, Wisconsin , to build airliners. The crash of his ambitious Lawson L-4 "Midnight Liner" during its trial flight takeoff on May 8, 1921, ended his best chance for commercial aviation success. In 1904, he wrote a utopian novel, Born Again , in which he developed
189-459: The contracts. In 1926, he started his last airliner, the 56-seat, two-tier Lawson super airliner. In this phase of his life, he was considered one of the leading thinkers in the budding American commercial aviation community; however, his inability to secure financial backing for his ideas led him to turn to economics, philosophy, and organization. In the 1920s, Lawson promoted health practices, including vegetarianism , and claimed to have found
210-595: The drafting board, given doubts within the Army aviation community and the signing of the armistice. After the war, in 1919, Lawson started a project to build America's first airline. He secured financial backing, and in five months, he had built and demonstrated in flight his biplane airliner, the 18-passenger Lawson L-2 . He demonstrated its capabilities in a 2000-mile multi-city tour from Milwaukee to Chicago-Toledo-Cleveland-Buffalo-Syracuse-New York City-Washington, D.C.-Collinsville-Dayton-Chicago and back to Milwaukee, creating
231-400: The early 1930s, mainly in the upper Midwest, but by the late 1930s the crowds had dwindled. His claims about his greatness became increasingly hyperbolic. The Lawsonomy trilogy , which Lawson considered his intellectual masterpiece, is replete with such self-referential statements as "About every two thousand years a new teacher with advanced intellectual equipment appears upon earth to lead
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#1732802308740252-464: The final standings. The Marion Senators had a record of 10–5 and the Canton Giants were 5–11 when they both folded on June 11, 1915. The Buckeye League never played again as a minor league after folding in 1915. Marion and Canton disbanded June 11 Playoffs: None Scheduled. The league disbanded July 5. Alfred Lawson Alfred William Lawson (March 24, 1869 – November 29, 1954)
273-788: The foot of 75th Street in New York City (about 35 miles). In 1917, utilizing the knowledge gained from ten years of advocating aviation, he built his first airplane, the Lawson Military Tractor 1 (MT-1) trainer, and founded the Lawson Aircraft Corporation. The company's plant was in Green Bay, Wisconsin. There, Lawson secured a contract and built the Lawson MT-2. He also designed the steel fuselage Lawson Armored Battler, which never got beyond
294-421: The magazine Fly to stimulate public interest and educate readers on the new aviation science fundamentals. It sold for 10 cents a copy from newsstands across the country. In 1910, moving to New York City, he renamed the magazine Aircraft and published it until 1914. The magazine chronicled the technical developments of the early aviation pioneers. Lawson was the first advocate for commercial air travel, coining
315-672: The people a step or two nearer the one God of everybody". In 1943, he founded the Humanity Benefactor Foundation and University of Lawsonomy in Des Moines , on the site of Des Moines University , to spread his teachings and offer the degree of "Knowledgian", but after various IRS and other investigations it was closed and finally sold in 1954, the year of Lawson's death. His financial arrangements remain mysterious to this day, and in later years, he seems to have owned little property, moving from city to city as
336-855: The philosophy which later became Lawsonomy. Lawson made one start for the Boston Beaneaters and two for the Pittsburgh Alleghenys during the 1890 season . His minor league playing career lasted through 1895. Lawson later managed in the minors from 1905 to 1907. In 1908, Lawson started a new professional baseball league called the Union Professional League . The league took the field in April but folded one month later because of financial difficulties. An early aviation advocate, in October 1908, Lawson started
357-650: The season, both the Marion and Canton franchises disbanded on June 11, 1915. The Buckeye League, with four remaining teams, permanently disbanded on July 5, 1915. The Lima Boosters, with an average roster age of 34.8 were in first place when the Buckeye League folded on July 5, 1915. Lima finished with a record of 25–18, playing under manager Sandy Murray. Lima was followed by the Findlay Finns (22–19), Akron Rubbermen (22–21) and Newark New Socks (14–24) in
378-502: The secret of living to 200. He also developed his own highly unusual theories of physics, according to which such concepts as "penetrability", "suction and pressure" and "zig-zag-and-swirl" were discoveries on par with Einstein 's theory of relativity . He published numerous books on these concepts, all set in a distinctive typography. He later propounded a philosophy, Lawsonomy, and the Lawsonian religion . He also developed, during
399-527: The supporting posts are still visible. On the northbound side of Interstate 94, a sign on the roof of the building nearest the freeway said "Study Natural Law" until being shingled over in October 2014. In 2018, the Town of Mount Pleasant paid $ 933,000 to purchase the property on the northbound side of Interstate 94 for the Foxconn project. All remaining buildings were demolished and removed. Lawsonomy maintains
420-622: The term "airline." He also advocated for a strong American flying force, lobbying Congress in 1913 to expand its appropriations for Army aircraft. In early 1913, Lawson learned to fly the Sloan-Deperdussin and the Moisant-Bleriot monoplanes, becoming an accomplished pilot. Later that year, he bought a Thomas flying boat and became the first air commuter to regularly fly from his country house in Seidler's Beach, New Jersey, to
441-422: Was an English-born professional baseball player, aviator , and utopian philosopher . He played baseball, managed and promoted leagues from 1887 through 1916, and pioneered the U.S. aircraft industry. He also published two early aviation trade journals. Lawson is frequently cited as the inventor of the airliner and received several of the first air mail contracts, which he ultimately did not fulfill. He founded
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