The Hopkinsville Hoppers were a baseball team based in Hopkinsville, Kentucky between 1904 and 1954. The team initially played as the "Browns" in 1904, before adopting the "Hoppers" moniker.
10-550: Hopkinsville teams played as exclusively as members of the Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League in 1904–1905, 1910–1914, 1916, 1922–1923, 1935–1942, 1946–1954. Hopkinsville was affiliate of the Milwaukee Brewers (AA) from 1937 to 1939; Chicago Cubs 1946; Philadelphia A's 1953–1954. Today, the "Hoppers" team moniker has been adopted by the summer collegiate baseball wood-bat team that plays as
20-646: A Minor League Baseball team that played in the Class D Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League (KITTY League) from 1946 to 1949. They were located in Clarksville, Tennessee , and played their home games at Goodrich Park . The team was known as the Clarskville Owls in 1946 before operating as the Clarksville Colts from 1947 to 1949. Clarksville, Tennessee , had been previously represented in
30-3232: A book. The Kitty League was written by Joshua Maxwell and Kevin McCann and published in 2012. Bowling Green, Kentucky * Bowling Green Barons 1939–1942 Cairo, Illinois * Cairo Egyptians 1903, 1912–1914, 1922–1924, 1946–1948 * Cairo Champions 1904 * Cairo Giants 1905–1906 * Cairo Dodgers 1949–1950 Central City, Kentucky * Central City Reds 1954 Clarksville, Tennessee * Clarksville Villagers 1903 * Clarksville Grays 1904 * Clarksville Volunteers 1910, 1913, 1916 * Clarksville Billies 1911 * Clarksville Rebels 1912 * Clarksville Boosters 1914 * Clarksville Owls 1946 * Clarksville Colts 1947 * Clarksville Cats 1948–1949 Danville, Illinois * Danville Old Soldiers 1906 Dawson Springs, Kentucky * Dawson Springs Resorters 1916 Dyersburg, Tennessee * Dyersburg Forked Deers 1923–1924 Evansville, Indiana * Evansville Yankees 1912 Fulton, Kentucky * Fulton Colonels 1911 * Fulton Railroaders 1922–1924, 1949–1951 * Fulton Eagles 1936–1938 * Fulton Tigers 1939–1942 * Fulton Chicks 1946–1948 * Fulton Lookouts 1952–1955 Harrisburg, Illinois * Harrisburg Merchants 1910 * Harrisburg Miners 1911 * Harrisburg Coal Miners 1913 Henderson, Kentucky * Henderson Hens 1903, 1905, 1911–1914, 1916 * Henderson Blue Birds 1904 Hopkinsville, Kentucky * Hopkinsville Hoppers 1903, 1910–1914, 1916, 1922–1923, 1935–1942, 1946–1954 * Hopkinsville Browns 1904 Jackson, Tennessee * Jackson Railroaders 1903 * Jackson Climbers 1911 * Jackson Blue Jays 1924 * Jackson Generals 1935–1942, 1950–1954 Jacksonville, Illinois * Jacksonville Jacks 1906 Lexington, Tennessee * Lexington Giants 1935–1938 Madisonville, Kentucky * Madisonville Miners 1916, 1922, 1946–1955 Mattoon, Illinois & Charleston, Illinois * Mattoon-Charleston Canaries 1906 Mayfield, Kentucky * Mayfield Pantsmakers 1922–1924 * Mayfield Clothiers 1936–1938, 1946–1955 * Mayfield Browns 1939–1941 McLeansboro, Illinois * McLeansboro Miners 1910–1911 Milan, Tennessee & Trenton, Tennessee * Milan-Trenton Twins 1923 Owensboro, Kentucky * Owensboro Distillers 1903, 1914, 1916 * Owensboro Pirates 1936 * Owensboro Oilers 1937–1942, 1946–1955 Paducah, Kentucky * Paducah Chiefs 1903, 1912–1913, 1951–1955 * Paducah Indians 1904–1906, 1910, 1914, 1922–1923, 1936–1941 * Paducah Polecats 1911 * Paducah Red Birds 1935 Paris, Tennessee * Paris Travelers 1922 * Paris Parisians 1923–1924 Portageville, Missouri * Portageville Pirates 1935–1936 Princeton, Kentucky * Princeton Infants 1905 Springfield, Tennessee * Springfield Blanket Makers 1923 Trenton, Tennessee * Trenton Reds 1922 Union City, Tennessee * Union City Greyhounds 1935–1942, 1946–1952 * Union City Dodgers 1953–1955 Vincennes, Indiana * Vincennes Alices 1903–1906, 1910, 1913 * Vincennes Hoosiers (1911) Clarksville Colts The Clarksville Colts were
40-668: A member of the Ohio Valley League, after the current team was founded in 2012. In 2012, Hopkinsville had the highest attendance in the league. This article about a baseball team in Kentucky is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Kentucky%E2%80%93Illinois%E2%80%93Tennessee League The Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League (or KITTY League ) was a Class D level minor league baseball circuit that went through six different periods of play between 1903 and 1955. The League hosted teams in 29 cities from
50-721: The Hopkinsville Hoppers before a home audience of around 3,000 people on May 8. The Colts gained their first win the next evening, beating the Hoppers 11–6. Clarksville ended their first season in fifth place, just missing the playoffs, with a record of 58–67 (.464). The team became known as the Clarksville Colts in 1947. They accumulated a record of 40–83 (.325), placing last of eight teams. The Colts posted two more losing seasons in 1948 (49–77; .389) and 1949 (40–85; .320), placing sixth and seventh respectively. Clarksville lost their last two games, 7–3 and 6–1, in
60-821: The Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League by the Clarksville Villagers in 1903 and the Clarksville Grays in 1904. From 1910 to 1916 the city fielded a team known as the Clarksville Volunteers (1910 and 1916), Clarksville Billies (1911), Clarksville Rebels (1912), and Clarksville Boosters (1913–1914). After a 39-year absence, Clarksville returned to the KITTY League in 1946 with the Colts, who played their home games at Goodrich Park . They lost their season opener, 11–0, to
70-534: The "KIT League" was formed. Members of the KIT League featured some of the former KITTY League cities, who formed teams and revived their previous monikers, such as the Fulton Railroaders , Owensboro Oilers and Union City Greyhounds . The KIT League is now defunct, with the teams having evolved to form the currently active ten–team Ohio Valley League in 2010. The league history was the subject of
80-404: The states of Illinois , Indiana , Kentucky , Missouri and Tennessee . The first KITTY League played from 1903 through 1906. The next one ran from 1910 through 1914. The third try played the 1916 season. The circuit was revived in 1922 and lasted three years. The fifth KITTY League lasted the longest, playing from 1935 through 1955 with a break from 1943 to 1945 due to World War II. The league
90-606: Was also known briefly as the Kentucky–Indiana–Tennessee League , for during this time the league contained teams such as the Evansville Yankees from Evansville, Indiana . Unlike most leagues that were dormant for years in between playing, the KITTY was much the same from 1903 to 1955, through its inactive years. Clifton C. Gosnell was league president in 1906, after which the league stopped playing, and
100-410: Was president in 1910–1911 when play resumed. Then Dr. Frank H. Bassett was league president 1912–1914, 1916, 1922–1924, and 1935–1937, through the active times and the inactive. Hopkinsville, Kentucky was represented for 28 of the 31 active seasons of the KITTY League, while Paducah, Kentucky made it for 23. In 2004, the league moniker was reincarnated, as a summer collegiate baseball league called
#898101