The Middle Atlantic League (or Mid-Atlantic League) was a lower-level circuit in American minor league baseball that played during the second quarter of the 20th century.
4-948: The Huntington Boosters were a Middle Atlantic League (1931–1933) and Mountain State League (1937, 1939) minor league baseball team based in Huntington, West Virginia . It was affiliated with the Detroit Tigers in 1932 and 1933 and with the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1939. It was the first team to be based in Huntington since the Huntington Blue Sox of the Ohio State League disbanded in 1916. Baseball Hall of Fame inductee Walter Alston played for Huntington in 1936. From 1934 to 1936,
8-586: A decade in Major League Baseball, played the team when it was known as the Jewels. Multiple major league players spent time with the team when it was called the Boosters, including 1945 All-Star second baseman Eddie Mayo . He was with the team in 1933. Middle Atlantic League The Middle Atlantic League played from 1925 through 1951 , with the exception of three seasons (1943–45) when
12-654: The loop suspended operations during World War II . The league primarily featured clubs based in the U.S. states of Pennsylvania , Ohio and West Virginia , although it had a team in Maryland and, in its final season, one in New York . Its longest-tenured team, in Johnstown, Pennsylvania - the Johnnies - existed for 19 seasons. Its final champion was the 1951 Niagara Falls Citizens . Throughout its 24-year history,
16-740: The team was known as the Huntington Red Birds and in 1938 it was known as the Huntington Bees . That year, it was managed by Dickey Kerr , while Mike Sandlock and Hank LaManna played for the team. It became the Huntington Aces in 1940. As the Aces, Sheriff Blake , Russ Young , Pee-Wee Wanninger and Ezra Midkiff each managed the team at some point, despite the team lasting only two seasons under that name. Of note, Cliff Fannin and Ken Wood , who both spent over half
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