Clarksdale Planters 1934–1951 (1934–1941, 1947–1951) Clarksdale, Mississippi |
|
Class-level | |
---|---|
Previous | Class-C |
Minor league affiliations | |
League | Cotton States League |
Previous leagues
|
East Dixie League |
Major league affiliations | |
Previous |
|
Team data | |
Previous names
|
|
Previous parks
|
|
The Clarksdale Planters are a defunct minor league baseball team that was based in Clarksdale, Mississippi. They played under different names over their 13 nonconsecutive seasons, including the Ginners (1934–1936, 1941), the Red Sox (1937–1940), and finally the Planters (1947–1951). The team started out in the East Dixie League from 1934 to 1935, and later joined the Cotton States League from 1937 to 1941, and 1947 to 1951. Clarksdale ceased to have a team for five seasons (1942–1946). However, the team returned in 1947 under the Planters name. The team was classified as a Class-C team for all of their 13 years. Clarksdale was affiliated with the Cleveland Indians for one season (1936), and the Boston Red Sox for two seasons (1938–1939).
Clarksdale, Mississippi has a professional baseball history stretching back to 1904. That season, the Clarksdale baseball club of the Delta League began its one-year run. They were classified as Class D. The team featured Harry Kane and Beals Becker who were the only two players on the club that played or went on to play in Major League Baseball. After the 1904 season, the Clarksdale club ceased operations. In 1913, Clarksdale included in Cotton States League, who at this time were classified as a Class-D league. The team played under the name the "Swamp Angels" and featured three players, Clarence Kraft, John Merritt, and Claude Thomas, who had or went on to have major league experience. Like the first professional team in Clarksdale, the Swamp Angels folded after one season. In 1921, Clarksdale was again a home to a professional baseball team. This time the Clarksdale Cubs would play for three seasons before folding. Their first season, 1921, the Cubs played in the Mississippi State League. The next two seasons, however, the Cubs played in the Cotton States League. Over their three-year stint, the Cubs were classified as a Class-D team. The 1921 team featured major leaguers Happy Foreman and Earl Webb.