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Gwinnett Braves Award August Grant to Family Connection and Communities in Schools of Barrow County

October 9, 2013

“Back to School” themed grant will help fund the organization’s “Back to School Bash”

Gwinnett BravesThe Gwinnett Braves have awarded their $1,000 grant for the month of August to Family Connection and Communities in Schools of Barrow County. The “Back to School” themed grant is aimed at benefiting organizations that support education or after-school mentoring.

Family Connection and Communities in Schools of Barrow County strives to improve the quality of life for children and families in Barrow County by fostering collaboration at the local and state levels to ultimately bring into focus their vision for all kids to be healthy, ready to start school and succeed when they get there, and for their families to be stable and self-sufficient.

Communities-In-School-Barrow-County-logoThe grant awarded by the Gwinnett Braves will help fund the organization’s “Back to School Bash,” a program that will distribute over 400 book bags, pens, pencils and notebooks to school-aged children in Barrow County.

“With programs that focus on youth peer-to-peer leadership, healthy decision making and breaking down barriers that keep students from coming to school and learning, we feel we are making a difference in our future leaders,” said Meg Loggins, Executive Director of Family Connection and Communities in Schools of Barrow County.

The original story appeared on the Gwinnett braves’ website and can be viewed by clicking here.

Tagged as : Atlanta Braves, Children's Health and Development, Donations, Education/Teacher Support, Georgia, Gwinnett Stripers, International League, Mentoring { }

Community Love: 2013 Thus Far

September 12, 2013

Thousands of Hours, Over $200,000 Given Back to NEPA

Moosic, Pa. – It’s more than numbers. It’s more than hours or dollars. It’s human. It’s real. It’s one of life’s most paradoxical, yet overwhelming true truths. An intangible concept, an experience really, that resounds with a firmness greater than Montage Mountain herself. It is better to give than to receive. Year one of the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders (Triple-A/New York Yankees) and the new PNC Field afforded the new-look franchise and the good folks of NEPA to get to know each other once more through more than just baseball. And the giving? Well, it sure felt good.

Below is a quick checklist of the highlight totals in 2013:

Front office staff hours volunteered: 890.5

Player hours volunteered: 202.5

Mascot appearances: 130

Donations: $24,044 (tickets/merchandise/autographed memorabilia)

Hurl the Pearl donation (Boys & Girls Club): $12,092

Allied Health Services donation: $16,000

Total donation including monetary value of volunteered hours from team/staff, all monetary donations and in-kind donations: $217,737

“The sum totals sound good, but what sticks with me are the individual moments,” said RailRiders president/GM Rob Crain. “I got more goosebumps from seeing the impact of the efforts spearheaded by our staff and community relations manager Rachel Mark than I’ve had at any other point in my life. It was a very good year.”

The Community Organization of the Night program made its debut this season. Each of the team’s 72 home games spotlighted a local non-profit/civic organization. That CON had the opportunity to spread its message to every guest through a pre-game on-field interview, a ceremonial first pitch, an on-air radio interview and a concourse table display.

The RailRiders’ Military Appreciation Program was implemented this season to show the team’s support of our nation’s active and retired military. The serviceperson and his/her family were honored. Activities included complimentary game tickets, a pre-game on-field interview and a ceremonial first pitch.

SWB’s patriotic pride continued with another new tip of the cap, Setting A Seat Aside. To honor men and women affiliated with our nation’s military whom could not be at PNC Field, one significant seat (section 13, row 15, seat one) will forever remain empty and unsold.

A standard from previous years got a big boost as the Adopt-A-Field Program upped the number of local fields renovated to four. Front office staff and grounds crew members combined to give the area little league/softball fields a big league facelift. Staffers spent the entire day at each park cutting the infield, rebuilding pitching mounds, fertilizing/mowing grass, cleaning dugouts and more. The fields were chosen through a contest on the team’s Facebook page with representatives of local leagues posting pictures of their field and describing its renovation needs. The four photos that received the most “likes” on Facebook were the lucky winners (Avoca/Dupont Little League; South Scranton Little League; Staback Park; Marvine Dutch Gap).

As the top affiliate of the New York Yankees, the RailRiders proudly played their part in the organization’s annual HOPE (Helping Others Persevere and Excel) Week effort. The week-long community outreach program’s purpose is to touch as many lives as possible in your area. Members of the RailRiders’ coaching staff, players and front office folks made their way throughout NEPA.

The week included a Children’s Miracle Network Day at the Ballpark on July 7. Twin boys who have overcome the worst of health adversities spent time on the field with players during batting practice, stopped by the pre-game clubhouse, threw out ceremonial first pitches and spent the game in the owner’s suite with friends and family. One day later, the RailRiders hosted a baseball game for the Lackawanna County Challenger Little League. LCCLL gives children with special needs the chance to participate in athletics. RailRiders coaches and players spent the entire game on the field, coaching and encouraging the boys and girls while helping them to bat, run and slide. A ballpark lunch followed. July 9 meant two surprise hospital visits to Moses Taylor and Geisinger in downtown Scranton. Patients interacted with the players while receiving giveaways, autographs and an overall fun time. The week concluded with players and front office staffers visiting the Boys & Girls Club of NEPA. The morning was spent playing baseball, billiards and computer games. The epic conclusion sported a dodgeball match between the RailRiders and the Boys & Girls club.

On Aug. 21, a tag-team food drive by the RailRiders and the Voluntary Action Center of NEPA sought out to stock as many food pantries in NEPA as possible. Fans received free game tickets in exchange for non-perishable food items. In addition to the food from fans, the RailRiders also presented the Voluntary Action Center with a check for $1,300 to assist with the fight against hunger in NEPA.

The RailRiders’ 2014 season begins on Thursday, April 3 when the club kicks off a seven-game road trip at Syracuse against the Chiefs (Washington Nationals). The home slate commences a week later on Thursday, April 10 when the Chiefs visit PNC Field for a four-game series and homestand. For season ticket information, call (570) 969-BALL (2255) or visit swbrailriders.com.

– SWB RailRiders – All Aboard! –

This article originally appeared on the official website of the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders. Click here to view the original story.

Tagged as : Boys and Girls Clubs, Challenger Little League, Children's Miracle Network, Community Benefit Report, Donations, Field Renovations, Food Banks, Food Drives, International League, Military & Veterans, New York Yankees, Pennsylvania, Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders, Supporting the Community, Ticket Donations, Volunteering, Youth Sports { }

Hurl the Pearl a Big Hit for Boys & Girls Club

August 28, 2013

RailRiders & Kost Tire to Present Check on Wednesday after Season-Long Fundraiser

Moosic, Pa. – The Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders (Triple-A/New York Yankees) have found a number of ways to further their community impact. A creative fan-favorite this season has been the “Hurl the Pearl” contest, presented by Kost Tire. For the contest, fans purchase “pearls”, soft baseballs, to hurl at the team’s pinstriped truck for prizes as it circles the warning track. Proceeds benefit the Boys & Girls Club of NEPA. This unique fundraiser has raised $11,877 so far, with Wednesday’s game still left to add to that total.

“Kost Tire and Auto Service has been a long-time supporter of the Boys and Girls Club for over 10 years now because they do such a great job of keeping the kids in our community safe,” said Erwin Kost, Jr., Kost Tire vice president and club secretary.

The RailRiders and Kost Tire will present a check to the Boys & Girls Club of NEPA at the end of the sixth inning during Wednesday night’s game at PNC Field. This will come on the heels of the final “Hurl the Pearl” half-inning of the season, as fans will help add to the $11,877 total being donated.

“We’ve stepped up our community involvement in a number of ways, but ‘Hurl the Pearl’ is one of my favorites,” said RailRiders president/GM Rob Crain. “This unique event is not only fun for fans to purchase a pearl and try to toss it into a moving truck, but it also provides an avenue to make an impact with a very important organization in NEPA, the Boys & Girls Club.”

Nightly “Hurl the Pearl” winners receive a $25 gift certificate to Kost Tire and Auto. The grand prize winner receives four tickets to a Yankees game; a $50 gas card; the chance to throw out a first pitch at PNC Field on Opening Night 2014; and a suite at PNC during the 2014 season. There will be a grand prize drawing on Thursday and participants must be in attendance to win.

The RailRiders will return home for their final two home games of the season on Wednesday night, and will host the Lehigh Valley IronPigs (Philadelphia Phillies) as the two teams continue the inaugural IronRail series. SWB trails in the rivalry series, 7-5. First pitch is scheduled for 7:05 p.m.

Wednesday is both Public Service Appreciation Night and a Kid’s Eat Free Wednesday thanks to Minooka Subaru. Every child 12 & under will receive a voucher for a free hot dog, bag of chips, and soda. Gates will open at PNC Field at 6 p.m. and the game will air live locally on My Network TV with the Voice of the RailRiders, John Sadak, on the call alongside FOX56 sports director Bob Ide. The RailRiders will play the final regular-season game of their inaugural season on Thursday. It will be Fan Appreciation Night at the ballpark, and a Thirsty Thursday presented by Budweiser. Thursday’s game is also a 7:05 p.m. first pitch and will include post-game fireworks.

– SWB RailRiders – All Aboard! –

This article originally appeared on the official website of the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders. Click here to view the original story.

Tagged as : Boys and Girls Clubs, Donations, Fundraising Opportunities, International League, New York Yankees, Pennsylvania, Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders { }

Foam Finger Giveaway and Fundraiser Tabbed for Tuesday

August 26, 2013

IronPigs to raffle off special caps for prostate cancer awareness

LehighValleyIronPigs_2013-08-26

 

In recognition of Prostate Cancer Awareness Night, the first 3,500 fans 18 and older will receive a sky blue foam finger giveaway presented by Urology Specialists of the Lehigh Valley (USLV) when the IronPigs and Buffalo Bisons wrap up their series at Coca-Cola Park on Tuesday at 7:05 p.m.

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In an effort to raise both funds and awareness for the disease, IronPigs players and coaches will wear commemorative sky blue caps during Tuesday’s game with proceeds from an in-game raffle benefitting The Prostate Cancer Awareness Fund of the Lehigh Valley.

“Unfortunately, research shows that one in six men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer during his lifetime,” said Charlie Fenstermaker, Chief Operating Officer of the Urology Specialists of the Lehigh Valley. “However, with early detection and advances in technology, survival rates among those diagnosed are at an all-time high.”

The physicians of USLV are offering a free health assessment, including a prostate screening, on Saturday, September 7, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the USLV Radiation & Imaging Center located at 5018 Medical Center Circle in Allentown. The free assessment includes a blood pressure test, a PSA blood test and a Digital Rectal Exam (DRE). For directions or to pre-register for the Health Assessment and Education Fair, visit uslv.net/register.

Added IronPigs General Manager, Kurt Landes: “Prostate Cancer Awareness Night is about pointing our attention to the importance of early detection and screening and getting the message out to adult men and their loved ones.”

According to recently published statistics, prostate cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death among American men and is the most commonly diagnosed with nearly 240,000 new cases of prostate cancer expected this year. Currently, there are more than 2.5 million American men living with the disease – roughly equal to the population of Chicago.

Urology Specialists of the Lehigh Valley (USLV) is one of Eastern Pennsylvania’s largest and fully-integrated urology practices, with 12 physicians and 6 office locations serving patients from Lehigh, Berks, Northampton, Carbon, Bucks, Monroe, and Warren counties. A combination of experienced and fellowship trained physicians, we are specialists in the field of Urology, with collective expertise in the diagnosis and treatment of prostate cancer, utilizing the latest technology including robotic surgery and GreenLight laser surgery for BPH.

To schedule a prostate screening or for additional information, visit uslv.net or call (484)-UROLOGY.

Additionally, fans will be able to play TD Bank Ballpark Bingo throughout the contest, which takes place every Tuesday throughout the season. The Morning Call autograph sessions which usually takes place on Mondays will be held on Tuesday evening, with two players (TBD) signing autographs on the concourse from 6-6:20 p.m.

Fans are reminded that Dauphin Street will be closed in both directions between Long Drive and American Parkway through Oct. 6 for work on the completion of American Parkway. Long Drive, just north of Union Boulevard, is the access road to the parking area for Coca-Cola Park in place of Dauphin Street. Preferred/Handicapped Parking access is available via American Parkway only.

The cost of parking in Coca-Cola Park’s “Pig Tail Porking Spaces” is $3 per vehicle for all IronPigs home games.

Single-game tickets, mini-plan packages and group tickets for all IronPigs home games presented by Capital BlueCross, are on sale now and can be purchased at the Coca-Cola Park Ticket Office, online at www.ironpigsbaseball.com or by calling (610) 841-PIGS.

Don’t forget to ask about the four-person “islands” in the Red Robin Oasis located directly above the left field bullpens. Each island is covered underneath a thatched roof and includes a circular half-table, cocktail-style seating for the four fans in the party and wait service.

 

This article originally appeared on the official website of the Lehigh Valley IronPigs. Click here to view the original story.

Tagged as : Cancer Awareness, Charity Auctions/Raffles, Family Relief/Resources, International League, Lehigh Valley IronPigs, Men's Health, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia Phillies, Promoting Health/Fitness, Public Recognition/Celebrations/Events { }

Donate non-perishables at Kroger Food Drive Friday!

August 13, 2013

ToledoMudHens_2013-08-13

 

The Mud Hens and Kroger have teamed up to present Kroger Food Drive Fridays at Fifth Third Field! The final Kroger Food Drive Friday is coming up on Friday, August 16. Each person that donates a minimum of three items to the food drive will receive a reusable shopping bag, courtesy of Kroger!

There will be collection bins at all Fifth Third Field entrances.

Need tickets to this Friday’s game? Call 419-725-4367 or order online.

This article originally appeared on the official website of the Toledo Mud Hens. Click here to view the original story.

Tagged as : Detroit Tigers, Food Drives, Food Insecurity, International League, Ohio, Toledo Mud Hens { }

Wear purple in support of Alzheimer’s awareness!

August 7, 2013

ToledoMudHens_2013-08-07

 

Representatives from the Alzheimer’s Association will be at the Sunday, August 18 Mud Hens game to raise awareness for the disease and promote the October 20 ‘Walk to End Alzheimer’s’ at the Lucas County Rec Center. We encourage all fans to WEAR PURPLE to the August 18 game in support of those afflicted with Alzheimer’s.

This article originally appeared on the official website of the Toledo Mud Hens. Click here to view the original story.

Tagged as : Alzheimer's Association, Detroit Tigers, Disability Awareness, Family Relief/Resources, International League, Ohio, Public Recognition/Celebrations/Events, Toledo Mud Hens { }

Gwinnett Braves Award June Grant to J.M. Tull-Gwinnett Family YMCA

August 4, 2013

“Summer Safety” themed grant will help fund swimming lessons throughout the community

Gwinnett BravesThe Gwinnett Braves have awarded their $1,000 grant for the month of June to J.M. Tull-Gwinnett Family YMCA. The “Summer Safety” themed grant is aimed at assisting organizations that promote safety programs for children.

The J.M. Tull-Gwinnett Family YMCA has been serving the Gwinnett community since 1974. The program offers wellness facilities for adults and families, while also assisting the community with non-member programs. J.M. Tull-Gwinnett Family YMCA continues to empower and transform lives around the community, serving over 12,000 Gwinnett residents through these programs.

YMCA-logo-green&blueThe funds from the grant awarded by the Gwinnett Braves will help J.M. Tull-Gwinnett Family YMCA in its continued mission to teach members of the community how to swim. Since 1986, the J.M. Tull-Gwinnett Family YMCA has been teaching youth and adults to swim and instructing their participants with life-saving techniques. The classes are intended for all ages, even young children as the YMCA offers a “SPLASH” program for ages 6 through 10. The program introduces children to the fundamentals of swimming and basic water safety.

“For over 15 years, the J.M. Tull-Gwinnett Family YMCA has been teaching youth and adults the ability to swim and importance of water safety,” said Kimberly Nelson, Executive Director of J.M. Tull-Gwinnett Family YMCA. “The education and instruction of water safety is crucial for all communities including Gwinnett County. Because of the generosity of the Gwinnett Braves Foundation, the YMCA is able to assist families that could not afford to participate in swim lessons and empower them with skills to be safer. As a community, we need to be especially cautious during the summer months when water incidents increase compared to the rest of the year. Together, the Y and Gwinnett Braves are making an impact and helping to save lives.”

The original story appeared on the Gwinnett Braves’ website and can be viewed by clicking here.

Tagged as : Atlanta Braves, Children's Health and Development, Donations, Georgia, Gwinnett Stripers, International League, YMCA { }

PawSox to honor Negro League Athletes on July 30

July 27, 2013

PawtucketRedSox_2013-07-27

 

Most Rhode Islanders recognize the strong relationship between their state and professional baseball at both the major and minor league levels. Few, however, are aware that this connection extends to the professional black teams in the Negro Leagues during the age of racial segregation in the 1930s and 1940s. In those years, African Americans participated in leagues of their own in response to the exclusionist policies of white major league baseball. Three men with close ties to Rhode Island participated in the Negro Leagues and distinguished themselves as outstanding athletes. Joseph Gomes, Charles Thomas, and Gideon Spence Applegate successfully competed “in the shadows” of segregation and thrilled loyal fans who appreciated their performance as a distinct form of social and cultural expression. Baseball certainly strengthened community within black neighborhoods, but both fans and players never lost their determination to integrate America’s national pastime. Outstanding players like Gomes, Thomas, and Applegate used the power of their abilities to demonstrate that they were second to none and, as such, acted as pioneers in the struggle to desegregate the game and country they honored.

2009 Honorees

Joe Gomes

Joseph “Joe” Gomes from East Providence began his career as a pitcher for the Philadelphia Bacharach Giants in 1929 and would spend seven seasons barnstorming the country competing against such legendary figures as Satchel Paige, Josh Gibson, and “Cool Papa” Bell. Earlier, Gomes led his East Providence High School baseball team to a state championship in 1928 where he garnered all-state recognition. After high school, John McGraw, manager and co-owner of the New York Giants, approached Gomes with a plan that would send the talented right-handed pitcher to Cuba for a season or two with the idea that he would later join the Giants as a Cuban player. Gomes affirmed his own heritage as a Cape Verdean and declined the offer. He subsequently played both baseball and football at Providence College and then made his professional debut in Philadelphia. He is, perhaps, the only person of Cape Verdean ancestry to play in the Negro Leagues. After his professional career ended, Gomes played for several local semi-pro and amateur teams in Rhode Island.

Charles Thomas

Equally significant is Charlie Thomas. Thomas was born in Georgia but spent most of his early life in Dayton, Ohio before moving to Boston, Massachusetts to attend college at Boston University. After serving his country with distinction in World War II and graduating from college, he moved to Providence where he enjoyed a strong presence as a community leader and civil servant working for the city’s recreational department and family court system.   Thomas compiled a successful professional career as an outfielder with the Newark Eagles playing for Hall of Fame owner Effa Manley between 1941 and 1943. With the Eagles, Thomas had Larry Doby, the first black player in the American League, and Hall of Famer Monte Irvin as teammates. The national and local press consistently touted Thomas’s athletic career and one teammate characterized him as “the guy who could deliver in a clutch.” Upon completion of his career in Newark, Thomas joined the Boston Colored Giants, New England’s most successful independent professional team where he frequently thrilled fans at Cardines Field in Newport. He also played semi-professional football for the Providence Steam Rollers. A member of the Boston University Athletic Hall of Fame, Thomas was a nine varsity letter award winner.

Gideon Applegate

Gideon Spence Applegate made his professional debut at McCoy Stadium as a member of the New York Cuban Giants in 1943 and competed for two full-seasons while still a student attending East Providence High School. During the 1943 season, he initially played under an assumed name, most likely Spearman, and the following year starred for the New York Black Yankees alongside manager George Scales and Hall-of Famer Willie Wells. Applegate was initially recommended to Cuban Giant owner, Alejandro Pompez, by his high school coach who also served as the skipper for the minor-league Pawtucket Slaters. He competed against such renowned Negro League players as Buck Leonard and Josh Gibson. Upon completion of his military service, Applegate attended a try-out at McCoy Stadium and joined the Pawtucket Slaters for spring training in 1948. Later, in 1949, he joined the Kingston, Ontario team, a farm club for the Boston Braves, where he became the first African-American player in the Braves organization. Applegate played for the Kingston Ponies in 1949 and 1950 in the Canadian Border League before winding up with Waterloo in 1951. The following season he helped the Superior Blues, a Chicago white Sox farm club, capture a league championship by pitching two no-hitters against rival teams in Sioux Falls and St Could. During his minor league years, he was selected to play in three all-star games. Applegate also starred for a celebrated local black team in Rhode Island. He played semi-professionally for the state’s premiere black club, the Invaders where he again competed against the best talent in the Negro Leagues with games against the New York Black Yankees and Philadelphia Stars.

2010 Honorees

Circle Athletic Club and

Charles Butler

Providence baseball fans experienced a different version of the “Summer of ’49.” Their edition focused on another pennant race, not the one in Boston and New York. This story featured the Circle Athletic Club, one of the city’s most celebrated and historic amateur teams. By season’s end, the Circle team conquered all its divisional opponents in the Independent National League and then set it sites on the American League victors for the Amateur championship. The Circle players subsequently won the championship and in the process made history as the first truly integrated team in the city’s then 48 year history of organized amateur ball. This month, on August 8th , the Pawtucket Red Sox will commemorate that achievement and honor pitcher Charles Butler for his outstanding accomplishments. Butler, who graduated from Central High School in 1944 and later served with distinction in World War II, initially played for the city’s all black team, the Invaders, before joining the Circle A.C.

Butler credits Ernest “Biffo” Duarte, prizefighter and sports promoter from Fox Point, as the inspiration behind the first integrated team. He scouted the best players, black and white, because he wanted only the best. Duarte struggled to land his ballclub in the Tim O’Neil Amateur League and only after relentless requests for a franchise did his dream come true. In 1949, two contingent factors, the expansion of the Independent League and the late withdrawal of one of its teams allowed the Circle Club to enter. As legend goes, Duarte told his ballplayers that the name of their club would be the Circle A.C. because nothing is more perfect than a circle that’s what he expected from his players.

He nearly got it. In its inaugural season, the team won its first 14 games, then lost one, but bounced back to win all its remaining contests. In a script only Hollywood could have written, the team won the amateur championship by defeating the highly favored Tutelo’s club on a two out, two-run double in the bottom of ninth which scored the tying and winning runs by pinch hitter Charles Harris. For the city’s African American community, the game defined the “Summer of 49” along with the promise of racial equality.

Although Charlie Harris provided the heroics that evening, it had been the consistent pitching of Charles Butler who delivered the team to its championship moment. Two other standout players, first-baseman Dick Harris, Charlie’s brother, and short-stop Johnny Braxton provided the power and speed essential for a balanced offense. A year earlier, in 1948, Harris and Braxton were among the first black players extended a tryout by the Boston Braves. The Braves organization eventually integrated its ball club in 1950 with the arrival of Sam Jethro.

In 1951, the team jumped to the semi-professional ranks and again made history as Rhode Island’s first integrated team to play for the National Baseball Congress’s world championship in Wichita, Kansas. On the road to Wichita, the team defeated Newport’s Bove Chevrolet led by player-manager Gordon Ross for the state semi-pro title and then defeated the Moodus Club of Connecticut to secure the regional championship. The Circle A.C. defeated teams from Alabama, Arizona, and Georgia before falling to the reigning Congress champs, the Indiana Capehearts. Butler played magnificently during the Kansas tournament as did his African American teammates Ray Edmonds and Charles Thomas. Thomas, then living in Rhode Island, had played for the Negro League World Champion Newark Eagles and had Hall-of-Famers Monte Irvin and Larry Doby as teammates.

The local press reported that “the idea of mixing races in the big leagues was quite a problem to the club owners but to Biffo it seems to be routine. He has managed to secure the better ballplayers of both races and not once has there been any inkling of misunderstanding among players or managers.” It is important to recognize that alternatives to the Jackie Robinson model of integration existed. Major League teams had several options including signing several black players at once to create an integrated team, like the Circle A.C., or expand the league to include one or more of the successful Negro League teams. The closest the national pastime came to true integration were rumors, now largely discredited, that maverick owner Bill Veeck planned to purchase the 1943 Phillies and stock the team with black ballplayers.

Long before baseball became the national pastime is was the local one. Providence fans surely followed the 1949 Red Sox and Yankee rivalry, but neither team featured a black ballplayer. While in Rhode Island, an interracial crowd gathered at Cranston Stadium to support the Circle A.C. in its bid for a league championship. Local baseball reflected the city’s racial flexibility and echoed the pulse of the community in ways the national pastime never could.

Charles Butler

Charles Butler was born and raised on Providence’s Westside and currently resides in East Providence with his wife Gwen. As a youngster, he played baseball at Central High School under renowned coach Walter “Pard” Pierce and concurrently starred for his neighborhood team the West Elmwood Raiders. Upon graduation, in 1944, he entered the United States Army and served with distinction during World War II. Upon his release in 1946, he resumed his ballplaying career as a hard throwing right-handed pitcher for the city’s black semi-professional team, the Invaders. Later, in 1949, he helped the first truly integrated amateur team in the city’s history, the Circle Athletic Club, win the Independent Amateur League championship. As the team’s premiere pitcher, he helped lead the team to a 20-2 overall record. Butler, a versatile athlete played the outfield when not on the mound. In 1951, he joined a very select group of athletes, both black and white, to represent the state in the National Baseball Congress world Championship in Wichita Kansas. To this day, Mr. Butler remains an active and avid golfer and tennis player.

2011 Honorees

The Invaders

During the challenging years of World War II, baseball provided a sense of comfort and stability for many Americans. This proved especially true for African Americans who steadfastly supported the war, but still faced racial segregation and discrimination at home. In 1945, the best non-white ballplayers in Providence formed the Invaders Baseball Club and quickly became New England’s most successful African American semi-professional team. These players competed against prominent regional clubs, both black and white, including the powerful Boston Colored Giants. By the time the Invader s disbanded in 1948, two of its members, Johnny Braxton and Dick Harris, had received tryouts by the Boston Braves and the team was carded against professional Negro League teams, including the New York Black Yankees. The Invaders also hosted hard-hitting barnstorming clubs like the Philadelphia All-Stars and Washington Pilots with rosters that listed mostly professional Negro League players. Fans packed Pierce Memorial Stadium in East Providence to demonstrate their appreciation for the team and its owner, Richard “Pop” Dudley, for the pride and sense of accomplishment the Invaders exemplified. It is exciting to note that during the team’s inaugural season, pitcher Amos Venter defeated the South Providence Mariners in a memorable game which included a hit and run scored by Mainer Lou Gorman, an outstanding first baseman who later became the General Manager of the Boston Red Sox.

Donald Taylor

The Invaders depended on Donald Taylor’s strong right arm to keep the team competitive in Rhode Island’s semi-professional baseball circuit. He never disappointed his teammates. He was a pitcher’s pitcher known for his pinpoint accuracy and ability to change speeds. Like many hurlers of his day, Donald was also a position player who hit for average and power. Most notably, in 1947, he doubled and scored the winning run against the Philadelphia All-Stars, a professional traveling team, in one of the Invader’s most memorable games. Donald was born on the West Side of Providence in 1922. Orphaned at an early age, he attended the Rhode Island State Home and School and later graduated from Mount Pleasant High School in 1940. While at Mount Pleasant he excelled in both football and baseball and also served as senior class president. Donald answered his nation’s call during World War II and served in the Army between 1943 and 1946. He participated in the Pacific Theater where he rose to the rank of Sergeant. Following his military release, he attended Delaware State College and became a stellar pitcher. After his college years, Donald spent most of his professional life in service to others. Starting as a Youth Supervisor for the Boys Training School in 1954, he later rose to the rank of Deputy Director and Acting Director of the state’s Department of Corrections. He retired from state service in 1989 as Assistant Director of Business Management in Management Services. He married Dorothy Hicks Goodwin in 1967 and they currently reside in Wakefield. He has three daughters and two sons.

Raymond Venter Sr.

The Venter name is well known in Rhode Island sport circles. Accepting the plaque in honor of his uncle, Amos Venter, is his nephew Raymond. During the 1940s, Amos played for the Invaders along with several other championship black teams including those coached by legendary sportsman Red Smith. Raymond followed in his uncle’s footsteps and became one of the state’s leading scholastic athletes. A graduate of Hope High School, Raymond excelled in football, basketball, baseball, and track. He later continued his athletic career in Providence’s amateur leagues where his hard work and ability played a major role in securing the state softball championship for his employer, the Amica Insurance Company. Raymond’s talents extended to the coaching realm where he assisted youngsters in the Martin Luther King Recreation League in Providence and Monsignor Clarke School in Wakefield. Raymond married Judy Riels and has three children, a son and two daughters. He currently lives in South Kingston.

Paul Price

Paul Price played for the Invaders along with his brothers Dan Price and Amos Venter. Paul’s speed and agility landed his a spot in the middle infield at second base or shortstop. He was born in Providence in 1921 where he attended the neighborhood public schools. Paul remained active in several civic and charitable organizations especially the Mason’s Constantine Temple #14. As a Mason, he served as Promotional Director for the Shriners and staged many fund-raising events which showcased the talent of the leading jazz bands and singers of the 1950s. He married Barbara Chinn, who recently passed away, and has two sons and two daughters. He lives in Providence.

2012 Honorees

Ralph “Tilly” Davis

Ralph Hickman Davis, better known as Ralph “Tilly” Davis in the local Rhode Island baseball world, was born in Providence, Rhode Island on February 5, 1915 to William and Rhoda (Hickman) Davis. He was the fourth in a family of four brothers, William, Dexter, Maynard, Clinton, and a sister, Nellie Davis Williams.

Ralph graduated from East Providence High School in 1934. Along with his two older brothers Dexter (Class of ’28) and Maynard (Class of ’30), and younger brother Clinton (Class of ’39), the gifted foursome excelled in varsity sports and were heralded statewide.

All four brothers were honored in 1955 by the East Providence Lettermen’s Club for their excellence in sports. Each of the Davis Brothers competed in at least three sports and led the East Providence High School “Townies” to championships for more than a decade. Whether playing baseball, football, or basketball from the late 1920s to nearly 1940, opposing teams in any of those three sports encountered at least one of the famed Davis brothers. At the time of the Letterman’s honoring event, The Providence Journal Bulletin further spread the news of the Davis Brothers’ extraordinary athletic achievements and artfully captured the foursome in a character portrait penned by the newspaper’s acclaimed illustrator, Frank Lanning.

While attending East Providence High School, Ralph achieved interscholastic all-state honors in baseball for both his junior and senior years. According to local sportswriters, he was considered one of the finest all-around athletes of his day, especially in baseball, when he captained the East Providence Townies to an undefeated season in 1933.

Ralph “Tilly” Davis owns a significant piece of Rhode Island baseball history. In 1933, as a member of the East Providence Belmonts, he helped integrate the Pawtucket Twilight League as a smooth fielding first baseman. Ralph also hit .360 that year, and it became apparent that he would soon advance to the highly competitive Pawtucket Inter City League. As expected, Ralph became the first player of African American descent to play in the Inter City League as a member of the semi-professional East Providence Townies. Ralph enjoyed a successful career with the Townies and in 1935 participated in the League’s All-Star game held in Coates Stadium as a representative of the Leagues’ American Division. Sportswriters touted Davis as a” heavy and consistent hitter, [who] has belted the old apple throughout the year at over a .320 clip while afield his handling of first base has been a revelation to his admirers. A past master in scooping grounders or reaching wide for bad throws, Tilly was unquestionably the leading first sacker of the strong Pawtucket League.” Davis played a key role in the American Division’s win with a clutch single in bottom of the ninth inning to tie the game.

During this period, “Tilly, divided his playing time between the Inter City League and several African American independent teams including the Dixie Matthews Athletics, The Douglass Athletic Club, and the Providence Colored Giants, and the Royal Colored Giants. He earned inclusion on the Boston Chronicle’s African American All-Star team for 1933, 1934, and 1935.

Ralph Davis had two great passions — baseball and flying. Like other young men of the time, the imminent specter of war swooped up three of the five Davis brothers. Civilian life pursuits were swept aside in order to serve gallantly in the service of their country.

During WWII, Ralph served in the United States Army Air Corps, assigned and served as a pilot, mechanic and instructor to the famed and highly decorated 99th Pursuit Squadron, known as the fearless Tuskegee Airmen flying those distinctive red tail P-51 fighter plans. Ralph Davis was honorably discharged in 1945 holding the rank of Staff Sergeant.

While still in the service, Ralph met and married, Mary Tate and they settled in her hometown of Staunton, Virginia. The couple was blessed with one son, Clinton Maynard Davis, currently a Staunton resident. Clinton accepts tonight’s recognition and memorial plaque on behalf of his father and family.

His belief in his abilities… His love for sports and honest competition all served as the foundation for Ralph “Tillie” Davis’ most inspiring life achievements.

Ralph Davis left this life in 2002 at the age of 87.

2013 Honorees

Carter “Speed” Braxton and John Braxton

Carter “Speed” Braxton and his brother John formed one of the smoothest double-play combinations in local black baseball. Carter began his baseball career in 1937 as a member of the West Elmwood Raiders as a pitcher and infielder. By1942, he had become manager of the Raiders, a team that now included his younger brother John. During World War II, the West Elmwood club played a highly competitive schedule in the John Hope Amateur League against ballclubs that included a talented team of black sailors from the Quonset Naval Air Station. The games attracted large numbers of fans that traveled to Hope Field, Bucklin Park, Tockwotton Park and Mashapaug Park to watch their neighborhood teams compete.

John entered the Navy in 1943, but periodically joined his brother on the field when granted shore leave. After the War, John became a stellar player for the finest African American team in Rhode Island, the Invaders. His talent caught the attention of the Boston Braves and, in 1948, the Braves selected him to participate in a try out held at McCoy Stadium. Johnny Braxton, who threw and batted right-handed, was characterized in the local press as an alert and fast infielder who covered a lot of territory around shortstop. He batted for average and was one of the leading base stealers in all New England.

The brothers reunited one last time when both participated as members of the famous Circle Athletic Club, the first integrated team in Rhode Island’s legendary Tim O’Neil League. With Carter playing second and John at short, the brothers helped the Circle Club win the League’s championship title in 1949. John gained recognition for his bat and Carter for his speed.

Not to be outdone, sister Lillian Braxton served as a founding member of the Circlettes, an all girls athletic club designed to promote baseball and basketball competition among Providence’s African American women.

Carter was born in 1925 and raised in Providence. He served his country with distinction as a member of the Navy during World War II. He married Hope (Washington) Braxton and together they created a family that included three sons, Carter, Earl, and Winston and two daughters Marsha and Linear. Later, he married Ramon (Smith) and raised two daughters Tyna, and Christine. Carter lived most of his adult life on Cranston Street and worked as a longshoreman as a member of the International Longshoreman’s Association Local 1329.   He passed away in 1989. His younger brother, John, also served his nation as a sailor during World War II and later worked at the former Quonset Point Naval Air Station in North Kingstown. Born in 1927, John married Velma (Taylor) Braxton and raised a family that included four sons, John, Jr., James, Ronald, and Curtis and three daughters, Ellen, Patricia, and Nancy. He remained a life-long resident of Providence and died in 1994.

Both were the sons of Carter and Mary (Cuff) Braxton and the brothers of Thomas, Clara, Martha, and Lillian. Thomas Braxton will accept the commemorative plaque in his bothers’ honor.

This article originally appeared on the official website of the Pawtucket Red Sox. Click here to view the original story.

Tagged as : Boston Red Sox, Honoring History, International League, Pawtucket Red Sox, Public Recognition/Celebrations/Events, Rhode Island { }

Knights Announce 2013 HealthCare Scholarship Award Winners

July 25, 2013

The winners were honored at the July 19 game at Knights Stadium. (Audrey Stanek/Charlotte Knights)
The winners were honored at the July 19 game at Knights Stadium. (Audrey Stanek/Charlotte Knights)

(Fort Mill, SC) – The Charlotte Knights, Triple-A affiliate of the Chicago White Sox, and Carolinas HealthCare System, are pleased to announce the names of the three winners of the 2013 Charlotte Knights Healthcare Scholarship Program. The winners are John Dock Tallent, Gisele Bailey, and Stephanie Smith.

The scholarship program is dedicated to providing educational opportunities to the youth in our communities. A $1,000 scholarship has been awarded to the winners to assist them in future academic endeavors. Each of their names will be inscribed on a plaque that will be prominently displayed on the Carolinas HealthCare System Home Run Porch at BB&T Ballpark.

“We are proud to announce such accomplished winners for our first scholarship,” said Knights Vice President of Sales Chris Semmens. “We feel these recipients closely represent the values and mission of the Knights and Carolinas HealthCare System. We look forward to hearing about their future achievements and wish them luck in all their endeavors.”

Brief information about the 2013 Charlotte Knights HealthCare Scholarship Program recipients:

•    John Dock Tallent – Tallent graduated from West Lincoln High School and was ranked #1 in his class. He played varsity golf and was the student body president. Tallent will attend Appalachian State University this fall to pursue a degree in the medical field. John hopes to one day become a doctor.

•    Gisele Bailey – Bailey is a recent graduate of Charlotte Christian High, where she held a 4.9 GPA this year. Also an athlete, Bailey was a varsity basketball player who ranked 27th at her position nationally by ESPN. She is heading to Harvard this fall and will be a member of the Crimson Women’s Basketball team.

•    Stephanie Smith – Smith is a recent graduate of Lake Norman High School. Last summer Stephanie performed research at Davidson College laboratories. She will be attending UNC-Chapel Hill this fall and hopes to become a neurosurgeon. She plans to focus on biomedical engineering, with an emphasis on neuroscience.

The three winners were recently honored at the Charlotte Knights game on Friday, July 19 during a special pre-game on-field ceremony. Dr. Michael Gibbs, Chair of Emergency Medicine, was on hand to present the award to the recipients.

High school seniors enrolled in one of the following North or South Carolina counties: Cabarrus, Catawba, Chester, Cleveland, Gaston, Iredell, Lancaster, Lincoln, Mecklenburg, Rowan, Union, or York County, are eligible for the 2014 Charlotte Knights Healthcare Scholarship Program. Applicants must be attending an accredited institution of higher education in the fall of 2014, and will be judged on academic performance; volunteer and community involvement; and sports and extracurricular activities. More information, along with applications, will be available online at charlotteknights.com in the fall.

About Carolinas HealthCare System:
Carolinas HealthCare System (carolinashealthcare.org), one of the nation’s leading and most innovative healthcare organizations, provides a full spectrum of healthcare and wellness programs throughout North and South Carolina. Its diverse network of nearly 800 care locations includes academic medical centers, hospitals, freestanding emergency departments, physician practices, surgical and rehabilitation centers, home health agencies, nursing homes and behavioral health centers, as well as hospice and palliative care services. CHS works to improve and enhance the overall health and wellbeing of its communities through high quality patient care, education and research programs, and numerous collaborative partnerships and initiatives.

Tickets for the 2013 season are on sale now and can be purchased in person at Knights Stadium, by phone at 704-357-8071 ext. 2106, or online at www.charlotteknights.com. Knights Baseball… Tradition Never Ends.

This article originally appeared on the official website of the Charlotte Knights. Click here to view the original story.

Tagged as : Charlotte Knights, Chicago White Sox, Children's Health and Development, Education/Teacher Support, Family Relief/Resources, International League, Scholarships, South Carolina { }

PawSox Wives Food Drive on Tuesday, July 30

July 23, 2013

PawtucketRedSox_2013-07-23

 

Help make sure no Rhode Islander goes hungry this summer. We need your help collecting food to meet the increased need. Fans bringing a “Pasta or Protein” Item (Pasta, Tuna, Peanut Butter, Beans, etc) can go by the PawSox Wives table located at the McCoy Stadium Main Entrance on Tuesday, July 30 and receive an autograph photo of a PawSox player. All food will be donated to the Rhode Island Food Bank as part of the Citizens Bank Strike Out Hunger Program.

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This article originally appeared on the official website of the Pawtucket Red Sox. Click here to view the original story.

Tagged as : Boston Red Sox, Family Relief/Resources, Food Banks, Food Drives, Food Insecurity, International League, Pawtucket Red Sox, Rhode Island { }

Shake your macaroni and help fight hunger: Fri. 7/26!

July 18, 2013

ToledoMudHens_2013-07-18

 

The first 2,500 fans at the Friday, July 26 game will receive a box of macaroni and are encouraged to use it as a noisemaker to cheer on the team. After the game fans can take the macaroni home for a tasty meal or donate it back to the Kroger Food Drive Friday event! Kroger will be matching the amount of boxes given away on Macaroni Day with an additional donation of 2,500 boxes! All Kroger Food Drive Friday events benefit the Northwest Ohio Food Bank.

Kroger Food Drive Fridays

The Mud Hens and Kroger have teamed up to present Kroger Food Drive Fridays at Fifth Third Field! Bring non-perishable food donations on Friday, July 26, and Friday, August 16. Each person that donates a minimum of three items to the food drive will receive a reusable shopping bag, courtesy of Kroger!

There will be collection bins at all Fifth Third Field entrances.

Need tickets to the Food Drive Friday games? Call 419-725-4367 or order online.

This article originally appeared on the official website of the Toledo Mud Hens. Click here to view the original story.

Tagged as : Detroit Tigers, Food Banks, Food Drives, Food Insecurity, International League, Ohio, Supporting the Community, Toledo Mud Hens { }

PawSox Help Raise Awareness of “Invisible Wounds of War”

June 26, 2013

PawtucketRedSox_2013-06-26

 

June is National PTSD Awareness Month. 1 in 3 service members returns from Iraq and Afghanistan with an “invisible wound of war” – Post-Traumatic Stress or Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI). The Pawtucket Red Sox baseball team is promoting PTSD awareness by hosting more than 150 Rhode Island and Massachusetts military service members, veterans and their families from the Red Sox Foundation and Massachusetts General Hospital Home Base Program for a baseball game and BBQ on Thursday, June 27.

This portion of the PawSox Military Appreciation Night is designed to raise awareness of the Red Sox Foundation and Massachusetts General Hospital Home Base Program which provides clinical care and support services to service members, veterans and families affected by combat stress or traumatic brain injury (TBI).

The PawSox game is part of the Home Base “Adventure Series” and is designed to give military families an opportunity to come together for a fun activity and learn about the Home Base Program. Tickets are generously donated by the PawSox and by the Highland Street Foundation.

Previous Home Base Adventure Series events have included alpine skiing and ice fishing in Vermont and New Hampshire, sailing on the Charles River and skating on the Frog Pond in Boston, and a visit to the Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, MA. This is the third year that Home Base will partner with the PawSox to host this Adventure Series event designed specifically for Rhode Island and Southeastern Massachusetts military families.

To learn about Home Base’s new public service campaign to raise awareness for PTS and TBI, visit www.helpathomebase.org. For more info on the Red Sox Foundation and Mass General Hospital Home Base Program, go to www.homebaseprogram.org.

Event details: Thursday, July 27, 2013. BBQ at 5 PM. Pre-game at 6:15 PM; Game start 7:05 PM. Contact Catherine Moore, 802-793-4914 or cmoore28@partners.org.

Where: McCoy Stadium; 1 Columbus Avenue; Pawtucket, RI

Upon arrival, members of the press should check in at the Home Base table located at Gate B, near the right field entrance to the stadium.

 

This article originally appeared on the official website of the Pawtucket Red Sox. Click here to view the original story.

Tagged as : Boston Red Sox, Family Relief/Resources, International League, Military & Veterans, Pawtucket Red Sox, Rhode Island, Supporting the Community, Ticket Donations { }

RailRiders to Hold Baseball Equipment Drive Saturday

June 18, 2013

Adult Equipment to be Sent to Troops Overseas, Youth Donations to Local Little Leagues

Moosic, Pa. – The Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders (Triple-A/New York Yankees) will hold a baseball equipment drive to benefit both soldiers in Afghanistan and local little leagues. The drive will take place on Saturday, June 22, when the RailRiders host the Norfolk Tides (Baltimore Orioles) in a split doubleheader. Equipment will be accepted at both games with the first contest starting at 12:05 p.m. and game two getting underway at 7:05 p.m.

“We wanted to bring a little piece of home to our troops overseas,” said RailRiders community relations manager Rachel Mark. “Giving them the ability to participate in America’s favorite pastime is the least we can do for the men and women who have given so much.”

Donation bins will be set up at the front gates at PNC Field and will be manned by volunteers from The American Legion Post 665 in Dickson City until the third inning of each game. This will allow fans to drop off their gently-used equipment as they enter the ballpark. The drive is designed to bring a piece of home to our soldiers, and also make a direct impact in the NEPA community.

Following the game, all of the equipment that was donated will be sorted by the volunteers. The adult equipment will be shipped to soldiers stationed in Afghanistan, while the youth equipment will be donated throughout the NEPA area. The RailRiders will be accepting all baseball equipment that is in usable condition.

Gates will open up at 11:00 a.m. on Saturday, June 22. The first 2,500 fans in game one will receive a free bat courtesy of Kost Tire & Auto. The gates for game two will open at 6 p.m. and the Cowboy Monkey Rodeo will perform after the nightcap. With no upper deck at PNC Field anymore, every seat in the ballpark provides the supreme views and intimacy that make minor league baseball so special at incredibly affordable prices. For more information, please visit the team’s official website, www.swbrailriders.com, or call 570-969-BALL (2255).

– SWB RailRiders – All Aboard! –

This article originally appeared on the official website of the Scranton Wilkes-Barre Yankees. Click here to view the original story.

Tagged as : Children's Health and Development, Equipment Donations, International League, Military & Veterans, New York Yankees, Pennsylvania, Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders, Youth Sports { }

Salute our troops at Veterans Appreciation Night!

June 12, 2013

ToledoMudHens_2013-06-12

 

Show support for current and former military and service personnel on Saturday, June 22 at Veterans Appreciation Night, presented by Owens Community College. Get to the ballpark early for a special pregame ceremony and enjoy “veterans-themed” music and in-game activities. Details on Veterans Night and info on discounted tickets at www.mudhens.com/veterans.

This article originally appeared on the official website of the Toledo Mud Hens. Click here to view the original story.

Tagged as : Detroit Tigers, Discounted Tickets, International League, Military & Veterans, Ohio, Public Recognition/Celebrations/Events, Toledo Mud Hens { }

Bark in the Ballpark A Success!

June 3, 2013

The Knights presented a check to the Human Society of York County on Sunday. (Audrey Stanek/Charlotte Knights)
The Knights presented a check to the Human Society of York County on Sunday. (Audrey Stanek/Charlotte Knights

(Fort Mill, SC) – It was a beautiful day for baseball on Sunday, June 2 as the Charlotte Knights welcomed all fans and dogs out to Knights Stadium for a 2:15 p.m. matinee game between the Knights and Rochester Red Wings (Triple-A affiliate of the Minnesota Twins).

The team’s annual Bark in the Ballpark celebration was filled with dog-themed tables on the concourse, a pre-game on-field dog parade, pooch-friendly music, and more. The great people from the Human Society of York County were on-hand for the event and the goal of the day was to raise money and find a good home for some of their puppies.

All of the dogs in attendance strutted their stuff during the parade and later in the day. Dogs of all ages and sizes were in attendance on Sunday.

Fans had a chance to see some dog clips on the in-stadium videoboard. One of the mound visits featured a clip from the Jetsons’ Astro. Other video dogs were Scooby Doo, Snoopy, and Brian from Family Guy.

Later in the day, the Knights had a special check presentation on the field to announce that the team raised $2,526 for the Human Society of York County. The money raised will go to insuring that all of the dogs at the shelter are well taken care of before they are adopted.

In all, three of the five dogs were adopted on Sunday at Knights Stadium and will now go to a great new home.

The entire Bark in the Ballpark celebration was sponsored by Nutramax Laboratories and Spay Neuter Clinic of the Carolinas.

Sunday’s game gave true meaning to “Dog Days of Summer”. It was a barking good time!

Tickets for all games this season are on sale now and can be purchased in person at Knights Stadium, by phone at 704-357-8071 ext. 2106, or online at http://www.charlotteknights.com.

This article originally appeared on the official website of the Charlotte Knights. Click here to view the original story.

Tagged as : Animal Shelters/Rescue, Charlotte Knights, Chicago White Sox, Donations, Humane Society, International League, South Carolina, Supporting the Community { }

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Minor League Baseball clubs have been actively involved in their communities for many years. For the first time, their activities and contributions will be chronicled on this site.

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