Hilldale Daisies & Sioux City Ghosts\u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \u2007͏ \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad \xad
Hilldale Daisies & Sioux City Ghosts |
|
The Hilldale Daisies were based in Darby, Pennsylvania, just outside Pennsylvania. Originally founded as a boys’ team in 1910, they grew to the professional level and won the first three Eastern Colored League pennants in 1923, 1924, and 1925. They lost the first Negro World Series in 1924 to the Kansas City Monarchs but faced them again in 1925 and emerged with the title.\xa0\xa0 |
|
|
|
|
The Sioux City Ghosts were a touring Black fast-pitch softball team with origins in a boys' club in the African-American West 7th Street neighborhood during the 1920s. The prowess of the team soon made them one of the top touring attractions during the Great Depression, along with teams like the House of David and Harlem Globetrotters. After becoming widely known in the Midwest, the team toured California, the West, and Canada. As entertainment was an integral part of the appeal of these barnstorming teams, the Ghosts relied on comedy routines and displays of baseball skills like "Shadowball" to widen their appeal.\xa0 |
|
|
|
|