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Allentown Red Sox

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Class AA (1958-1960)

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Max Hess Stadium

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Eastern League

Allentown Red Sox

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Boston Red Sox (1958-1960)

The Allentown Red Sox (A-Sox) was a minor league baseball team affiliated with the Boston Red Sox. The team played in the Class AA Eastern League and was based in Allentown, Pennsylvania.

Contents

History

The club's origins date to 1933 as the Reading Phillies. It became a farm team for the Red Sox in 1938 as the Hazelton (PA) Red Sox. In 1957, the Red Sox purchased the former Detroit Tigers Eastern League team, the Syracuse Chiefs, and moved the club to Allentown mid-season, being operated as an unaffiliated team for the balance of the season. The Red Sox ended their affiliation with their Eastern League team in Albany, New York after the season and reassigned it to Allentown for the 1958 season.

Owned by Joe Buzas, the team played for three seasons at Max Hess Stadium (formerly Breadon Field), owned by Max Hess, Jr., owner of the Allentown Hess Brothers department store. One of Allentown's players was Tracy Stallard who achieved some sort of notorious fame as the pitcher who served up Roger Maris' sixty first homer in 1961 while playing for Boston. Another player who appeared at the stadium was Curt Simmons, a native of Egypt, Pennsylvania, who pitched at Max Hess Stadium in a rehab assignment for the Asheville (NC) Tourists, a farm team of the Philadelphia Phillies. The presence of Curt Simmons filled up the stands. For the 1960 season, Bob Heffner, who graduated from Allentown High School as a two-sport letterman in 1957 played for the A-Sox. He had the best pitching record on the club at 16-9. Heffner later played in the majors for the Red Sox, Cleveland Indians and lastly California Angels in 1968.

The A-Sox's best season was 1960. On September 3, 1960, the Red Sox kept its Eastern League playoff hopes alive with a 7-6, 3-2 sweep of Williamsport at Hess Stadium, the second of four straight doubleheaders the A-Sox played to close out the season. Two days later, Allentown's playoff bid ended in a 5-4, 11-inning defeat at Springfield in the first game of a Labor Day doubleheader. The holiday crowd of 1,297 at Hess Stadium witnessed the last professional baseball game in Allentown for 37 years.

Legacy

After the 1960 season, the team was relocated due to a lack of attendance (average of 650 fans per game in 1960), the team moved to Johnstown, Pennsylvania on December 5, 1960, for the 1961 season played as the Johnston Jonnies at Point Stadium. Over subsequent seasons, the club has remained as the AA level under different names in various cities:

  • 1962 York White Roses, York Pennsylvania (Red Sox)
  • 1963-1964 Reading Phillies, Reading, Pennsylvania
  • 1965-1969 Pittsfield Phillies, Pittsfield Massachusetts
  • 1970-1972 Pawtucket Red Sox, Pawtucket, Rhode Island
  • 1973-1982 Bristol Red Sox, Bristol, Connecticut
  • 1983-1994 New Britain Red Sox, New Britain, Connecticut
  • 1995-2002 Trenton Thunder, Trenton, New Jersey (Red Sox)
  • Since 2003, the club has been the Red Sox AA affiliate, Portland (Maine) Sea Dogs.
  • Seasons

  • 1958 Season
  • Won: 51 Lost: 83 Pct: .381 4th Place Eastern Division, 24 GB Manager: Eddie Popowski

    1958 Complete Team Statistics

  • 1959 Season
  • Won: 82 Lost: 59 Pct: .582 2d Place, 3 GB Manager: Sheriff Robinson Attendance: 84,000

    1959 Complete Team Statistics

  • 1960 Season
  • Won: 67 Lost: 72 Pct: .482 5th Place, 9 GB Manager: Sheriff Robinson Attendance: 51,654

    1960 Complete Team Statistics

    References

    Allentown Red Sox Wikipedia