Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Mattoon Phillies

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Previous parks
  
Mattoon Baseball Park

Previous
  
Class D 1947–1957, 1906–1908 Class E 1899

Previous leagues
  
Midwest League (1956–1957) Mississippi–Ohio Valley League (1949–1955) Illinois State League (1947–1948) Eastern Illinois League (1907–1908) Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League (1906) Indiana–Illinois League (1899)

Previous
  
Chicago White Sox (1947) Cleveland Indians (1948) Cincinnati Reds (1952) Philadelphia Phillies (1953–1956) Kansas City Athletics (1957)

Previous names
  
Mattoon Athletics (1957) Mattoon Phillies (1953–1956) Mattoon Indians (1947–1952) Mattoon Giants (1907–1908) Mattoon Canaries (1906) Mattoon (1899)

Location
  
Mattoon, Illinois, United States

The Mattoon Phillies was the primary nickname for a minor league baseball franchise in Mattoon, Illinois. Mattoon was a founding franchise in the Midwest League and played in the leagues directly preceding the MWL: the Mississippi–Ohio Valley League (1949–1955) and the Illinois State League (1947–1948). The franchise is the oldest in the MWL, evolving into today's Fort Wayne TinCaps. Earlier, Mattoon had teams in the Eastern Illinois League (1907–1908), Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League (1906) and Indiana–Illinois League (1899). Mattoon was affiliated with the Chicago White Sox (1947), Cleveland Indians (1948), Cincinnati Reds (1952), Philadelphia Phillies (1953–1956) and Kansas City Athletics (1957). The team moved to Iowa and became the Keokuk Cardinals in 1958.

Contents

History

The Mattoon Illinois State League (ISL) franchise was the direct result of the efforts of the Mattoon Athletic Association, which was formed in 1947 by William Zurheider, Clyde Kirk and Charles Heath. The corporation issued 600 shares of stock at $250 and built a new ballpark. Charles Heath was also a founder of the ISL.

No hitters

  • On August 24, 1954 Tom Cronin defeated the Hannibal Cardinals 2-0 in his no-hitter. On July 16, 1956 Mike Wallace pitched a no-hitter against the Clinton Pirates , winning 6-0.
  • The ballpark

    Mattoon played their home games at the Mattoon Baseball Park. The park was located at DeWitt Avenue and North Logan Street. The ballpark hosted the 1948 Illinois State League All-Star Game and the 1950 Mississippi–Ohio Valley League All-Star Game. Baseball Hall of Fame member Earl Weaver played in the 1948 game. The ballpark had a capacity of 2,500 and was destroyed shortly after the team left in the late 1950s.

    Notable alumni

  • Lew Krausse, Sr. (1957, MGR)
  • Art Mahaffey (1956) 3 x MLB AS
  • Jimmie Coker (1955)
  • Jim Golden (1954–1955)
  • Dallas Green (1955) MLB GM: MLB MGR; MGR 1980 World Series Champion – Philadelphia Phillies
  • Don Landrum (1954)
  • Grover Lowdermilk (1908)
  • Larry Doyle (1906) 1915 NL Batting Champion; 1912 NL Most Valuable Player
  • Pug Bennett (1899)
  • Roy Brashear (1899)
  • Dummy Taylor (1899) 116 Wins
  • Bob Wicker (1899)
  • References

    Mattoon Phillies Wikipedia