Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Montreal Royals

Montreal Royals

FieldValue
nameMontreal Royals
firstseason1896
lastseason1960
cityMontreal, Quebec
class level{{plainlist
majorleague{{plainlist
*Pittsburgh Pirates (1937–1938)<ref>{{cite weburlhttps://www.baseball-reference.com/register/team.cgi?id=e455674awebsite=Baseball Referencetitle=1938 Montreal Royalsaccess-date=November 23, 2015}}
ballpark{{plainlist
leaguenum9
leaguechamps
  • Class AAA (1946–1960)
  • Class AA (1928–1945)
  • Class B (1922–1924)
  • Class AA (1912–1917)
  • Class A (1897–1911)
  • International League (1928–1960)
  • Ontario–Quebec–Vermont League (1924)
  • Eastern Canada League (1922–1923)
  • International League (1912–1917)
  • Eastern League (1897–1911)
  • Brooklyn/Los Angeles Dodgers (1939–1960)
  • Pittsburgh Pirates (1937–1938)
  • Philadelphia Athletics (1933–1934)
  • Delorimier Downs
  • Atwater Park The Montreal Royals () were a minor league professional baseball team in Montreal, Quebec, during 1897–1917 and 1928–1960. A member of the International League, the Royals were the top farm club (Class AAA) of the Brooklyn Dodgers from 1939; pioneering African-American player Jackie Robinson was a member for the 1946 season. The 1946 Royals were recognized as one of the 100 greatest minor league teams of all time.

History

1948 team
[[Delorimier Stadium]], seen here in 1950, was the home of the Montreal Royals.

In 1928, George Stallings, a former Major League Baseball executive and Southern United States planter, formed a partnership with Montreal lawyer and politician Athanase David and businessman Ernest Savard to resurrect the Montreal Royals. Among the team's other local affluent notables were close friends Lucien Beauregard, Romeo Gauvreau, Hector H. Racine, and Charles E. Trudeau. Trudeau, businessman and father of the future 15th Prime Minister of Canada, Pierre Trudeau (and grandfather to the 23rd Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau), would remain on the Montreal Baseball Club Inc. Board of Directors until his death in 1935. Together these men financed and built Delorimier Stadium (also known as Montreal Stadium, Hector Racine Stadium and Delorimier Downs) at Delorimier Avenue and Ontario Street in east-end Montreal to serve as the team's home field.

This version of the Montreal Royals enjoyed great success, particularly after it became the top farm team of the Dodgers in 1939. The Royals launched the baseball careers of Sparky Anderson, Gene Mauch, Roberto Clemente and the man who broke Major League Baseball's color barrier with Montreal in 1946, Jackie Robinson. Other Royals' players of note include Duke Snider, Don Drysdale, Chuck Connors, Walter Alston, Roy Campanella, Johnny Podres and the winningest pitcher in the history of the team, Tommy Lasorda.

''Baseball's Fabulous Montreal Royals'' book (1996) displaying [[Jackie Robinson]] on the cover

The team holds a unique place in baseball history for being the first major-league affiliate to break the so-called "baseball colour barrier". On October 23, 1945, two members of the Brooklyn National League Baseball Club Inc. Board of Directors, Montreal Royals owner and team president, Hector Racine, and Brooklyn Dodgers general manager, Branch Rickey, signed Jackie Robinson, an African-American. Robinson played with the Royals during the 1946 season. John Wright and Roy Partlow, black pitchers, also played with the Royals that year.

Jackie Robinson uniform worn with the Royals

During that season, Robinson faced the race-related resistance from his manager (a Mississippian, Clay Hopper) and teammates but soon won them over with his masterful play (beginning with his spectacular debut in the opening game against the Jersey City Giants) and courage facing hostile crowds and opponents. As for his home city, he was welcomed immediately by the public, who followed his performance that season with intense adoration. For the rest of his life, Robinson remained grateful to the people of Montreal for making the city a welcoming oasis for him and his wife during that difficult 1946 season. They lived in an apartment in a white, Francophone neighbourhood of Montreal that summer at 832 avenue de Gaspé.

Olympic Stadium]] of the Royals' most famous player, [[Jackie Robinson]] made by sculptor [[Jules Lasalle

Robinson then left to play for the Dodgers the following year, but not before winning the Little World Series and being chased by exultant Montreal fans right to the train as he left. In Ken Burns' documentary film Baseball, the narrator quotes Sam Maltin, a sports journalist with the Montreal Herald*:* "It was probably the only day in history that a black man ran from a white mob with love instead of lynching on its mind."

The Royals continued through the 1960 season, two years after the Dodgers moved to Los Angeles. On September 13, 1960, Dodgers President Walter O'Malley announced that due to weak attendance, the Dodgers were ending their 21-year affiliation with the team. While a new affiliation with the Minnesota Twins was arranged, efforts to keep the team in Montreal failed, and the franchise was relocated to Syracuse, New York, for 1961, and became the Syracuse Chiefs. Montreal would gain an MLB team, the Expos, in 1969; "Royals" was suggested as a nickname for that team but was taken instead by the new American League club in Kansas City.

Titles

The Royals won the Governors' Cup, the championship of the IL, 7 times, and played in the championship series 11 times.

  • 1935 – Lost to Syracuse
  • 1941 – Defeated Newark
  • 1945 – Lost to Newark
  • 1946 – Defeated Syracuse
  • 1948 – Defeated Syracuse
  • 1949 – Defeated Buffalo
  • 1951 – Defeated Syracuse
  • 1952 – Lost to Rochester
  • 1953 – Defeated Rochester
  • 1954 – Lost to Syracuse
  • 1958 – Defeated Toronto

Montreal Royals records

Royals and Jackie Robinson memorial at former location of [[Delorimier Stadium]].
YearWinsLossesPercentageFinish
18974976.3927th
18986848.5861st
18996251.5492nd
19005472.4297th
19016567.4926th
19025977.4346th
19033795.2807th
19046762.5195th
19055680.4126th
19065783.4077th
19074685.3518th
19086475.4615th
19096883.4506th
19107180.4705th
19117280.4745th
19127181.4676th
19137477.4905th
19146089.4037th
19156770.4895th
19167564.5393rd
19175694.3737th
19288484.5005th
19298879.5274th
19309672.5713rd
19318580.5154th
19329078.5364th
19338184.4906th
19347377.4876th
19359262.5971st
19367181.4676th
19378267.5502nd
19386984.4516th
19396488.4217th
19408080.5005th
19419064.5842nd
19428271.5362nd
19437676.5004th
19447380.4776th
19459558.6211st
194610054.6491st
19479360.6082nd
19489459.6141st
19498470.5453rd
19508667.5622nd
19519559.6171st
19529556.6291st
195389635862nd
19548866.5712nd
19559559.6171st
19568072.5264th
19576886.4428th
19589063.5881st
19597282.4686th
19606292.4038th

[[Junior World Series]] appearances

YearWinnerLoserMargin of victory
1941Columbus Red BirdsRoyals4 games to 2
1946RoyalsLouisville Colonels4 games to 2
1948RoyalsSt. Paul Saints4 games to 1
1949Indianapolis IndiansRoyals4 games to 2
1951Milwaukee BrewersRoyals4 games to 2
1953RoyalsKansas City Blues4 games to 1
1958Minneapolis MillersRoyals4 games to 2

Montreal Royals managers

Year(s)Name
1897George Weidman
1897–1902Charles Dooley
1903Gene DeMontreville
1904Charlie Atherton
1904Ed Barrow
1905–1906Jimmy Bannon
1906–1907Malachi Kittridge
1907James Morgan
1908–1909Doc Casey
1910Ed Barrow
1911Edward J. McCafferty
1912Billy Lush
1912–1914Kitty Bransfield
1914–1917Dan Howley
1928George Stallings
1928–1932Ed Holly
1932–1933Doc Gautreau
1933–1934Oscar Roettger
1934–1936Frank Shaughnessy
1936Harry Smythe
1937–1938Walter "Rabbit" Maranville
1938Alex Hooks
1939Burleigh Grimes
1940–1942Clyde Sukeforth
1943Fresco Thompson
1944–1945Bruno Betzel
1946–1949Clay Hopper
1950–1953Walter Alston
1954Max Macon
1955–1957Greg Mulleavy
1957Al Campanis
1957Al Ronning
1957Tommy Holmes
1958–1960Clay Bryant

Notable former players

  • Sparky Anderson – Major League Hall of Famer
  • Joe Altobelli – World Series-winning manager
  • Roy Campanella – Major League Baseball Hall of Famer
  • Al Campanis – Major League scout and general manager
  • Roberto Clemente – Major League Hall of Famer
  • Chuck Connors – Major League first baseman and pinch-hitter
  • Tommy Davis – Major League outfielder and corner infielder
  • Don Drysdale – Major League Hall of Famer
  • Carl Erskine – Major League pitcher
  • George Gibson – Major League catcher and manager
  • Jim Gilliam – Major League infielder
  • Al Gionfriddo – Major League outfielder
  • Carl Furillo – Major League outfielder
  • Waite Hoyt – Major League Hall of Famer
  • Sam Jethroe – Negro league and Major League center fielder
  • Tommy Lasorda – Major League Hall of Famer
  • Van Lingle Mungo – Major League pitcher
  • Sam Nahem – Major League pitcher
  • Don Newcombe – Major League pitcher
  • Johnny Podres – Major League pitcher
  • Pete Reiser – Major League outfielder
  • Jackie Robinson – Major League Hall of Famer
  • John Roseboro – Major League catcher
  • Goody Rosen – Major League All Star outfielder
  • Schoolboy Rowe – Major League All Star pitcher
  • Duke Snider – Major League Hall of Famer
  • George Shuba - Major League outfielder
  • Bucky Walters – Major League pitcher
  • Dick Williams – Major League outfielder-third baseman and World-Series-winning manager

Montreal Royals in the Major League [[Baseball Hall of Fame]]

NameTenure
Walter AlstonManager, 1950–1953
Ed BarrowManager, 1904, 1910
Roy Campanella1947
Roberto Clemente1954
Jocko Conlan1931–1932
Don Drysdale1955
Burleigh GrimesManager, 1939
Waite Hoyt1917
Rabbit MaranvilleManager, 1937-1938
Jackie Robinson1946
Duke Snider1948

International League awards

Most Valuable Pitcher

First Awarded in 1953

YearPlayerStatistics
1958Tommy Lasorda18 Wins, 6 Losses, 2.50 Earned Run Average

Most Valuable Player

YearPlayerPositionHome RunsRBIBatting AverageSpecial Notes
1948Jimmy BloodworthSecond Base2499.294.976 Fielding Percentage
1949Bobby MorganShortstop19112.337Led league in batting average
1952Jim GilliamSecond Base and Outfield9112.301Led league with 18 stolen bases
1953Rocky NelsonFirst Base34136.308Led league in RBIs
1955Rocky NelsonFirst Base37130.364Won Triple Crown

Rookie of the Year

First Awarded in 1950.

YearPlayerPositionStatistics
1951Hector RodriguezThird Base8 HR, 95 RBI, .302 Batting Average, 26 stolen bases
1956Fred KippPitcher20 Wins, 7 Losses, 3.33 ERA, 127 Strikeouts

Triple Crown Winner

Given to the player who leads the league in Home Runs, Runs Batted In, and Batting Average

YearPlayerStatistics
1955Rocky Nelson37 HR, 130 RBI, .364 Batting Average

Notable media personnel

  • Charles Mayer – French language radio broadcaster

Bibliography

  • William Brown (foreword by Ken Singleton): Baseball's Fabulous Montreal Royals (1996) Robert Davies Publishing, 1996 –

References

References

  1. "1938 Montreal Royals".
  2. "1937 Montreal Royals".
  3. (2001). "Top 100 Teams". [[Minor League Baseball]].
  4. "Canadian Broadcasting Corporation : Charles Trudeau ownership". CBC News.
  5. "Hour.ca - News - SS: Tommy Lasorda & the Montreal Royals".
  6. "General Baseball History: Baseball's Negro Leagues".
  7. "Society for American Baseball Research: Quebec".
  8. Hill, Benjamin. (2007-02-14). "Forgotten members of the 'great experiment': Roy Partlow, John Wright lost in Dodgers' 1946 Minor League integration". [[Minor League Baseball]].
  9. (February 27, 2011). "US to honor Robinson's Montreal home". FOXSports.com.
  10. Rampersad, Arnold. (1997). "Jackie Robinson: A Biography". Alfred A. Knopf.
  11. (2011). "Carl Furillo: Brooklyn Dodgers All-Star". McFarland & Co..
  12. (1971). "Charles Mayer".
  13. "Journalisme – Mayer, Charles".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Montreal Royals — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report