Wednesday 6 November 2013

BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY : AFRICAN AMERICAN " WILLIAM BINGA " WAS A BASEBALL THIRD VASE MAN CATCHER AND MANAGER IN THE PRE-NEGRO LEAGUE BASE BALL ERA : GOES INTO THE " HALL OF BLACK GENIUS "

                         BLACK                    SOCIAL                HISTORY                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 William H. Binga  born February 26, 1869 and died October 14, 1950 was an American third basemancatcher and manager in the pre-Negro League baseball era. Born in Michigan, Binga played most of his career in Chicago, Illinois, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and Minneapolis, Minnesota.
BLACK                  SOCIAL            HISTORY
Currently, it appears Binga started his baseball career at the age of 26, playing three games as a catcher for a team in Adrian, Michigan. He quickly moved on to the Page Fence Giants, which eventually brought him to Chicago when the team moved to Chicago and became the Chicago Columbia Giants in 1899.
In Chicago, he played for several seasons for the Columbia Giants, Chicago Union Giants, and the Leland Giants. He would move with many fellow players to Minnesota in 1908.
During his career, he played with Sol White, Rube Foster, George Wilson, Walter Ball, Eugene Barton, Andrew Campbell, Alex Irwin, Candy Jim Taylor, Johnny Davis, and he played baseball alongside University of Minnesota famed Bobby Marshall.
BLACK       SOCIAL     HISTORY

Fellow player Jimmy Smith called Binga "the only third sacker and surest hitter in the country."
After a couple of seasons in Philadelphia, it appears Binga played the rest of his seasons for teams in Minnesota and the Dakotas. The last known game Binga played was in Willmar, Minnesota. He was living in Willmar as late as the 1930 Census, where he is still listed as renting a place from Clayton R. Baker.

Post Baseball Career

Binga was buried in an unmarked grave in Minneapolis, Minnesota, where his grave has remain unmarked for more than 61 years. He will receive a proper headstone for the first time in 2012 from the Negro Leagues Baseball Grave Marker Project. His death records show he was married, to Edna Louise, and his parents were Joshua and Lucy Binga. According to the 1940 Census, Binga's wife had died.

























No comments:

Post a Comment