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  <title>202: The Hilldale Club - With Neil Lanctot</title>
  <description>We continue our dogged pursuit of the history of baseball's Negro Leagues with a stop this week in the suburban Philadelphia borough of Darby, PA - for a look at the famed Hilldale Club with SABR Seymour Medal-winning historian Neil Lanctot (&amp;quot;Fair Dealing and Clean Playing: The Hilldale Club and the Development of Black Professional Baseball&amp;quot;). &amp;amp;nbsp; Established as an amateur boys team in 1910 by a moonlighting civil servant named Ed Bolden, the club incorporated in November 1916, as the Hilldale Baseball &amp;amp;amp; Exhibition Company - and developing into a professional Negro League powerhouse in the 1920s. &amp;amp;nbsp; Along with Atlantic City's Bacharach Giants, Hilldale played as eastern &amp;quot;associates&amp;quot; of the predominantly midwestern Negro National League in 1920-21 - before becoming charter members of a full-fledged Bolden-founded rival Eastern Colored League in 1923. &amp;amp;nbsp; Immediately, Hilldale's &amp;quot;Darby Daisies&amp;quot; became the team to beat - winning the ECL's first three league pennants, and earning two trips to the first-ever Colored World Series against the NNL's powerhouse Kansas City Monarchs - barely losing a best-of-nine series in 1924, but dominating in a five games-to-one title in 1925. &amp;amp;nbsp; Darby lineups were frequently stocked with some of the top players of the era - including six eventual baseball National Baseball Hall of Famers: Oscar Charleston, &amp;quot;The Immortal&amp;quot; Martin Dihigo, &amp;quot;Pop&amp;quot; Lloyd, &amp;quot;Judy&amp;quot; Johnson, &amp;quot;Biz&amp;quot; Mackey, and Louis Santop. &amp;amp;nbsp; ​Hilldale also made waning appearances in 1929's one-year American Negro League and 1932's East-West League ​as the economic strains of the Great Depression ultimately pushed the club into extinction. </description>
  <author_name>Good Seats Still Available</author_name>
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