In the 20th century, several
Minor League Baseball teams in
Louisville, Kentucky, have been known as the Louisville Colonels. In 1909, the Colonels won the
American Association pennant, as they also did in 1921, 1925, 1926, and 1930 while featuring players such as
Joe McCarthy,
Billy Herman, and
Earle Combs; Combs hit .344 in 1923 and .380 in 1924 before joining the
New York Yankees in 1925.
Pee Wee Reese was a rookie with the 1938 Colonels. The Colonels were one of few minor league teams to play throughout World War II, and they won pennants in 1944 and 1945. In 1944, the Colonels played in the
Junior World Series against the
Baltimore Orioles, and the game drew an attendance of 52,833 — 16,265 more than any single
World Series game that year. Through the 1940s and 1950s, the Colonels were part of the
Boston Red Sox farm system, and they won the pennant in 1954. The Red Sox transferred its affiliation to the
San Francisco Seals after the 1955 season. Starting in 1956, the Colonels were affiliated with the
Washington Senators. They moved to
Fairgrounds Stadium in 1957. In 1959, the Colonels became affiliated with the
Milwaukee Braves. They won (in 1960, with pitcher
Phil Niekro) one of three appearances in the Junior World Series in that time, but in 1962 the American Association folded. In October 1967, Walter J. Dilbeck purchased the
Toronto Maple Leafs of the
International League and moved them to Louisville, renaming them the Colonels. They played in the International League through the 1972 season. During this stretch, players included
Carlton Fisk,
Dwight Evans,
Luis Tiant, and
Cecil Cooper. The franchise had to move when the Kentucky State Fair Board announced that Fairgrounds Stadium would be renovated for football in a manner that would make it unsuitable for baseball. The team relocated to
Pawtucket, Rhode Island, and became known as the
Pawtucket Red Sox. Baseball returned to Louisville when the same stadium was renovated for baseball in 1981 and the
Springfield Redbirds came to Louisville as the Louisville Redbirds, later called the
Louisville Bats, setting minor league attendance records and outdrawing several major league teams. ==Notable former players==