The Oakland Larks were a Negro league baseball team in the West Coast Negro Baseball League, based in Oakland, California, in 1946.[1]

Oakland Larks
Information
League
LocationOakland, California
Established1946
Disbanded1946

The West Coast Baseball Association’s Oakland Larks were born from two of the major sports figures of the early part of the 20th Century: Olympic great Jesse Owens and Abe Saperstein, founder of the Harlem Globetrotters. The fledgling league was founded to capitalize on the large migration of African Americans to West Coast cities, and also to show that black baseball was still viable after Branch Rickey signed Jackie Robinson. In fall of 1945, Saperstein and Owens started the league with he idea that its teams would use the existing Pacific Coast League stadiums. The Oakland Larks, for example, would share Oaks Park with the PCL’s Oakland Oaks. The Larks were joined by five other entries: Los Angeles White Sox, San Francisco Sea Lions, Portland Rosebuds, Seattle Steelheads and the Fresno Tigers. Each franchise was expected to pay a $500 entry fee; but it later was dropped. Larks owner was Eddie Harris took a leading role in the WCBA, and his Oakland club was the league’s most successful team, both on the field and at the gate.

The WCBA inaugural game was a doubleheader between the L.A. White Sox and Sea Lions on May 12, 1946. Oakland’s own Governor Earl Warren threw out the first pitch at San Francisco’s Seals Stadium to open the league. The Larks traveled to Fresno, where they routed the Tigers 16- in front of a sellout crowd of 3,500. Larks pitcher “Sugar” Cain threw a gem, only allowing three hits. The Larks returned to Oakland and Oaks Park was filled to capacity, featuring a crowd of 6,000. The Larks opening-day starter was a local kid named Lionel Wilson, who became Oakland’s first African-American mayor,

While Larks attendance was always strong, other WCBA teams’ ticket sales were more erratic. The league folded after one season due to financial instability. However, the well-supported Oakland Larks continued to play as a barnstorming team, enjoying much success. While the WCBA only lasted a few months, it created conditions that allowed the Pacific Coast League to integrate a couple of years later.

References

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www.oaklandlibrary.org/archival_post/west-coast-negro-baseball-association-collection/