On March 13, 1953, the Boston Braves left their hometown after playing
76 seasons of baseball in Boston. They ended up in Atlanta via
Milwaukee, but their rich history was already made in New England, where
they captured ten pennants and one world championship. The 1914 World
Series, a four-game sweep of the Philadelphia Athletics, was considered
by the Associated Press to be the greatest sports upset of the first
half of the twentieth century. In Images of Sports: The Boston Braves,
author Richard Johnson tells the story of this beloved team.
Thirty-eight Boston Braves represent the Hall of Fame in Cooperstown,
including players as famous as Rabbit Maranville and Babe Ruth and as
colorful as Kid Nichols and Warren Spahn. The Braves left more than just
a baseball legacy in Boston. In 1947, Braves' management founded the
Jimmy Fund, now an internationally known organization, to raise funds
for cancer research and treatment at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute.
In 1950, outfielder Sam Jethroe made history as Boston's first
African-American major leaguer.