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・ Frank Lee Crist
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Frank Leland
・ Frank Lelle
・ Frank LeMaster
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・ Frank Lentricchia
・ Frank Lenz
・ Frank Lenz (cyclist)
・ Frank Leonard (baseball)
・ Frank Leonard Brooks
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Frank Leland : ウィキペディア英語版
Frank Leland

Frank C. Leland (born 1869 and died November 14, 1914) was an African-American baseball player, field manager and club owner in the Negro Leagues.
Leland was born in Memphis, Tennessee. He attended Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee from 1879 to 1886.〔("Frank Lelands' Chicago Giants Base Ball Club" Fraternal Printing Company, 1910 )〕
He began his professional career with the Washington Capital Cities in the 1887 National League of Colored Baseball Clubs, a team which played no league games before the experiment collapsed. He "moved to Chicago and was instrumental in organizing and developing five successful baseball teams in that city" (Riley, 475).
In 1888, he organized the black amateur Union Base Ball Club, with sponsorship from some of Chicago's black businessmen, Henry Elby, Albert Donegan, and W.S. Peters.〔 Leland obtained a lease from the city government to play at South Side Park, a 5,000-seat facility. In 1898 his team went pro and became the Chicago Unions.
He played outfield with the Unions in the 1880s. Leland also worked as the umpire for the club in the first few years. He also worked as the traveling manager of the Chicago Unions.

In 1901 he merged the Unions and the Columbia Giants to form the Chicago Union Giants. This became the top Negro League team in the Midwest.
==Leland Giants==

The team changed its name to the ''Leland Giants'' in 1905 after his partnership split with W.S. Peters;〔 in 1907 Rube Foster replaced Leland as manager and Pete Hill and Foster strengthened the club in the field. Leland remained as President of the board of directors for the Leland Giants until he resigned in September of 1909. While some researchers believe there was a rift between Foster and Leland, newspapers of the day reported that Frank Leland, who used to own the club on his own, sold away rights to a stock company in 1909 and "had little say in the management of the team." 〔("Frank C. Leland Resigns." Indianapolis Freeman, Indianapolis, Indiana, Saturday, October 2, 1909, Page 7, Columns 3 and 4 )〕
While Rube Foster continued to run the Leland Giants Baseball Club, Leland started a new corporation in October 1909 called "Leland's Chicago Giants Baseball Club" or, in short "Chicago Giants" opening his offices at 2551 State Street in Chicago. He signed Bill Lindsay as his first pitcher.
The confusion over the Leland name amongst the teams changed as Rube Foster changed the Leland Giants name to the Chicago American Giants, and Leland's team became the Chicago Giants.
Frank C. Leland produced and worked with well-known pre-Negro League baseball players: Bill LIndsay, Walter Ball, Harry Buckner, William Horn, George Hopkins, Harry Hyde, William Monroe, George Wright, Harry Moore, Pete Burns, Lewis Reynolds, William Smith, Dangerfield Talbert, Bert Jones, Nathan Harris, Rube Foster, and Andrew Campbell.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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