- San Diego Padres (PCL)
Defunct MiLB infobox
name = San Diego Padres
firstseason = 1936
lastseason = 1968
allyears =
city = San Diego, California
cap
lastclasslevel = Triple-A (1946-1951), (1958-1968)
pastclasslevel = Open (1952-1957)
*Double-A (1936-1945)
lastleague =Pacific Coast League (1936-1968)
conference =
division =
pastleague =
lastmajorleague =Philadelphia Phillies (1966-1968)
pastmajorleague =Cincinnati Reds (1962-1965)
*Chicago White Sox (1960-1961)
*Cleveland Indians (1949-1951) (1957-1959)
*Boston Red Sox (1936)
lastnickname = San Diego Padres (1936-1968)
pastnames =
lastballpark =Westgate Park (1958-1968)
pastparks = Lane Field (1936-1957)
classchamps =
leaguechamps = 1937, 1962, 1964, 1967
conferencechamps=
divisionchamps = The San Diego Padres were aminor league baseball team which played in thePacific Coast League from 1936 through 1968. The team that would eventually become the Padres was well traveled prior to moving toSan Diego . It began its existence in 1903 as theSacramento Solons , a charter member of the PCL. The team moved toTacoma in 1904 (where it won the PCL pennant), returned to Sacramento in 1905, then left the PCL altogether for the next three seasons. The Solons rejoined the PCL in 1909, then moved toSan Francisco during the 1914 season, finishing out the season as the San Francisco Missions. The team was sold to businessman Bill "Hardpan" Lane, who moved the team toSalt Lake City for the 1915 season as the Salt Lake Bees.Eleven years later Lane moved the Bees to
Los Angeles for the 1926 season, and changed their name to theHollywood Stars . The Stars played at Wrigley Field, home of the Los Angeles Angels, winning pennants in 1929 and 1930. When, after the 1935 season, the Angels doubled the Stars' rent, Lane moved the Stars toSan Diego for the 1936 season, to become the San Diego Padres.The city constructed a waterfront stadium for its new team, appropriately called Lane Field, replacing a race track that was on the site. The team finished second in its inaugural year in the border city, then won the postseason series and the PCL pennant in 1937, led by the hitting of sophomore outfielder
Ted Williams , who was first signed to a contract in 1936.Though for the next decade or more the Padres were mired in the second division, at last this franchise achieved stability and longevity. The team remained in San Diego for 28 years, displaced only by virtue of San Diego's admission to the major leagues. Finally in 1954, managed by former major league player
Lefty O'Doul , the Padres finished first in the PCL for the first time in their history, but were eliminated in the postseason playoffs.After the 1957 season, the Padres were sold to C. Arnholt Smith, who moved the team from ancient Lane Field to
Westgate Park , an 8,200-seat facility located in what is now the Fashion Valley area of Mission Valley, where the Padres won PCL pennants in 1962, 1964, and 1967. The Padres were the class AAA affiliate of theCincinnati Reds from 1962-65; some of their players (includingTony Perez ) would become vital cogs of what was called the "Big Red Machine " Reds' teams of the 1970's. The Pads won a final PCL pennant in 1967 as a farm club of thePhiladelphia Phillies .In 1969, San Diego was granted an expansion team in the
National League . Taking the name of the long-successful Pacific Coast League team, theSan Diego Padres entered the Senior Circuit in 1969.Affiliations
The Padres, like most PCL clubs, operated without a working agreement with or outright ownership by a major league team throughout much of the 1930s and 1940s, and again in the mid-1950s when the PCL was an Open Classification league attempting to attain MLB status. They were affiliated with the following major league teams:
References
*O'Neal, Bill. "The Pacific Coast League 1903-1988." Eakin Press, Austin TX, 1990. ISBN 0-89015-776-6.
*Snelling, Dennis. "The Pacific Coast League: A Statistical History, 1903-1957" McFarland & Company, Inc., Jefferson, NC, 1995. ISBN 0-7864-0045-5.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.