No Money, No Beer, No Pennants - Info and Reading Options
The Cleveland Indians and Baseball in the Great Depression
By Scott H. Longert


"No Money, No Beer, No Pennants" is published by Ohio University Press in Sep 15, 2016, the book is classified in Sports & Recreation genre, it has 272 pages and the language of the book is English.
“No Money, No Beer, No Pennants” Metadata:
- Title: No Money, No Beer, No Pennants
- Author: Scott H. Longert
- Language: English
- Number of Pages: 272
- Is Family Friendly: Yes - No Mature Content
- Publisher: Ohio University Press
- Publish Date: Sep 15, 2016
- Genres: Sports & Recreation
“No Money, No Beer, No Pennants” Subjects and Themes:
- Subjects: ➤ Cleveland indians (baseball team) - Depressions, 1929 - Baseball, biography - History - Depressions - SPORTS & RECREATION - Baseball
Edition Specifications:
- Format: paperback
Edition Identifiers:
- Google Books ID: 7IvpDAAAQBAJ
- The Open Library ID: OL27437024M - OL20242139W
- Online Computer Library Center (OCLC) ID: 948339827
- Library of Congress Control Number (LCCN): 2016026044
- ISBN-13: 9780821422441 - 9780821445853
- ISBN-10: 0821422448 - 0821445855
- All ISBNs: 0821422448 - 9780821422441 - 9780821445853 - 0821445855
AI-generated Review of “No Money, No Beer, No Pennants”:
Snippets and Summary:
... <b>LCCN 2016026044</b> | ISBN 9780821422434 ( hardback ) | ISBN 9780821422441 ( pb ) | ISBN 9780821445853 ( pdf ) Subjects : LCSH : Cleveland Indians ( Baseball team ) -History - 20th century . | Depressions - 1929 - United States . | BISAC ...
"No Money, No Beer, No Pennants" Description:
The Open Library:
"The Cleveland Indians of 1928 were a far cry from the championship team of 1920. They had begun the decade as the best team in all of baseball, but over the following eight years, their owner died, the great Tris Speaker retired in the face of a looming scandal, and the franchise was in terrible shape. Seeing opportunity in the upheaval, Cleveland real estate mogul Alva Bradley purchased the ball club in 1927, infused it with cash, and filled its roster with star players such as Bob Feller, Earl Averill, and Hal Trosky. He aligned himself with civic leaders to push for a gigantic new stadium that--along with the team that played in it--would be the talk of the baseball world. Then came the stock market crash of 1929. Municipal Stadium was built, despite the collapse of the industrial economy in Rust Belt cities, but the crowds did not follow. Always the shrewd businessman, Bradley had engineered a lease agreement with the city of Cleveland that included an out clause, and he exercised that option after the 1934 season, leaving the 80,000-seat, multimillion-dollar stadium without a tenant. In No Money, No Beer, No Pennants, Scott H. Longert gives us a lively history of the ups and downs of a legendary team and its iconic players as they persevered through internal unrest and the turmoil of the Great Depression, pursuing a pennant that didn't come until 1948. Illustrated with period photographs and filled with anecdotes of the great players, this book will delight fans of baseball and fans of Cleveland"--
Google Books:
The Cleveland Indians of 1928 were a far cry from the championship team of 1920. They had begun the decade as the best team in all of baseball, but over the following eight years, their owner died, the great Tris Speaker retired in the face of a looming scandal, and the franchise was in terrible shape. Seeing opportunity in the upheaval, Cleveland real estate mogul Alva Bradley purchased the ball club in 1927, infused it with cash, and filled its roster with star players such as Bob Feller, Earl Averill, and Hal Trosky. He aligned himself with civic leaders to push for a gigantic new stadium that—along with the team that played in it—would be the talk of the baseball world. Then came the stock market crash of 1929. Municipal Stadium was built, despite the collapse of the industrial economy in Rust Belt cities, but the crowds did not follow. Always the shrewd businessman, Bradley had engineered a lease agreement with the city of Cleveland that included an out clause, and he exercised that option after the 1934 season, leaving the 80,000-seat, multimillion-dollar stadium without a tenant. In No Money, No Beer, No Pennants, Scott H. Longert gives us a lively history of the ups and downs of a legendary team and its iconic players as they persevered through internal unrest and the turmoil of the Great Depression, pursuing a pennant that didn’t come until 1948. Illustrated with period photographs and filled with anecdotes of the great players, this book will delight fans of baseball and fans of Cleveland.
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- Public Domain: No
- Availability Status: Partially available
- Availability Status for country: US.
- Available Formats: Text is available, image copy is available.
- Google Books Link: Google Books
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