Page Fence Giants succeeded on and off the field

Written by: Bruce Markusen

In 2022, Bud Fowler earned election and induction to the Hall of Fame. Though he never appeared in what would officially be regarded as a major league game, his long career as a dominant player stands high among his accomplishments.

Another aspect of his career also merits praise: his leadership and vision in forming a team with the unusual name of the Page Fence Giants.

In 1894, Fowler was playing for an integrated and unaffiliated minor league team in Findlay, Ohio. An intelligent, well-organized and driven man, Fowler wanted to create something more notable and impactful in Findlay: a team consisting of Black stars that he planned to call the Findlay Colored Western Giants.

Fowler sought some help from his lone Black teammate in Findlay, shortstop Grant “Home Run” Johnson. Fowler wanted Johnson, a native of Findlay and a college-educated player, to join him on the new team. Their vision was to create an all-Black team that would travel the country in a luxurious private railcar while taking part in street parades prior to each of their games.

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It was a grand plan, but Fowler could not raise the money to support a team based out of Findlay. So, he turned to a different location in the Midwest. He approached a white businessman from Adrian, Mich., a small city located about an hour’s drive of Detroit. The businessman, named J. Wallace Page, owned a company called the Page Woven Wire Fence Company.

Pitching his idea to Mr. Page, Fowler found an interested partner. Even though Page lived in Adrian, a largely white community in the 1890s, he seemed intrigued about the possibility of sponsoring a team filled with Black stars. He and Fowler agreed to call the team the “Page Fence Giants,” a shortening of the company’s official name.

Fowler also found additional money from a business called the Monarch Bicycle Company, located not so closely in Massachusetts. With Page Fence and Monarch Bicycle aboard, Fowler embarked on his mission of finding players for the team. Home Run Johnson agreed to play, even though the team now bore no connection to his hometown in Findlay. Fowler signed a bevy of other accomplished players, including catcher Peter Burns, first baseman George Taylor, center fielder Gustavus “Gus” Brooks, and pitchers Billy Holland and Joe “Cannon Ball” Miller. And Fowler himself played second base, even though he was 37 years of age.

In putting the team together, Fowler did not merely focus his attention on acquiring talented star players. He wanted players who did not drink, took care of themselves, and possessed what he regarded as good character. Of his 12 original players, five turned out to be college graduates, an unusually high percentage for any team, Black or white, of that era.

The Giants played their first game on April 9, 1895, marking the start of a 156-game season. Although loaded with talent, the team struggled at the start, winning only two of 11 games in April. It took the Giants a couple of months to jell, but by the end of June, they began to play a dominant brand of ball and embarked on the first of several long winning streaks.

Playing in 112 towns across seven states in middle America (and with none of the games played in Adrian), the Giants won 118 games, lost only 36, and managed a pair of ties. As well as the Giants played, Fowler did not last the season with the traveling team. In July, Fowler left the Giants due to a dispute with owner Page and his business partners. Still wanting to play, Fowler joined another Adrian-affiliated team, which was part of the nearly all-white Michigan State League. To replace Fowler at second base, the Giants signed Sol White, who would later become famous for writing his groundbreaking book, History of Colored Baseball.

While the Giants played to win, they also added substantial degrees of showmanship and humor to their brand of baseball. On one occasion, Home Run Johnson hit a home run, circled the bases, and then executed a full-body cartwheel near home plate. Billy Holland, noted as an accomplished tenor, would often break out into song during actual games.

To make matters even more interesting, the Giants sometimes activated non-playing members of their staff, particularly against weaker level competition. One day, the team’s cook, Will Gaskin, was given a start and banged out five hits.

The Giants also played high-level competition, none better than the Cincinnati Reds of the well-established National League. An article in the Cincinnati Enquirer anticipated the two-game series, reporting that the Giants “would conduct a street parade on bicycles and put up a good article of ball.” The Giants did just that. Though they lost the two games, they were competitive in the first game, before losing by a final score of 11-7. The two games drew good crowds, including a large contingent of black fans.

The street parade became a hallmark of the Giants’ franchise, a nice finishing touch to their arrival in a new town. The Giants traveled by train, while enjoying the accommodations of their own private railroad car, which was attached to a local train and was decorated with the team’s name on the outside. The Giants players ate their meals and slept in the railroad car, a major convenience at a time when many American restaurants and hotels imposed Jim Crow segregation against Black Americans.

Upon their arrival at the local train station, the Giants disembarked and then drove through town on bicycles supplied by Monarch Bicycle. That much-anticipated parade of bicycles typically attracted attention throughout the town, with some fans following the Giants players to the local ballfield. In some towns, the arrival of the Giants on bikes became a beloved spectacle— – and a perfect way to drum up interest in the barnstorming team.

The Giants generated enough interest to draw an average crowd of 1,500 fans per game that season. While that might not sound like a large turnout, it’s worth noting that the Giants often played in smaller towns with modest populations, as opposed to large-city venues. With decent crowd support, the team was able to turn a profit, though Page reportedly did not pocket the money. Satisfied with the Giants as a promotional vehicle for his fence company, Page instead put the money back into the team. He paid the players at a rate similar to other Black barnstorming teams. According to Black baseball historian Larry Hogan in his book, Shades of Glory, the Giants players were paid anywhere from $75 to $100 per month, commensurate with what other top Black players of the era were receiving.

Sadly, the Giants also faced difficult moments during their first season. Giants management disputed the outcomes of some of their losses, claiming that unfair calls by biased umpires had directly affected the course of the game. And then there was the horrific tragedy that involved one of the Giants’ players. During a June game in Hastings, Mich., center fielder Gus Brooks collapsed on the field. He was then taken to a hotel, where he died a few hours later. Brooks, a standout defensive center fielder, was only 23 years old.

Brooks’ death marred a tumultuous season for the Giants. The midseason departure of Fowler also created difficulty for a team that had come to rely not only on his playing skills, but also his ability to organize, lead, and promote the team.

Even with Fowler’s early withdrawal, the Giants remained a viable franchise for a period of four seasons. They also remained a dominant team, winning a remarkable 143 games in 1896, and then following up with 129 and 107-win seasons. The 1897 season included a mind-numbing 82-game winning streak.

As with many Black ballclubs, the Giants’ run came to an end because of financial difficulties, and not because of any lack of playing ability. Forced to dissolve in 1898, the franchise was then moved to Chicago in 1899, when the team became known as the Chicago Columbia Giants.

Ultimately, the Page Fence Giants lasted for only the four seasons. Yet, their impact as a dominant black franchise in the era before the formation of the Negro Leagues, coupled with their ability to entertain fans with parades, on-field stunts, and quirky gimmicks, made them a national sensation— – and a vital and fascinating part of Black baseball history.


Bruce Markusen is the manager of digital and outreach learning at the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum

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Bud Fowler blazed a trail for Black professional baseball players with a number of teams, including the Page Fence Giants.

Bud Fowler’s story has deep roots in Central New York

In 1987, thanks to an effort led by SABR, a headstone was erected for Class of 2022 Hall of Fame electee Bud Fowler.

Jimmy Claxton blazed trails via baseball cards

In 1916, Jimmy Claxton was the first black player to be featured on an American baseball card.

Doby was Second to None

Larry Doby integrated the American League en route to a stellar career that brought him to Cooperstown.

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On Aug. 9, 1971, Satchel Paige was inducted into the Hall of Fame, becoming the first player inducted based solely on time spent in the Negro Leagues.