Brooklyn Dodgers Transactions, 1890–1957

A History and Analysis

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About the Book

Baseball transactions—trades, sales, purchases, free agents coming or leaving—have always had the ability to stir the interest and passion of fans. Whether it is the purchase or sale of a veteran star during the heat of a pennant race, a multi-player trade made during the dead of winter, or the offseason scramble for desirable free agents, player transactions engender more interest and heated debate among fans than almost any other aspect of the game. Baseball fans love trades; they love to hear about them, to read about them, and to talk about them. They even love those that are rumored but don’t get made.
This book covers the transactions of the Brooklyn Dodgers, one of the game’s most storied teams, from their 1890 entry into the National League until their 1957 move to Los Angeles. For significant transactions, players and the deal are placed in historical perspective, covering why the Dodgers and the other team(s) involved made the exchange; the expectations the owners, general managers, and managers of the respective teams had for their new players; and, for most, what the players involved thought about their old and new teams. The history of the Brooklyn Dodgers trades represents a microcosm of the history of baseball, and that history is covered here in fine detail.

About the Author(s)

Lyle Spatz served as chairman of SABR’s Baseball Records Committee from 1991 to 2016. He is the recipient of SABR’s Bob Davids and Henry Chadwick, and Seymour Medal awards, and among the books he has written or edited are biographies of Bill Dahlen, Willie Keeler, Dixie Walker and Hugh Casey.

Bibliographic Details

Lyle Spatz
Format: softcover (6 x 9)
Pages: 266
Bibliographic Info: notes, bibliography, index
Copyright Date: 2025
pISBN: 978-1-4766-9330-9
eISBN: 978-1-4766-5521-5
Imprint: McFarland

Table of Contents

Preface 1
One. 1890–1894 5
Two. 1895–1899 17
Three. 1900–1904 34
Four. 1905–1909 50
Five. 1910–1914 62
Six. 1915–1919 76
Seven. 1920–1924 90
Eight. 1925–1929 102
Nine. 1930–1934 122
Ten. 1935–1939 145
Eleven. 1940–1944 169
Twelve. 1945–1949 191
Thirteen. 1950–1954 209
Fourteen. 1955–1957 226
Chapter Notes 237
Bibliography 243
Index 249