The eldest of four baseball brothers, C.I. Taylor was regarded by many players and
peers as the finest manager in black baseball history. He was patient and dignified,
a strict disciplinarian and a good teacher, scrupulously fair and honest with his
players. After ten years managing the Birmingham Giants, he moved with the club to
West Baden, IN in 1914. As the Sprudels, the club challenged Rube Foster's American
Giants for the Chicago area's supremacy. With the backing of the American Brewing
Company, the team settled in Indianapolis in 1915 as the ABC's.
Taylor's teams
were perennial powers. At the time of his death, the ABC's were financially sound
and one of the top three black teams in the Midwest. Taylor was also instrumental
in the founding of the Negro National League and the National
Association of Colored
Professional Baseball Clubs.
(JO)