Northern State of Indiana League
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| Classification | Class D (1909–1911) |
|---|---|
| Sport | Minor League Baseball |
| First season | 1909 |
| Ceased | July 29, 1911 |
| President | Charles Klunk (1909) Daniel Flanagan (1910) Charles Halderman (1910) Charles Klunk (1911) |
| No. of teams | 8 |
| Country | United States of America |
| Most titles | 1 Bluffton Babes/Lafayette Maroons (1909) Wabash Rockeries (1910) Marion Boosters (1911) |
The Northern State of Indiana League was a Class D level minor league baseball league that played from 1909 to 1911. The six–team Northern State of Indiana League consisted of teams based in Indiana.
The Northern State of Indiana League began minor league play on May 5, 1909, as a Class D level six–team league, under the direction of league president Charles Klunk.[1] The Bluffton Babes, Huntington Johnnies, Kokomo Wild Cats, Lafayette Maroons and Marion Boosters joined the Wabash Whitecaps as charter members of the league.[2]
At the conclusion of the 1909 Northern State of Indiana League season, there was a tie for first place. The Bluffton Babes with a 65–38 (.631) record and the Lafayette Maroons with a 66–39 record (.629) tied for first place in the standings, with the two teams finishing 6.0 games ahead of the third place Huntington Johnnies.[3] The league held no playoffs for its duration. The regular season 1st place team was the Northern State of Indiana League champion.[4]
In 1910, the Northern State of Indiana League was under the direction of presidents Daniel Flanagan and Charles Halderman and began the season with four teams.[5] On July 2, 1910, the Bluffton and Marion franchises joined league play and games played prior to July 1, 1910, were not counted in the standings. The Wabash Rockeries won the league championship with a 46–25 record, finishing 3.5 games ahead of the second place Bluffton Babes.[3][6][7]
The 1911 season was the final season of play for the Northern State of Indiana League.[8] Charles Klunk returned as league president as play began on May 24, 1911. During the final season, the Logansport franchise moved to Anderson on July 2, 1911, and Bluffton folded on the same date.[9] The league permanently folded on July 29, 1911. At the time the league folded, the Marion Boosters, with a record of 46–24, finished 6.0 games ahead of the second place Huntington Indians in the six–team league. The Bluffton Babes (31–31), Wabash Rockeries (30–35), Lafayette Farmers (28–37) and Logansport Whitecaps /Anderson Whitecaps (22–40) were the remaining franchises in the last season of play.[3][10]