New Georgia Encyclopedia
homeindexquick factsdestinationsgalleryfeaturesabout NGEcontact
header

NGE >> Sports and Recreation >> Individual and Team Sports >> Baseball >> Earl Mann (1904-1990)

tanline
left menu toptop corner
the artsbusiness & industrycities & countieseducationfolklifegovernment and politicshistoryland & resourcesliteraturemediareligionscience & medicinesports & recreationtransportation search
search line
most_popular
logo
Digital Library of Georgia

Earl Mann (1904-1990)

Long before Ted Turner and the Atlanta Braves,
Courtesy of Special Collections & Archives, Georgia State University Library
Earl Mann
Earl Mann was known as "Mr. Atlanta Baseball" and the "Baseball Genius in Dixie." Mann rose from humble beginnings as a Georgia farm boy to build a baseball dynasty. Born Otis Earl Mann on October 2, 1904, in Riverdale (Clayton County), Mann was selling peanuts, cushions, and soft drinks at Spiller Field (later known as Ponce de Leon Ballpark) by the time he was twelve.

After attending Oglethorpe University for a couple of years, Mann sold tickets for the Atlanta Crackers baseball team. He became assistant team secretary in 1924 and was eventually promoted to team secretary, a position he held until 1929. Over the next four years he managed four different minor league teams throughout the South, each of which won a pennant under his leadership. In 1934 he returned to the Atlanta Crackers as vice president. He was named president the following year at age thirty, and bought the Crackers outright in 1949.

Mann was among the first minor league operators to send scouts to other baseball parks to look for talent. After recruiting a player, Mann paid him between $1,000 and $2,500 up front and wrote into his contract a provision that he would be paid a percentage of what Mann made if the contract was sold to the majors.

Mann's Atlanta Crackers would lead the Southern Association in attendance more times than any other city. His teams also won more league championships than any other Southern Association team.

In 1959, after losing money for several consecutive years, Mann turned control of the team's operations over to the league. He continued to remain active in the Atlanta sports scene. He died on January 6, 1990, and his ashes were spread under the magnolia tree on the site of the former Ponce de Leon Ballpark.

Suggested Reading

Furman Bisher, "They Call Him a Genius in Dixie," Saturday Evening Post, June 28, 1952.

Tim Darnell, The Crackers: Early Days of Atlanta Baseball (Athens, Ga.: Hill Street Press, 2003).

Thomas Stinson, "Ex-Cracker Fans Meet at the Magnolia Tree in Memory of Mann," Atlanta Journal-Constitution, May 8, 1993.


Tim Darnell, Atlanta


Published 8/9/2004

printer

Printable Version

article links

Ralph "Country" Brown (1921-1996)
Nap Rucker (1884-1970)
Nat Peeples (b. 1926)

images

Earl Mann: Philosophy
Earl Mann: Extras
Earl Mann: Great Teams


spacer spacer spacer spacer
   

A project of the Georgia Humanities Council, in partnership with the University of Georgia Press, the University System of Georgia/GALILEO, and the Office of the Governor.