They were affiliated with the Philadelphia Athletics from 1935 to 1936, and the New York Giants from 1937 to 1938, in 1940, and from 1944 to 1950. As was more common during that time period, the Colts occasionally played exhibition games against major league teams.[3]
One of their home ballparks was Mooers Field, from the early 1940s until 1953, named after Eddie Mooers, who purchased the team in 1931.[4][5][6] Prior to Mooers Field, the team played at Tate Field on Mayo Island in the James River, but that facility was destroyed in a fire in May 1941.[4][7]
In 1953, the team signed Whit Graves as its first black player.[8][9]
When Richmond obtained a Class AAA franchise in 1954, Mooers moved the Colts to Colonial Heights' Shepherd Stadium.[6][10] Harry Seibold purchased the team and renamed it the Virginians.[11][12] Mooers Field was turned into a racing track, and then torn down in 1958.[6][13]
^Dawson, James P. (Apr 14, 1934). "Yanks Overwhelm Richmond, 20-12". The New York Times. Retrieved Oct 13, 2009. (story on exhibition game in Richmond against New York Yankees, including a home run by Lou Gehrig that landed in the James River)
^ abCite error: The named reference B&R was invoked but never defined (see the help page).