John C. Claybrook (June 11, 1872 – July 21, 1951) was a logger, farmer and businessman in the United States.[1][2] He owned property in Arkansas.[3] He owned a semi-professional baseball team and developed Claybrook, Arkansas.
He was born in Florence, Alabama.[4] He received a William E. Harmon Foundation Award for Distinguished Achievement Among Negroes.
He cut timber, acquired land, grew cotton, and developed a timber industry town of Topaz into what became known as Claybrook with a boarding house and mill. Ernie Pyle wrote a column about him in the Memphis Commercial Appeal June 18, 1936 (republished in 1947 in Pyle's Home Country.[1] His semi-professional baseball team the Claybrook Tigers played in the Negro Southern League, winning a couple of championships with Ted Radcliffe.[1]
He married, became a widower, remarried, and had a son John Claybrook Jr. and three daughters with his second wife Emma G. Claybrook.[1]
He retired to his home in Memphis and is buried at Elmwood Cemetery (Birmingham, Alabama).[1]
The documentary film Swingin' Timber by David D. Dawson was made about him and his baseball team.[5][6]