Baseball

The End of an Era: Arkansas‑Missouri League’s Final Season in 1940

A brief look at the short‑lived Class D league that capped a six‑year run amid the Great Depression

A Brief History of the Arkansas‑Missouri League

The 1940 season ended with the final regular‑season games of the Arkansas‑Missouri League, a Class D minor league that had been a fixture in the baseball landscape of the Ozarks for six years.

Founded in 1934, the league operated continuously through the decade, offering small‑town clubs a chance to compete at a professional level while navigating the constraints of the Great Depression.

It was one of three Depression‑era circuits established in Arkansas, the others being the Northeast Arkansas League and the Cotton States League, each aiming to sustain local interest in baseball when major‑league revenues were scarce.

Among the teams that called the league home were the Fayetteville Angels, a club that contributed to the development of regional talent and fostered community pride in the northwest part of the state.

Although the league folded after the 1940 campaign, its brief existence left a lasting imprint on the structure of minor‑league baseball in the central United States, paving the way for future affiliations and regional tournaments.

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