Sport | Baseball |
---|---|
League | National League |
Awarded for | Postseason champion |
Sponsored by | William Chase Temple |
Country | United States |
History | |
First award | 1894 |
Editions | 4 |
Final award | 1897 |
First winner | New York Giants (1894) |
Most wins | Baltimore Orioles (2) |
Most recent | Baltimore Orioles (1897) |
The Temple Cup was a cup awarded to the winner of an annual best-of-seven postseason championship series for American professional baseball from 1894 to 1897. Competing teams were exclusively from the National League, which had been founded in 1876 as the National League of Professional Baseball Clubs. There was only one major league at the time, following the folding of the American Association after the 1891 season, and the series was played between the first and second-place teams of the surviving National League. The series played for the Temple Cup was also known as the "World's Championship Series".[1]
The approximately 30-inch-high (76 cm) silver cup cost $800 (equivalent to $27,000 in 2023) and was donated by coal, citrus, and lumber baron William Chase Temple (1862–1917), a part-owner of the Pittsburgh Pirates at the time.[2] The Temple Cup is now in the collection of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum.