James
"Soup"
Campbell



JAMES FRANCIS "SOUP" CAMPBELL was born on December 24, 1897 in Homestead, Pennsylvania. He appears to have learned to play basketball, as fellow Homestead natives, Jackie Adams and Roy Steele, under the tutelage of famed 23rd Street Wanders’ star Sandy Shields at the Homestead YMCA. Steele and Adams were teammates for nine pro seasons, the last five of which were in Camden, New Jersey. Familiarity allowed Adams and Steele to develop the most sophisticated offense in the early years of professional basketball. Season after season, Steele and Adams refined their offensive system which was based on rapid ball movement and an intricate short passing game. When Adams retired in 1918, Steele assumed Adams’ role as team leader of Camden’s powerful offense. Steele formed a new partnership with Soup Campbell, a young player from Homestead, which created the most formable scoring duo in the league. The team enjoyed tremendous post-war success winning the 1919-20 EBL championship and compiled a 112-37 record in three and half seasons before the demise of the league in January of 1923.


Soup Cambell joined the Camden club, which alternately was known as the Alphas, Skeeters, and Camden Crusaders of the Eastern Basket Ball League in time for the 1919-1920 season. The team was owned by Camden veterinarian Dr. Charles B. Helm and former Camden County Sheriff W. Penn Corson. Other team members included Neil Deighan amd his brother Rich Deighan, Eddie Ferat, Sam Lennox, Roy Steele, Dave Kerr, and Joe Hyde

Soup Campbell was one of pro basketball’s top offensive stars in the early 1920s. Campbell was a fine set shooter, but speed and agility were the keys to his game. He was considered one of the best of the “two-handed dribblers” of the era. Campbell’s greatest success came early in his pro basketball career. In his first full pro season,  he led Camden to the Eastern League championship and was the league’s leading scorer. He won two more EBL scoring titles in 1922 and 1923. He starred in the Metropolitan League for three seasons before he joined the American Basketball League in 1925. Campbell played for five ABL teams during the next four seasons. During the later years of his career, Campbell was no longer among the top echelon of scorers, but remained valuable as a floor leader and strategist.. 

James Campbell married Gladys Frick in 1924. A son, James F. Campbell Jr., was born in Camden on February 25, 1925. Two more children followed by 1930, William A. Campbell and Shirley E. Campbell. The April 1930 Census shows the family living at 111 Terrace Avenue in East Camden. The 1928 and 1929 City Directory shows him involved with a bar at 28 Haddon Avenue, with Neil Deighan. By 1931 James Campbell was then the proprietor of a restaurant, the Marmon Cafe, at 821 Market Street

On July 25, 1930 James Campbell's basketball career came to an abrupt end when he was involved in an automobile accident on the Admiral Wilson Boulevard in Pennsauken, New Jersey, just outside of Camden's city limits. Both of his sons were also injured in the crash. James Campbell was awarded $15,000 damages, which were reduced to $12,000 in June of 1932. He appeared in three games in the 1932-1933 season, but time and injury had taken its toll and that was the end of his basketball career.

Sadly, James and Gladys Campbell divorced during the 1930s, and apparently his business ventures outside of sports did not do well either. The 1940 Census shows Mrs. Campbell living with her children and mother at 229 Ivins Avenue in Delaware Township (present-day Cherry Hill), New Jersey. James Campbell appears to have been living in Camden, renting a room at the home of Charles J. and Lydia Davidson of 319 North 2nd Street. The Census states that James Campbell, oddly enough, was working in the cannery at Campbell Soup. 

James "Soup" Campbell died on March 5, 1942 in Camden, New Jersey.


SOUP CAMPBELL

Height:

5:09

 

Weight:

160

 

College:

None
James F. Campbell

Born:

1896

 

Died: March 4, 1942

Hometown:

Homestead, Pa.
   

 

REGULAR SEASON RECORD

 

 

 

 
Year Team

League

GA

FGM

FTM

FTA

PCT.

AST

PTS

AVG

 

1914-15

Homestead Shippers

Indep

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1915-16

Tower City (Pa)

Indep

26

86

0

 

 

 

172

6.6

 

1916-17

Pitcairn

IBLWP

17

76

9

 

 

 

161

9.5

 

1917-18

Pitcairn

IBLWP

7

24

16

33

.485

 

64

9.1

 

1917-18

Greystock

EBL

                 

1918-19

Wilmerding Airbrakes

ICL

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1919-20

Camden

EBL

37

91

93

146

.637

38

275

7.4

 

1919-20

Nanticoke

PSL

3

6

7

12

.583

0

19

6.3

 

1920-21

Camden

EBL

26

57

63

108

.583

30

177

6.8

 

1920-21

Nanticoke

PSL

21

37

35

 

 

18

109

5.2

 

1920-21

Easthampton

IL

3

8

6

 

 

 

22

7.3

 

1921-22

Camden

EBL

44

137

140

 

 

 

414

9.4

 

1922-23

Camden

EBL

23

59

79

139

.568

47

197

8.6

 

1922-23

Brooklyn ProsYonkers

MBL

31

77

72

 

 

 

226

7.3

 

1922-23

Cohoes

NYSL

5

9

15

 

 

 

33

6.6

 

1922-23

Tri-Council

PBL

18

37

90

 

 

 

164

9.1

 

1923-24

TrentonKingston

MBL

18

48

42

 

 

 

138

7.7

 

1923-24

Tri-Council

PBL

40

71

144

 

 

 

286

7.2

 

1923-24

Pottsville Big-5

Indep

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1924-25

Passiac/KingstonTrenton

MBL

31

60

48

 

 

 

168

5.4

 

1924-25

Tri-Council

PBL

32

60

93

 

 

 

213

6.7

 

1924-25

Hazleton Professionals

AnBL

7

9

7

 

 

 

25

3.6

 

1925-26

CamdenPottsville

EBL

7

14

39

 

 

 

67

9.6

 

1925-26

Perth Amboy

MBL

10

12

14

 

 

 

38

3.8

 

1925-26

Chicago

ABL

21

27

39

 

 

 

93

4.4

 

1926-27

Philadelphia

ABL

39

66

50

 

 

 

182

4.7

 

1927-28

PhiladelphiaDetroitCleveland

ABL

29

41

31

 

 

 

113

3.9

 

1927-28

Salem

SJL

7

13

19

 

 

 

45

6.4

 

1928-29

Trenton

ABL

22

33

12

 

 

 

78

3.5

 

1928-29

Salem-Millville

SJL

20

43

37

 

 

 

123

6.2

 

1929-30

Camden

EBL

16

35

27

 

 

 

97

6.1

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1932-33

Philadelphia WPEN

EBL

4

3

3

 

 

 

9

2.3

 

 

Major League Totals

 

464

953

1115

 

 

 

3021

6.5

 

 

 

 

 

PLAYOFF RECORD

 

 

 

 

Year

Team

League

GA

FGM

FTM

FTA

PCT.

AST

PTS

AVG

 

1923-24

Tri-Council

PBL

2

4

5

 

 

 

13

6.5

 

1927-28

Salem

SJL

3

7

13

 

 

 

27

9.0

 

1928-29

Millville

SJL

3

8

8

 

 

 

24

8.0

 

 

Major League Totals

 

2

4

5

 

 

 

13

6.5

 

James "Soup" Campbell's Basketball Career

A teenage sensation coming out of his hometown YMCA program, Jimmy Campbell was well known as a prospect in pro basketball circles, and was recruited by a number of teams in the Eastern League. America's entry into World War I for all intents and purposes suspended professional sports in 1917. After World War I concluded, Roy Steele convinced Jimmy Campbell to resumed his basketball career with the Camden team, now known as the Camden Crusaders in 1919. The Crusaders were the 1919-1920 Eastern Basketball League champions. With a combined record of 30 wins against 8 losses, Camden won both halves of the season, eliminating the need for a league championship series, led by league scoring leader and newly nicknamed "Soup" Campbell.

The following year the Crusaders play the following year was almost a carbon copy of the year before. Camden had the unusual distinction of having the best overall season record (29-11) and not being invited to the league championship series because they had won neither half of the season - finishing second by one game each time. Camden had five of the top eleven scorers in the league that year. 

The team, now called the Camden Skeeters, met a similar fate in the 1921-1922 season, as the Trenton Tigers went an incredible 24-3 in the first half, and the Skeeters finished a game behind the New York Celtics. Again, four out of the top ten in total points played for Camden. 

Sadly, Camden's success on the court may have contributed to the league's demise. Eastern League club owners on January 18, 1923 decided to suspend the season and attempt to 
reorganize the following year. The suspension was due to "one-sided races, high salaries and unusual overhead expenses. When the Eastern league folded, Soup Campbell, like Skeeters teammate Neil Deighan, briefly played in the Metropolitan Basketball League, a New York area circuit. He also played with Camden Skeeters of the semi-pro version of the Eastern League in 1925. Campbell played the next four season in the American Basketball League, and picked up a few extra dollars playing in the South Jersey League. His last full season was the 1929-1930 year where he appeared in 16 games with the Camden Skeeters in a revived version of the Eastern Basketball League.


Camden Crusaders
1919-1920 Eastern Basketball League Champs

Front row, left to right:  Jimmy “Soup” Campbell and Joe Hyde.
Second row, left to right:
Dr. Charles B. Helm, Neil Deighan, Roy Steele,
Eddie Dolin, Dave Kerr and Sheriff W. Penn Corson.
Back row, left to right: Bill Mitchell, trainer;
Sam Lennox,
Manager Bill Kennedy,
Richie Deighan and Timekeeper Jim Kane.

Click on Image to Enlarge


Camden Courier-Post - July 26, 1955
...continued...
...continued...
...continued...
...continued...
in original full page format
...continued...
in original full page format
...continued...

...continued...


Philadelphia Evening Public Ledger * November 21, 1917




Jimmy "Soup" Campbell - Roy Steele - Neil Deighan  - Jimmy Brown

Philadelphia Inquirer * December 9, 1917
...continued...
Jimmy "Soup" Campbell - Roy Steele - Neil Deighan - Dr. Charles B. Helm
Jack Kelly - Chol Engle - Pete Kilpatrick - Willie Miller

World War I Draft Card

Trenton Evening Times * December 30, 1919
Jimmy "Soup" Campbell - Eddie Dolin - Neil Deighan - Sam Lennox - Dave Kerr - Roy Steele

Philadelphia Inquirer * March 22, 1920
Jimmy "Soup" Campbell - Eddie Dolin - Roy Steele

Philadelphia
Evening Public Ledger
January 16, 1922

Jimmy "Soup" Campbell
Roy Steele,
Eddie Dolin

Philadelphia
Evening Public Ledger
March 22, 1922

Jimmy "Soup" Campbell
Neil Deighan
Roy Steele,
Eddie Dolin
Dave Kerr

Richie Deighan

 

Trenton Evening Times * January 9, 1923
Jimmy "Soup" Campbell - Bernie Dunn - Dave Kerr

Trenton Times - January 17, 1925

Neil Deighan - Jimmy "Soup" Campbell

Trenton Times - November 5, 1925

...continued...

Neil Deighan - Rich Deighan - Jimmy "Soup" Campbell - Dave Kerr
Bob Griebe - George Boone - Eddie Brando - Oscar Grimstead

Trenton Times - February 3, 1928

...continued...

Jimmy "Soup" Campbell - Ted Kearns - George Glasco - Tom Barlow - Red Sherr

 

Trenton
Evening Times
July 27, 1930

Jimmy "Soup" Campbell
Albert Brandon
James Campbell Jr.
William Campbell
Cooper Hospital

 

Trenton
Evening Times
March 20, 1932

James "Soup" Campbell
Frank B. Davis
Albert Brandon
James Campbell Jr.
William Campbell

Camden Courier-Post
June 11, 1932

James "Soup" Campbell
Frank B. Davis
Terrace Avenue
Marmon Cafe
Market Street
Albert Brandon
Whoopee Coaster
James Campbell Jr.
William Campbell

THE EVENING NEWS, HARRISBURG, PA FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1942 
Cager Dies at Camden 

CAMDEN, N. J., March B.-James (Soup) Campbell, known in pro basketball in Pennsylvania and New Jersey for more than ten years, died in a hospital here yesterday. Campbell, 44, and a native of Homestead, Pa., was a star in the old Eastern Professional League. 

RETURN TO CAMDEN'S INTERESTING PEOPLE PAGE

RETURN TO DVRBS.COM HOME PAGE