Sunday, December 8, 2019

12/8 Through the 1930’s: Louisville & Deacon Danny Deals; Show Biz; HBD Pags, Spoon, Charlie, Jack & Kid

  • 1856 - Utilityman Jack Rowe was born in Hamburg, Pennsylvania in Berks County. He spent his 11th year in the league with Pittsburgh in 1889, much to his disappointment. He was sold to the club with Deacon White and they refused to report, preferring to play for Buffalo where they had begun their career and made their names. William Nimick, the Alleghenys owner, took a hard stand and the pair eventually joined the club in mid-season...and then bolted to Buffalo in 1890. After retiring from baseball in 1895, Rowe ran a cigar store in Buffalo where the sporting figures of the area would gather around his hot stove. 
Jack Rowe 1887 - photo/Tomlinson
  • 1869 - RHP Winifred “Kid” Camp was born in New Albany, Ohio. He made a couple of brief big league stops, appearing in four games for the 1892 Pirates (0-1/6.26 with one start) as a 22-year-old with three more outings for the 1894 Chicago Colts. Sadly, he never got a chance to show he belonged; he passed away at the age of 25 in 1895. His infielder brother Lew spent three years in the majors; they were teammates in Chicago. 
  • 1883 - LHP Charlie Wacker was born in Jeffersonville, Indiana. His MLB career lasted two innings tossed for the Pirates in 1909, surrendering two unearned runs on two hits and a walk. The 25-year-old got his shot after going 27-8 in 1908 for Evansville of the Central League; he finished out his career in 1911 with Fort Wayne. 
  • 1899 - The Louisville Colonels, which was being contracted out of the league, traded a dozen players to Pittsburgh (Jack Chesbro, George Fox, Art Madison, John O'Brien and $25,000 went to Louisville for Fred Clarke, Bert Cunningham, Mike Kelley, Tacks Latimer, Tommy Leach, Tom Messitt, Deacon Phillippe, Claude Ritchey, Rube Waddell, Jack Wadsworth, Honus Wagner and Chief Zimmer, with Chesbro being assigned back to Pittsburgh for the 1900 season). Barney had taken over the Pirates prior to the deal, in effect transferring the core of his old team to his new one. They became one of the powerhouse clubs of the early 1900's thanks to the greatest deal ever swung by the Buccos. 
  • 1902 - RHP Ernest “Spoon” Carter was born in Harpersville, Alabama. He tossed for 15 years in the Negro Leagues and made stops at both local clubs, working for the Pittsburgh Crawfords from 1933-36 and later for the Homestead Grays from 1943-45. Spoon also pitched in the Cuban and Mexican Leagues and managed for a while. 
  • 1927 - Washington Senators’ pitcher Al Schacht, the Clown Prince of Baseball, and his buddy, coach Nick Altrock, appeared for three days at the Sheridan Square Theater in East Liberty as part of a vaudeville revue, using a schtick they honed during games. Schacht only had a three-year MLB career but spent a dozen years on stage with Altrock and then opened a NY steakhouse where he sometimes performed. 
Jim Pagliaroni - 1965 Kahn's Wieners
  • 1937 - C Jim Pagliaroni was born in Dearborn. “Pags” caught for the Bucs from 1963-67, sometimes starting and sometimes in platoon. He hit .254 during his Pittsburgh time and still has the record for most homers hit by a Pirate catcher in a season at 17, set in 1965. Injuries and reports that he wanted to be traded - he was playing in a rotation with Jerry May and Jesse Gonder - resulted in his contract being sold to Oakland in 1967. 
  • 1939 - RHP Bill Swift was traded, along with cash, to the Boston Bees for RHP “Deacon” Danny MacFayden. Swift had won 91 games for the Bucs in eight years and MacFayden claimed 124 victories in his career, but both were past their prime and the deal ended up a wash.

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