Also Read: Shoeless Joe Forward from "Shoeless Joe and Ragtime Baseball"
Excerpts:Remembering Fenway Park: Twenties / Thirties / Forties / Fifties / Sixties / First Match Up At Fenway: April 20, 1912 (From the Vault) / Fenway Park Flashback: All Star Game 1999
Shoeless Joe Jackson Belongs in the Hall of
Fame!
With one of the most exciting World Series ever played now truly
one for the books, the memory of another long ago Fall Classic
surfaces. It was the 1919 contest between the Chicago White Sox and the
Cincinnati Reds. It was the one that saw eight players ultimately and unjustly
banned from baseball for life. It was the one that made Shoeless Joe
Jackson into a scapegoat, victim and story that just wont go
away.
On July 16, 1889, Joseph Jefferson Wofford Jackson was born into a
poor family in Greenville, South Carolina. He never learned to read or write.
By the time he was six years old, he worked as a cleanup boy in the cotton
mills.
By age 13, he labored amidst the din and dust a dozen hours a day
along with his father and brother. It was hard and back-breaking employment.
Playing baseball on grassy field was his way of escape. It was there where
Joes natural ability stood out. Baseball was his game, and he loved
it. The youth had such passion
and skill that he was recruited to play for the mill team organized by the
company.
One humid and hot summer
day, Jackson was playing the outfield. His shoes pinched. He removed them
and played in his stocking feet. An enterprising sportswriter gave him the
nick-name: "Shoeless Joe." Even though it was reported that was the only
time Jackson ever played that way in a game - the Shoeless moniker
stuck. He hated the name, feeling
it cruelly referenced the fact
that he could not or write.
From the mill team, Jackson moved on to play with the Greenville,
South Carolina Spinners. It was there in 1908 that a scout recommended him
to Philadelphia Athletics owner/manager
Connie Mack who purchased his
contract for $325.
The youngster made his Major League Baseball debut on August 25, 1908.
The more he played the more his potential impressed everyone. An article
in the
The Evening
Times noted:
He
has justified early predictions of his abilities. With experience and the
coaching of Manager Mack, he should turn out to be
the find of the
season.
Sadly, Jackson was unable to read what the Philadelphia newspaper
wrote about him. He could not even read menus. In restaurants he usually
ordered what another player did. Sadly, he did not fit in with his teammates
or the big city. Homesick, he jumped the team and took a train back home.
Mack sent Jackson down to a minor league team in Georgia in 1909 where
he won the batting title. In 1910, Mack called him up to the big league team
but decided that Jackson lacked the disposition to play in a big city like
Philly. In one of the worst trades in baseball history, the six foot one,
190 pound Jackson was shipped to Cleveland for a player named Bris Lord
(Bristol Robotham
Lord , nick-named the
(The Human
Eyeball) and $6,000.
Shoeless Joe fit in quite nicely in Cleveland where he batted .408
in 1911. In mid-season of 1915, after compiling a .375 career batting average
with the Ohio team, Jackson was traded after mid season for three players
and $15,000 to the White Sox.
It was in Chicago that Jackson
made a point of wearing
alligator and patent-leather shoes -- the more expensive the better. It was
as if he were announcing to the world, "I am not a Shoeless Joe. I do wear
shoes. And they cost a lot of money!"
With the White Sox, Jackson became one of baseballs storied
stars. His defensive play was at such a remarkable level that his glove was
called "the place where triples go to die."
On offense, he was one of the most feared hitters of his time. Babe
Ruth copied his swing claiming Jackson was the greatest hitter he ever
saw.
Then Along came 1919!
The 1919 Chicago White Sox were one of the greatest teams of their
era. Paced by Jackson who batted .351, they won the American League pennant.
They were 3-1 favorites to win the World Series as they prepared to face
off against the Cincinnati Reds.
Prior to the series betting odds started to shift to even money. The
word on the street was that New York gambler Arnold Rothstein was behind
the swing, that the series was fixed.
Hearing the rumor, the 31-year-old Jackson asked Chicago manager Kid
Gleason and owner Charles Comiskey to bench him. But they insisted he play.
They would have been crazy to put down their best
player.
During the series, Jackson hit the only home run. He posted the highest
batting average. He committed no errors. He established a new World Series
record with 12 hits. Nevertheless, the Reds won the Fall
Classic.
Edd Rousch, who played for the Reds, insisted that charges that the
series was fixed was nonsense. "We were just the better team," he said.
"Maybe I'm a dope but everything seemed okay to me," said umpire Billy
Evans who worked the series.
But the rumor of a fix persisted as the 1920 season got underway.
The White Sox were driving hard to their second straight pennant when a petty
gambler in Philadelphia broke the news that a Cubs-Phillies game had been
fixed in 1919.
That led to a gambling investigation - its focus the 1919 World Series.
With only a couple of days left in the 1920 season, a Grand Jury was called
to determine whether eight White Sox players should stand trial for allegedly
throwing the 1919 World Series. Jackson was one of the eight
players.
It took the jury a single ballot to acquit all eight accused players.
Incredibly, the very next day, baseball's first commissioner - Judge Kenesaw
Mountain Landis, who came to power in the fall of 1920 with a lifetime contract
and a mandate to clean up the game using whatever methods he saw fit - banned
all eight players from baseball for life. The bigoted Landis was brought
into organized baseball with a reputation of being a vindictive judge, a
hanging judge. He was all of that.
Was there a plan to throw the World Series in
1919?
Was a plan carried out?
If so, which games were dumped?
What role did each banned player have?
Why was there a total banning of the
players?
Buck Weaver was banned
not for dumping but for allegedly having guilty knowledge that there was
a plot.
Fred McMullen was banned though he came to bat twice and got one hit.
And Joe Jackson was banned although his performance exceeded his own
standards.
Most importantly, the eight players were found not guilty in a court
of law.
Yet, they were found guilty by a brand new Baseball
Commissioner.
At the trial, Joe Jackson was asked under
oath:
"Did you do anything to
throw those games?"
"No sir," was his response.
"Any game in the series?"
"Not a one," was Jacksons response. "I didn't have an error
or make no misplay."
With the banning from baseball for life of "Shoeless Joe" Jackson
and the seven other White Sox players, it seemed the sport was saying - now
we are clean. Now we have purged ourselves of the dishonest ways of the past
in the national pastime. And if Jackson in the prime of his baseball career
and the others were sacrificed, that was the way it had to
be.
Shoeless Joe Jackson maintained that he had played all out in that
World Series of 1919. Nevertheless,
Major League Baseball was done with Jackson and his seven teammates. It was
a miscarriage of justice, a field day for slander on parade. Powerless players
were punished, scapegoated.
For a couple of decades Jackson attempted to play the game that he
loved, the game that he had learned so well back in the days of his youth.
He made an effort to play with outlaw barnstormers, mill teams,
semi-pro outfits. Aliases and
disguises did him not much good; his unmistakable talent brought the spotlight
to be bear on him.
Relentless, unforgiving, prejudiced Judge Landis, to keep Jackson
from playing, threatened baseball team owners and league
officials.
In 1932, Jackson applied for permission to manage a minor league team
in his home town of Greenville, South Carolina. Landis denied the
application.
In 1951, Joseph Jefferson Jackson
died of a massive heart attack a week before he was to appear on the
Ed Sullivan television show. He was scheduled to receive a trophy honoring
him for being inducted into the Cleveland Indians Baseball Hall of
Fame.
It is an old story
The roster of hall of Famers includes personalities with much shabbier
credentials and far more soiled reputations. Attempts to get Joe Jackson
into the Baseball Hall of Fame failed during and after his lifetime. Yet,
Jackson's shoes are at Cooperstown. Yet, his life-sized photograph is there.
So is a baseball bat he used, along with the jersey he wore in the 1919 World
Series. So is the last Major
League Baseball contract he signed.
Prominent attorneys like Alan Dershowitz and F. Lee Bailey have argued
that Jackson should go into the Hall. There have been petitions, Congressional
motions, letters sent to baseball Commissioners through the years - all to
no avail.
Commissioner Bart Giammatti
said:"I do not wish to play God with history. The Jackson case is best left
to historical debate and analysis. I am not for reinstatement."
Commissioner Faye Vincent said, "I can't uncipher or decipher what
took place back then. I have no intention of taking formal action."
Commissioner Bud Selig has not stood up for Joe Jackson even though
he met with Ted Williams who
pushed for Jackson's admission to the Hall of Fame.
Four times Jackson batted over .370. His lifetime batting average
was .356, topped only by Ty Cobb and Rogers Hornsby. Ruth, Cobb, and Casey
Stengel all placed him on their all-time, all star team.
Vilified through the decades by many who never knew or didnt
care to know the full storyhis is a story that just will not go away.
About the author
2011 marks Harvey Frommer's 36th consecutive year of writing sports books. A noted oral historian and sports journalist, the author of 41 sports books including the classics: "New York City Baseball,1947-1957" and "Shoeless Joe and Ragtime Baseball," his acclaimed REMEMBERING YANKEE STADIUM, an oral/narrative history was published in 2008. Frommer's newest work is REMEMBERING FENWAY PARK: AN ORAL AND NARRATIVE HISTORY OF THE HOME OF RED SOX NATION (Abrams).
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