- Fred Saigh
Frederick Michael Saigh Jr. (pronounced "sigh") (1905 – 1999) was the part-owner, then sole owner, of the
St. Louis Cardinals of AmericanMajor League Baseball (MLB) from 1948 through 1953.Pre-Cardinals years
Saigh, the son of Lebanese immigrants who owned a chain of grocery stores, was the oldest of five children. He was born in
Springfield, Illinois , and grew up inKewanee, Illinois . He attendedBradley University inPeoria, Illinois and graduated fromNorthwestern University with a law degree in 1926, at age 21. [http://engineering.wustl.edu/OrgCustomFiles/File/Newsletters/2005-Spring.pdf "The School of Engineering salutes its newest endowed professors ... and the donors who made the professorships possible" (pdf)] , "Engineering News", School of Engineering & Applied Science at Washington University in St. Louis, Spring 2005] and became a highly successful tax and corporate lawyer and investor in St. Louis. In the 1940s, he owned prime office buildings in downtown St. Louis.Richard Goldstein, "Fred Saigh, Who Helped Cardinals Stay Put, Dies at 94", "New York Times", January 2, 2000]St. Louis Cardinals
At the end of the 1947 baseball season, Saigh got wind that longtime Cardinals owner
Sam Breadon wanted to sell. Breadon faced two dilemmas. He was ill withprostate cancer , and he'd been unable to find land on which to build a planned new ballpark. Breadon had set aside $5 million to build a park, and was facing the end of a five-year deadline to build it before having to pay taxes on that money. Saigh persuaded Breadon to sell the Cardinals to him, with the assurance that he wouldn't have to pay taxes on his $5 millon fund. To further put him at ease, Saigh brought inRobert Hannegan as a minority partner. Hannegan was a prominent St. Louis businessman, formerUnited States Postmaster General , and confidante of PresidentHarry Truman . The $4 million deal closed in late 1947.cite book |title=The Team-by-Team Encyclopedia of Major League Baseball |last=Purdy |first=Dennis |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=2006 |publisher=Workman |location=New York City |isbn=0761139435 |pages= ]Saigh inherited a team in transition. The Cardinals, though then just one year removed from their ninth
National League pennant and sixthWorld Series championship since 1926, had begun to decay as an organization. Five years before, Breadon had forced out legendarygeneral manager Branch Rickey , who had quickly resurfaced with the Brooklyn Dodgers.In January 1949, Hannegan, suffering from poor health,, sold his share of the team to Saigh (Hannegan died in October of heart disease). As sole owner, Saigh's notable actions included leading other baseball owners to oust (by not renewing his contract) Commissioner of Baseball
Happy Chandler in December 1950 [ [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,859109,00.html "Surprise!"] , "Time Magazine", December 25, 1950] and proposing revenue-sharing of local television revenues. [May 16, 1951 "Sporting News"]However, the tax dodge Saigh used soon came to light, as well as other questionable practices on his part.In April 1952, Saigh was indicted on federal charges of evading $49,260 in income taxes between 1946 and 1949. In January 1953, he pleaded no contest to two counts involving more than $19,000 in tax underpayments, and was sentenced to 15 months in prison. He served five months at the federal penitentiary in
Terre Haute, Indiana , leaving in November 1953 when he was given parole for good behavior.In February 1953, under pressure from Commissioner
Ford Frick , Saigh put the Cardinals up for sale. While the Cardinals were clearly the more beloved of St. Louis’s two MLB clubs, the fact that the Cardinals were tenants of that other team, theAmerican League Browns, atSportsman's Park , made it seem likely that the team would be purchased by someone interested in moving them to another city. But Saigh accepted less money ($3.75 million) fromAnheuser-Busch , the brewery, than from out-of-town suitors and the Cardinals remained in St. Louis. By the end of 1953, the Browns were the ones who left town, becoming theBaltimore Orioles . The Cardinals then bought Sportsman’s Park, and have been in St. Louis since.Post-Cardinals years
After his release from prison, Saigh resumed his career in private business, amassing a large amount of stock in Anheuser-Busch – the largest shareholder outside the Busch family itself. He died in St. Louis, at the age of 94, worth approximately $500 million. [Heather Cole, [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4185/is_20070207/ai_n17202172 "A.G. Edwards to face trial in St. Louis County Circuit Court", "St. Louis Daily Record & St. Louis Countian", February 7, 2007] ]
Saigh had no children. [Opinion,
Missouri Court of Appeals , Eastern District, [http://www.courts.mo.gov/Courts/PubOpinions.nsf/6c38d75d12b7d96c8625661f004bc89e/43e10762ac9d3f928625727b00591a3c?OpenDocument "Michael Saigh and Andrew Saigh, Appellants v. William K. Saigh, et al., Respondent"] , February 6, 2007] He left $70 million to charity in his will, establishing the [http://www.thesaighfoundation.org/about.html Fred Saigh Foundation] . [" [http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/stories.nsf/newswatch/story/7AB628C50F1A4F5B8625719F002417F8?OpenDocument Buffett donation puts spotlight on philanthropy] ".St. Louis Post-Dispatch . July 2, 2006.]References
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