- Charles Comiskey
-
Charles Comiskey First baseman/Manager/Owner Born: August 15, 1859
Chicago, IllinoisDied: October 26, 1931 (aged 72)
Eagle River, WisconsinBatted: Right Threw: Right MLB debut May 2, 1882 for the St. Louis Brown Stockings Last MLB appearance September 12, 1894 for the Cincinnati Reds Career statistics Batting average .264 Hits 1,530 Runs 994 Teams As Player
- St. Louis Brown Stockings/Browns (1882-1889)
- Chicago Pirates (1890)
- St. Louis Browns (1891)
- Cincinnati Reds (1892-1894)
As Manager
As Owner
Career highlights and awards - World Series champion: 1906, 1917
- American League pennant: 1901, 1919
- American Association pennant: 1885-1888
- Career managerial record: 840-541
Member of the National Baseball Hall of Fame Induction 1939 Election Method Veteran's Committee Charles Albert "The Old Roman" Comiskey (August 15, 1859 – October 26, 1931) was a Major League Baseball player, manager and team owner. He was a key person in the formation of the American League and later owned the Chicago White Sox.[1] Comiskey Park, Chicago's storied baseball stadium, was built under his guidance and named for him.[1]
Comiskey's reputation was permanently tarnished by his team's involvement in the Black Sox Scandal, a conspiracy to "throw" the 1919 World Series.[1] Despite popular allegations that his poor treatment of White Sox players fueled the conspiracy, Comiskey was inducted as an executive into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1939.[1]
Contents
Early years
Charles Comiskey was the third of the eight children born to John and Annie Comiskey. He was of Irish descent. His father, popularly known as "Honest John," was the political boss of his Chicago ward, serving as an alderman from 1859 to 1863, and again from 1867 to 1870. While his father would have liked him to become a businessman or a plumber, Comiskey preferred playing baseball. Over the objections of his father, he joined a local semi-pro team.[citation needed]
One story suggests that Comiskey's interest in the game was sparked by an event that occurred when he was 17 years old. According to this account, Comiskey was driving a brick wagon through Chicago when he spotted a game in progress. The pitcher was performing so poorly that Comiskey felt compelled to take his place.[2] To discourage his son's obsession, Comiskey's father eventually sent him to St. Mary's College, Kansas, where it seemed less likely he would have a chance to play baseball. Instead, he met the club- and league-organizer Ted Sullivan, who already owned a team in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Comiskey played in Milwaukee and with the Dubuque Rabbits, a club that Sullivan established.[2]
Baseball career
Comiskey entered the American Association in 1882 as a player with the St. Louis Brown Stockings.[2] He managed the team during parts of its first seasons and took over full-time in 1885,[2] leading the Browns to four consecutive American Association championships and a close second in 1889.[citation needed] He also played and managed for the Chicago Pirates in the Players' League (1890), the Browns again (1891), and the Cincinnati Reds in the National League (1892–94).[citation needed]
Managing career
Comiskey left Cincinnati and the majors in fall 1894 to purchase the Western League club in Sioux City, Iowa and move it to Saint Paul, Minnesota.[2] He had compiled a .264 batting average with 29 home runs, 883 RBI and 419 stolen bases. As a manager, he posted an 839-542 record.
After five seasons of sharing the Twin Cities with another Western League club in Minneapolis, Comiskey and his colleagues arranged to share Chicago with the National League, whose club (the Chicago Cubs today) played on the North Side. The St. Paul Saints moved to the South Side as the White Stockings of the renamed American League for the 1900 season. The American then declared itself a major league starting in 1901.[2]
As owner of the White Sox from 1900 until his death in 1931, Comiskey oversaw building Comiskey Park in 1910 and winning five American League championships.[2] He lost popularity with his players, whose views of him became hateful, and that is seen as a factor in the Black Sox scandal, when eight players on the AL champions conspired to "throw" the 1919 World Series to the NL champion Cincinnati Reds.[2] Comiskey was notoriously stingy (his defenders called him "frugal"), even forcing his players to pay to launder their own uniforms.[2] Traci Peterson notes that, in an era when professional athletes lacked free agency, the White Sox's formidable players had little choice but to accept Comiskey's substandard wages. She writes: "Charles Risberg and Claude Williams made less than $3,000 a year. Joe Jackson and George Weaver made only $6,000 a year. Eddie Cicotte had been promised a $10,000 bonus if he could win 30 games in a season. When Cicotte closed in on the 30-game goal, Comiskey had him benched to keep him from reaching the mark".[2] In one incident, he promised his players a bonus for winning the 1919 pennant - the "bonus" turned out to be a case of flat champagne.
Comiskey initially defended the accused players and, in an unusual display of largesse, provided them with expensive legal representation.[2] While he ultimately supported baseball commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis' decision to ban the implicated White Sox players from further participation in professional baseball, Comiskey must have realized that this ruling deprived his team of its top players.[2] Indeed, the White Sox promptly tumbled into seventh place and would not be a factor in a pennant race again until 1936, five years after Comiskey's death.
Legacy
Comiskey is sometimes credited with the innovation of playing the first base position behind first base or inside the foul line, a practice which has since become common.[2] He was inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 1939.[1]
Comiskey died in Eagle River, Wisconsin at age of 72. The White Sox would remain in his family until 1958.
See also
- List of Major League Baseball leaders in career stolen bases
- List of professional sports team owners
References
- ^ a b c d e "Charlie Comiskey". Baseball Library. http://www.baseballlibrary.com/ballplayers/player.php?name=Charlie_Comiskey_1859. Retrieved 2007-12-27.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Charles "The Old Roman" Comiskey". University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law. http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/blacksox/comiskeybio.html. Retrieved 2007-12-27.
Further reading
- Riehle, Dave, Say it Ain't So, Charlie:The 1897 Dispute Between Charles Comiskey and the St. Paul Labor Trades , Ramsey County History Quarterly V39 #2, Ramsey County Historical Society, St Paul, MN, 2004.
- Axelson, Gustaf W. (1919). "Commy": the life story of Charles A. Comiskey, the "Grand old Roman" of baseball and for nineteen years president and owner of the American league baseball team "The White Sox,". Chicago: Reilly & Lee Co. http://www.archive.org/details/commylifestoryof00axel.
External links
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball-Reference, or Baseball-Reference (Minors)
- Charles Comiskey managerial career statistics at Baseball-Reference.com
- Charles Comiskey at the Baseball Hall of Fame
Titles Preceded by
Joe GerhardtSt. Louis Browns Manager
1891Succeeded by
Jack GlasscockPreceded by
Jimmy WilliamsSt. Louis Browns Manager
1884 - 1889Succeeded by
Tommy McCarthyPreceded by
Ted SullivanSt. Louis Browns Manager
1883Succeeded by
Jimmy WilliamsPreceded by
Tom LoftusCincinnati Reds Manager
1892-1894Succeeded by
Buck EwingPreceded by
OriginalChicago White Sox Owner
1900-1931Succeeded by
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Spring Training: Recreation Park • Palm Springs Stadium • Plant Field • Al Lopez Field • Payne Park • Ed Smith Stadium • Tucson Electric Park • Camelback RanchCulture Disco Demolition Night • White Flag Trade • Andy the Clown • "Let's Go, Go-Go White Sox" • "Sweet Home Chicago" • Curse of the Black Sox • Na Na Hey Hey Kiss Him Goodbye • Nancy Faust • Southpaw • Gene Honda • Sox–35th • Take Me Out to the Ball Game • Soxville • Turn Back the ClockLore Black Sox Scandal • 1994 Bat Burglary • Mark Buehrle's perfect gameRivalries Chicago CubsRetired Numbers Key Personnel Owners: Jerry Reinsdorf and Eddie Einhorn • General Manager: Kenny Williams • Manager: Robin Ventura • Team Captain: Paul KonerkoWorld Series
Championships (3)American League
Championships (6)Division Championships (5) Minor League
AffiliatesCharlotte Knights (AAA) • Birmingham Barons (AA) • Winston-Salem Dash (A) • Kannapolis Intimidators (A) • Bristol White Sox (Rookie) • Great Falls Voyagers (Rookie)Other Assets Seasons (111) 1900s 1910s 1920s 1930s 1940s 1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s 2000s 2010s 2010 • 2011 • 2012
Principal owners of the Chicago White Sox franchise Charles Comiskey • J. Louis Comiskey • Grace Comiskey • Dorothy Comiskey Rigney & Chuck Comiskey • Bill Veeck & Chuck Comiskey • Arthur Allyn, Jr. & John Allyn • John Allyn • Bill Veeck • Jerry ReinsdorfSt. Louis Brown Stockings 1882 Inaugural Season Roster Catcher / Infield / Outfield C Joe Crotty | C Eddie Fusselback | C Sleeper Sullivan | IF Charlie Comiskey | IF Frank Decker | IF Bill Gleason | IF Jack Gleason IF Charlie Morton | IF John Shoupe | IF Bill Smiley | OF Ed Brown | OF Ned Cuthbert | OF Harry McCaffery | OF Bobby Mitchell | OF George Seward | OF Oscar WalkerPitchers P Morrie Critchley | P Bert Dorr | P John Doyle | P Eddie Hogan | P Jumbo McGinnis | P John SchappertManager St. Louis Browns 1885 American Association Champions Sam Barkley | Doc Bushong | Bob Caruthers | Charles Comiskey | Bill Gleason | Dave Foutz | Arlie Latham | Jumbo McGinnis | Hugh Nicol | Tip O'Neill | Yank Robinson | Curt Welch
Manager Charles ComiskeySt. Louis Browns 1886 American Association Champions Doc Bushong | Bob Caruthers | Charles Comiskey | Bill Gleason | Nat Hudson | Dave Foutz | Rudy Kemmler | Arlie Latham | Jumbo McGinnis | Hugh Nicol | Tip O'Neill | Yank Robinson | Curt Welch
Manager Charles ComiskeySt. Louis Browns 1887 American Association Champions Jack Boyle | Doc Bushong | Bob Caruthers | Charles Comiskey | Bill Gleason | Nat Hudson | Dave Foutz | Silver King | Ed Knouff | Arlie Latham | Tip O'Neill | Yank Robinson | Lou Sylvester | Curt Welch
Manager Charles ComiskeySt. Louis Browns 1888 American Association Champions Jack Boyle | Ice Box Chamberlain | Charles Comiskey | Jim Devlin | Ed Herr | Nat Hudson | Silver King | Ed Knouff | Arlie Latham | Harry Lyons | Tommy McCarthy | Chippy McGarr | Jocko Milligan | Tip O'Neill | Yank Robinson | Bill White
Manager Charles ComiskeyBaseball Hall of Fame Class of 1939 BBWAA Vote Veterans Committee Cap Anson • Charles Comiskey • Candy Cummings • Buck Ewing • Lou Gehrig • Charles Radbourn • Albert SpaldingExecutives & Pioneers inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame Barrow • Bulkeley • Cartwright • Chadwick • Chandler • Comiskey • Dreyfuss • Frick • Giles • Gillick • Griffith • Harridge • Hulbert • Johnson • Kuhn • Landis • La. MacPhail • Le. MacPhail • Manley • O'Malley • Pompez • Posey • Rickey • Spalding • Veeck • Weiss • White • Wilkinson • G. Wright • H. Wright • YawkeyCategories:- 1859 births
- 1931 deaths
- American Roman Catholics
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- Chicago Pirates players
- Chicago White Sox executives
- Chicago White Sox owners
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- Cincinnati Reds players
- American people of Irish descent
- Major League Baseball executives
- Major League Baseball first basemen
- Major League Baseball managers
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- Baseball players from Illinois
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- People from Chicago, Illinois
- St. Louis Browns (AA) managers
- St. Louis Browns (AA) players
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- Dubuque Red Stockings players
- St. Paul Apostles players
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