Science  People  Locations  Timeline
Index: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Home > Jimmy Austin


James Phillip "Jimmy" Austin ( December 8, 1879 - March 6, 1965) was a professional baseball player and coach.

Austin was born in Swansea, Wales, the son of a shipbuilder. He was one of only two Major League ballplayers to be born in Wales (the other being pitcher Ted Lewis). His father moved to the USA in 1885 to find work, and Jimmy followed in 1887.

After leaving school in 1889, Austin became an apprentice machinist with Westinghouse. After finishing his four-year apprenticeship, Westinghouse went on strike. Austin took up an offer of $40 a month, plus a job, to play independent ball in Warren, Ohio. He returned to Westinghouse that fall, but in the spring of 1904 signed with the Central League Dayton, Ohio club.

Austin remained in Dayton until 1907, when he was sold to Omaha in the Western League. He stole 97 bases for Omaha in 1908, and at the end of the season was sold to the New York HighlandersThe New York Yankees are a Major League baseball team based in The Bronx, New York City. They are in the Eastern Division of the American League. The Yankees have won 26 and competed in 39 World Series. These numbers dominate the sport, considering the St, of the American LeagueThe American League (or formally the American League of Professional Baseball Clubs is one of two leagues that make up Major League Baseball in the United States of America and Canada. It developed from a minor league, the Western League, that aspired to.

He made his Major League debut in 1909 at the relatively advanced age of 28. He played two seasons in New York, but was traded to the St. Louis Browns in 1911 by new Highlanders manager Hal ChaseHal Chase, of the Chicago White Sox, at Comiskey Park. Harold Homer Chase (born February 13, 1883 in Los Gatos, CA, died May 18, 1947 in Colusa, CA) was a baseball player, banned from baseball for corruption. During his career, he played for the New York, thus beginning a thirty-year career with the Browns as player and coach.

In 1913, when Browns player-manager George Stovall was suspended by the American League for spitting at an umpireGary Darling signals that the last pitch was a strike In baseball, the umpire is the person charged with officiating the game, including beginning and ending the game, enforcing the rules of the game and the grounds, making judgment calls on plays, and me, Austin was made manager on a temporary basis, until replaced by the legendary Branch RickeyWesley Branch Rickey ( December 20, 1881 December 9, 1965) was an innovative Major League Baseball executive who is best known for helping break baseball's color barrier and creating the framework to the modern minor league system. His many accomplishment in his first managerial job. Austin continued as Rickey's Sunday Manager - Rickey had promised his mother that he would not enter a ballpark on Sundays, and therefore Austin managed the Browns on those days.

Austin played regularly for the Browns until 1921, and served as a coach for another 20 years. In 1929, at the age of 49, Austin became one of the oldest ever major leaguers when he was inserted into a blowout. He cleanly handled two chances at third base, and struck out in his only at bat.

Austin was one of the old-time ballplayers who told his story in Lawrence Ritter 's classic book Glory of Their TimesThe Glory Of Their Times: The Story Of The Early Days Of Baseball Told By The Men Who Played It is a book, edited by Lawrence Ritter, telling the stories of early 20th century baseball. It is widely acclaimed as one of the great books written about baseba, whence much of the information in this article came.



Read more »

Non User