Bill Gatewood
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William Miller "Big Bill" Gatewood (August 22, 1881 – December 8, 1962) was an American Negro league baseball pitcher and manager for several years before the founding of the first Negro National League, and in its first few seasons. He pitched for the Leland Giants,[1] Chicago Giants, St. Paul Colored Gophers,[2] Chicago American Giants,[3] New York Lincoln Giants, Cuban X-Giants, Philadelphia Giants, Brooklyn Royal Giants, St. Louis Giants,[4] Indianapolis ABCs,[5] Detroit Stars, St. Louis Stars, Toledo Tigers, Milwaukee Bears, Memphis Red Sox, Atlantic City Bacharach Giants, and Birmingham Black Barons.
Career
Sportswriter Harry Daniels named Gatewood to his 1909 "All American Team."[6]
In the first week of June in 1920,[7] at age 38, Gatewood left the St. Louis Giants and joined Tenny Blount's team, the Detroit Stars.[8] Part-way through the second season, he moved on to the Cuban Stars.
A 6'7" tall spitball pitcher, Gatewood was a first line pitcher in Blackball's pre-league days, and pitched the first no-hitter in NNL league play, beating the Cincinnati Cuban Stars on June 6, 1921. As his pitching skills deteriorated, he remained in the game as a manager.
Gatewood managed the St. Louis Stars and Birmingham Black Barons. He is credited with giving Negro leagues great James Cool Papa Bell his famous nickname,[9] and for convincing him to learn to switch hit in order to take advantage of his speed. Gatewood is also credited with teaching Satchel Paige his "hesitation pitch" while managing him in Birmingham.
After Gatewood died, he was buried in an unmarked grave and did not receive a proper headstone until a Society for American Baseball Research group called the Negro Leagues Baseball Grave Marker Project installed a proper gravestone in 2010.[10] Gatewood's grave did not have a headstone for about 48 years.[11]
References
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- ↑ "BEARS ROMP AWAY FROM GIANTS 8 TO 1" San Diego Union, San Diego, California, December 30, 1912
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- ↑ "The Base Ball Spirit In The East." Indianapolis Freeman, Indianapolis, Indiana, Saturday, December 25, 1909, Page 7, Columns 1 and 2
- ↑ "Dayton Marcos to Meet Stars" Detroit Free Press, Detroit, Michigan, June 4, 1920, Page 19, Column 4
- ↑ "Star Trucker Series Evened" Saginaw News, Saginaw, MI, July 17, 1920, Page 5, Column 3
- ↑ 1974, J."Cool Papa" Bell Named to Baseball's Hall of Fame, Ironwood Daily Globe, Ironwood, Michigan, 13 February 1974
- ↑ "For Negro League Players, A Measure of Recognition" The New York Times, July 1, 2010, Page A1 of the New York Edition
- ↑ "A Legacy Written in Stone" The Columbia Daily Tribune, Columbia, MO, Wednesday, June 30, 2010, Page B1Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
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"A Legacy Written in Stone" The Columbia Daily Tribune, Columbia, MO, Wednesday, June 30, 2010, Page B1 https://www.newspapers.com/image/1021981250/?match=1&terms=A%20Legacy%20Written%20in%20Stone
Sources
- The Biographical Encyclopedia of the Negro Baseball Leagues by James A. Riley {1994} Publisher: Carroll & Graf (New York NY) Template:ISBN
- Draft registration card, 1918, National Archives & Records Administration
External links
- Career statistics from Script error: No such module "String".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". and Baseball-Reference Black Baseball stats and Seamheads
- Template:PAGENAMEBASE managerial career statistics at Baseball-Reference.comTemplate:EditAtWikidata and Seamheads
- A Legacy Written in Stone - The Columbia Tribune
- Pages with script errors
- Pages with reference errors
- 1881 births
- 1962 deaths
- Baseball pitchers
- Negro league baseball managers
- Leland Giants players
- Chicago American Giants players
- New York Lincoln Giants players
- Cuban X-Giants players
- Philadelphia Giants players
- Brooklyn Royal Giants players
- St. Louis Giants players
- Indianapolis ABCs players
- Detroit Stars players
- St. Louis Stars (baseball) players
- Toledo Tigers players
- Milwaukee Bears players
- Memphis Red Sox players
- Bacharach Giants players
- Birmingham Black Barons players
- St. Paul Colored Gophers players
- Baseball players from San Antonio
- Sportspeople from Columbia, Missouri
- Burials at Memorial Park Cemetery (Columbia, Missouri)