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08-21-2007 09:19 PM |
Jimmy Phelan
Posted By: <b>Tom Hufford</b><p>This is a tough one. Every T206 checklist that I've seen that tries to list first names, lists him as James Phelan. This probably comes from the writeup on the back of Phelan's T205 gold border card, which lists him as "Jimmy" Phelan, and says that he came to the (Providence) Grays from Montreal in 1907.<br /><br />I have a copy of a list that Buck Barker put together in the late 1950's, in which he tried to identify the T206 minor leaguers. Buck lived in St. Louis, and in the narrative that accompanies this list, he describes having access to the card files and guides at The Sporting News office. The card files he refers to are the player transaction cards maintained by the paper (note: these cards are now in storage in St. Louis, and are no longer available for research - SABR and TSN are now trying to work an agreement for SABR to digitize these cards and make them available to the public on the SABR and/or TSN website). Many members of this board are familiar with Buck's research in these files - and his notes on the back of many, many of the cards he had in his collection.<br /><br />Anyway, as far as the Phelan in T206 and with Montreal/Providence, the TSN files identified him as John F. (Jimmy, Jack) Phelan, born in 1883.<br /><br />I've been unable to find a James Phelan born in 1883 that looks like our man. I did find a John Francis Phelan b. June 30, 1883 in Harrison, NJ, d. June 1968 in Ocean Grove, Monmouth Co., NJ, who seems to fit, but I can't tie him to baseball. This man's listings in the census and draft registration files list him as a driver or chauffer. The only census during his playing career was 1910, and this John F. Phelan is shown in Newark, NJ when the census was taken on May 4, 1910 - when the ballplayer should have been with the Providence team somewhere. Of course maybe he was the player, was out of town, and the info was provided by his wife. None of the Phelans listed in the 1910 Providence, RI census are the ballplayer.<br /><br />So, no definite proof of what Phelan's name was .... yet.
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