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#1
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Clark Griffith acquired Tommy Taylor in June 1924 via a trade with Memphis, and in December 1924, Taylor was traded back to Memphis. He appeared in 3 games of the 1924 WS, and struck out in both of his at bats. Taylor did accumulate almost 1,700 hits over his 16-year minor league career, which concluded in 1935 with Greenville of the East Dixie League at age 42. As far as I have been able to determine, no cards of Taylor were issued during his playing career.
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Seeking very scarce/rare cards for my Sam Rice master collection, e.g., E210 York Caramel Type 2 (upgrade), 1931 W502, W504 (upgrade), W572 sepia, W573, 1922 Haffner's Bread, 1922 Keating Candy, 1922 Witmor Candy Type 2 (vertical back), 1926 Sports Co. of Am. with ad & blank backs. Also 1917 Merchants Bakery & Weil Baking cards of WaJo. Also E222 cards of Lipe, Revelle & Ryan. |
#2
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First in War, first in Peace, and now first in the American League, the Senators were honored with a victory parade when they got back to the capital -- open cars, police escort up Pennsylvania Avenue . . . the whole nine yards. The end of the line was the White House, where the ballclub was welcomed by President Calvin Coolidge, who promised to be on hand for the first game of the World Series at Griffith Stadium between the Senators and the New York Giants. The truth is that President Coolidge had absolutely no affinity with baseball -- he found the game a bore. Mrs. Coolidge, however, was a great fan of the game and just loved the Senators.
Three days later, on October 4, 1924, "Silent Cal" and his wife became the first President and First Lady to attend a Series opener. Secretary of State Charles Hughes, as well as the Secretary of War and the Speaker of the House were also in place in the presidential box. The United States Army Band entertained during the pregame ceremonies, and a military guard paid homage to the colors. Political and military bigwigs of all stripes had shown up for the occasion. To top things off, Walter Johnson and Roger Peckinpaugh were awarded shiny new automobiles. https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1678698488 |
#3
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George, I wonder how Bucky Harris felt about not also being awarded a shiny new automobile. Not only did the first-year player-manager lead the Senators to their first-ever pennant, but he and Peckinpaugh comprised one of the best, if not the best, Keystone Combos in the American League.
Has anyone ever seen another one of these?
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Seeking very scarce/rare cards for my Sam Rice master collection, e.g., E210 York Caramel Type 2 (upgrade), 1931 W502, W504 (upgrade), W572 sepia, W573, 1922 Haffner's Bread, 1922 Keating Candy, 1922 Witmor Candy Type 2 (vertical back), 1926 Sports Co. of Am. with ad & blank backs. Also 1917 Merchants Bakery & Weil Baking cards of WaJo. Also E222 cards of Lipe, Revelle & Ryan. |
#4
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#5
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Thanks! Here's how Carry's Ice Cream was delivered back in the day:
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Seeking very scarce/rare cards for my Sam Rice master collection, e.g., E210 York Caramel Type 2 (upgrade), 1931 W502, W504 (upgrade), W572 sepia, W573, 1922 Haffner's Bread, 1922 Keating Candy, 1922 Witmor Candy Type 2 (vertical back), 1926 Sports Co. of Am. with ad & blank backs. Also 1917 Merchants Bakery & Weil Baking cards of WaJo. Also E222 cards of Lipe, Revelle & Ryan. |
#6
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I think Bucky was thrilled just to be the boy wonder. Johnson and Peckinpaugh were established national stars. The Carry's Ice Cream piece is unbelievable. I've never seen anything like it. Thanks for the show.
A week before the World series, syndicated columnist and future American icon Will Rogers, who ranched about 40 miles from the Johnson family spread in Coffeyville, Kansas, wrote that if Walter Johnson had played for John McGraw's New York Giants all those years, he would have had to be incompetent to have lost even a single game. Johnson, Rogers declared, could be sure that he caried more good wishes than any man, let alone athlete, who'd ever entered any competition in the entire history of America. After a "diligent search" of 150 years, Rogers wrote, Washington had finally found an honest man. Nonetheless, since Walter Johnson had waited this long for his first World Series, he now had a platform for exposure that the Series could not have provided previously. The world was changing at a pace like never before. The automobile was now affordable to most Americans -- the Ford Model T sold for $260 brand new. The first coast-to-coast airplane flight had taken place in 1923. By now, the radio receiver was commonplace in the average home. This World Series would be broadcast over the airwaves of WRC in Washington, which had opened as the city's first radio station that summer. The previous year the Series had been broadcast in its entirety for the first time by the team of Graham McNamee, who'd given up a professional singing career to become a radio announcer, and Grantland Rice. By the spring of 1925, all the Nats' road games would be broadcast on station WRC. Two days before the Series began, Walter Johnson and Bucky Harris both spoke into a radio microphone for the first time. The gratitude they expressed to their fans across the country, and their promise of a World Championship victory, were broadcast across the nation over the NBC network. Western Union had strung 75,000 miles of cable to scoreboards in cities across the U.S., and wire services were available in approximately 200 other locations. Nats fans wait in line for 1924 World Series tickets: https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1678786064 |
#7
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The day would be perfect if America's darling, Walter Johnson, could get his team off on the right foot with a victory over the Giants in the series opener. We get an idea of the type of opponent the Nats were up against when we consider that six of their members are today enshrined in the National Baseball Hall of Fame. Those players are Bill Terry, George Kelly, Frank Frisch, Travis Jackson, Ross Youngs, and Hack Wilson. (Note: I don't know why Deveaux omits Freddie Lindstrom from this list. He was inducted in 1976 by the Veteran's Committee, but I believe Deveaux's book was issued in 2001.) Both Terry and Wilson were rookies, and Terry had seen limited action during the season due to Kelly's incumbency at the first-base position.
Ross Youngs had just won the National League batting title with a .356 average, the eighth straight year he'd batted over .300. George Kelly was tops in RBIs in both major leagues in 1924 with 136. Long George, who was 6'4", had the agility of a cat around the first base bag, and he could play the outfield, and even second base in a pinch. Team captain Frank Frisch was a recognized superstar, one of the acknowledged all-time best at second base. He'd hit .328 for the season and had tied for the league lead in runs with another of the great second basemen, Rogers Hornsby of the St. Louis Cardinals, who had hit .424, a mark never matched during the entire century. Among the other regulars were the 18-year-old lead-off hitter, third baseman Fred Lindstrom, who would hit .311 for his career, and Emil "Irish" Meusel, Yankee Bob Meusel's older brother, who would post a .310 career mark. Needless to say, the Giants, who took the pennant by a mere 1 1/2 games over the Dodgers, had far and away the best offense in the National League in 1924. They were participating in their fourth straight World Series -- they had won two of the three previous Series, all against the Yankees, but their most recent memory was of a six-game defeat in 1923. They were led by the wiliest and toughest of baseball men, the antagonistic John McGraw. Washington catcher Muddy Ruel would say years later that the Giants had seemed like a confident bunch on the other side of the diamond during the 1924 World Series. Apart from their offensive fire power, they had the reputation of being better defensively than any club in the American League. With John McGraw glowering at them all the while, it would have been easy for the Nats to have felt intimidated. But, as Ruel put it, those Washington Senators were a tough bunch too, and they wouldn't go down without a hell of a fight. New York had no Walter Johnson or Firpo Marberry, and in Goose Goslin the Nats had a man with incredible power, a man who put as much into his swings as Babe Ruth. The proof was that when he missed, the Goose would do a pirouette which was pretty much just like the Babe's. But it was hard to deny that the Giants had more good hitters, and had more depth in starting pitching, and with only three days' rest following the end of the regular season and a World Series game scheduled every single day, these factors could turn out to be keys in determining the outcome. There was also the nagging fact that the Giants were taking part in their fourth consecutive World Series. On the Washington side, only Roger Peckinpaugh and Nemo Leibold had ever played in the postseason. Nevertheless, oddsmakers were calling it pretty much a toss-up, and the Nats were favored to take the first game, what with Bucky Harris having promised to start Walter Johnson. 1924 New York Giants wait to board train to Washington for Game 1: https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1678874183 Last edited by GeoPoto; 03-15-2023 at 09:39 AM. |
#8
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#9
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Umpire Billy Evans was of the opinion that at one time Walter Johnson could have won a World Series by himself, reasoning that a team from another league would not have had time, in one week, to adjust to Walter's legendary blazing fastball. However, when Evans came into the clubhouse prior to the start of the first game to get some baseballs autographed for friends, it was obvious to him that Walter Johnson, arguably the greatest pitcher in history, was very nervous. It had taken him 18 years to make it this far, the longest wait ever, incidentally, until Joe Niekro made it after 21 years, with the Minnesota Twins in 1987.
Walter Johnson admitted to Babe Ruth on the morning of the opener that he could hardly avoid the jitters, considering that everyone was expecting him to come through, everyone right up to and including the President of the United States. The first game, incidentally, would be only the second World Series game witnessed by the chief executive, President Wilson having been privy to the proceedings at a game in Philadelphia back in 1915. Another sidebar to the 1924 World Series was the patching up of the strained relationship between two baseball legends, Ty Cobb and Babe Ruth. Cobb had recently been quoted as saying that he had gotten a real kick out of seeing the almighty Yankees fall to the Senators. The Babe had sarcastically commented to the press that Cobb, who would be doing some newspaper reporting of the Series, was probably also coming to Washington to collect some of the gate receipts as well, considering the impact he had had on deciding the pennant. Christy Walsh, ghostwriter for many a baseball star who purportedly analyzed ballgames but were in fact nowhere near the ballpark, somehow tricked Ruth and Cobb into the same cab. The two made up, acting like best buddies as they watched the proceedings from the press box throughout the week of the World Series. While the Senators' first Series participation grabbed all the headlines, the Giants had been getting more than their share of ink. As their lead over Brooklyn dwindled in the late stages of the season, it had been alleged that Jimmy O'Connell, a spare outfielder with the Giants, had offered Philadelphia's shortstop, Heinie Sand, a sum of $500 if Sand would agree not to bear down too hard. When Sand reported the incident to his manager, Art Fletcher, the matter was brought to the attention of Commissioner Landis. The bribery plot was traced back to Giants coach Cozy Dolan, and both Dolan and O'Connell were eventually forever banned from organized baseball as a result. (The Washington Senators by Tom Deveaux.) Clark Griffith inspects progress adding bleachers to Griffith Stadium in advance of hosting the 1924 World Series: https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1678957429 |
#10
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"Nevertheless, oddsmakers were calling it pretty much a toss-up, and the Nats were favored to take the first game, what with Bucky Harris having promised to start Walter Johnson."
George, I assume to only reason the oddsmakers considered the 1024 WS a toss-up is that they assumed that Walter would win at least 2 games. Had the oddsmakers known that Johnson would lose his two starts, I assume the Giants would have been prohibitive favorites.
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Seeking very scarce/rare cards for my Sam Rice master collection, e.g., E210 York Caramel Type 2 (upgrade), 1931 W502, W504 (upgrade), W572 sepia, W573, 1922 Haffner's Bread, 1922 Keating Candy, 1922 Witmor Candy Type 2 (vertical back), 1926 Sports Co. of Am. with ad & blank backs. Also 1917 Merchants Bakery & Weil Baking cards of WaJo. Also E222 cards of Lipe, Revelle & Ryan. |
#11
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I'm sure that's right, Val, Walter was viewed as a difference maker; Game 1 was probably the only game in which the Nats were favored, at least outside of Washington.
With the uproar from fans queuing for tickets plainly audible beyond Griffith Stadium's walls, the Nats practiced inside, in private, for two days prior to the start of the Series. Bucky Harris wanted it that way. He had his charges working on squeeze plays, bunting drills, and defensive positioning and execution. Temporary bleachers had been set up in left field to accommodate the anticipated overflow crowd, and they had an influence on the outcome of game one. George Kelly's homer in those stands in the second inning was particularly galling, as it fell just beyond Goose Goslin's outstretched glove at the three-foot barrier. In the fourth inning, rookie Bill Terry reached the seats on the fly with a homer that would normally have been easily caught. Walter Johnson was on his game, though, and struck out the side in that inning. Travis Jackson became his fifth consecutive strikeout victim to open the fifth. Joe Judge, a lifetime .324 hitter during the season, got the Nats' first hit off of veteran southpaw Art Nehf of the Giants in the fourth, and in the sixth Earl McNeely broke the ice by doubling to left and coming around following consecutive ground-ball outs by Harris and Rice. In the eighth, with the Giants still ahead 2-1, Ross Youngs doubled down the left field line with one out. He moved to third on a groundout, the second out, and Bill Terry was walked intentionally. Terry attempted to steal second, the idea being that if Ruel threw to second, he might make it and Youngs could come in on the second part of the double steal. But Ruel gunned the ball to third, and Youngs, who had strayed one step too far, was out. In the top of the ninth, with two out, pitcher Art Nehf singled to right with Hack Wilson on second. Sam Rice charged the ball, scooped it up cleanly and relayed it about five feet up the line so that Ruel was able to jam it right into Wilson's neck. The crowd of 35,000-plus was delirious. https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1679045697 |
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