2 1952 newspapers SATCHEL PAIGE PITCHES his 1st MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL SHUTOUT

2 1952 newspapers SATCHEL PAIGE PITCHES his 1st MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL SHUTOUT - inv # 4M-313

Please visit our EBAY STORE for THOUSANDS MORE HISTORICAL NEWSPAPERS for SALE or at auction

SEE PHOTO(s) - Two (2) COMPLETE ORIGINAL NEWSPAPERs, the Mobile Register (AL) dated Aug 7 and 8, 1952. These two newspapers contain coverage of SATCHEL PAIGE , the former NEGR0 LEAGUE baseball star, pitching his first Major League baseball shutout game, a 12-inning game won by his team, the St Louis Browns in the 12th inning 1-0.
 
On August 6, 1952 SATCHEL PAIGE threw a 12-inning shutout of the Detroit Tigers. It was his first shutout of his Major League baseball career.

Leroy Robert "Satchel" Paige (July 7, 1906 – June 8, 1982) was an American professional baseball pitcher who played in NEGR0 league baseball and Major League Baseball (MLB). His career spanned five decades and culminated with his induction into the National Baseball Hall of Fame.

A right-handed pitcher, Paige first played for the semi-professional Mobile Tigers from 1924 to 1926. He began his professional baseball career in 1926 with the Chattanooga Black Lookouts of the NEGR0 Southern League and became one of the most famous and successful players from the NEGR0 leagues. On town tours across the United States, Paige would sometimes have his infielders sit down behind him and then routinely strike out the side.

At age 42 in 1948, Paige made his major league debut for the Cleveland Indians. Paige was the first black pitcher to play in the American League and was the seventh black player to play in Major League Baseball. Also in 1948, Paige became the first player who had played in the Negro leagues to pitch in the World Series; the Indians won the Series that year. He played with the St. Louis Browns from 1951 to 1953, representing the team in the All-Star Game in 1952 and 1953. He played his last professional game on June 21, 1966, for the Peninsula Grays of the Carolina League. In 1971, Paige became the first electee of the Negro League Committee to be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame

Since capturing an unlikely pennant in 1944, the Browns had been among the worst teams in baseball, and struggled to draw fans in a city long dominated by the Cardinals. In 1951 Bill Veeck bought a controlling interest in the club and vowed to make changes as he did when he purchased the Cleveland Indians in 1946. The visionary owner had integrated the AL with the signing of NEGR0 Leagues star Larry Doby in 1947. In July 1948 he signed Satchel Paige, who by some estimates had probably already pitched in excess of 2,000 games in the NEGR0 Leagues, most notably with the Pittsburgh Crawfords and Kansas City Monarchs, and on barnstorming tours. The 41-year-old “rookie” became the first African-American pitcher in the major leagues, going 6-1 as the Indians went on to win the World Series. When Veeck was forced to sell the Indians after the 1949 season as part of a divorce settlement, Paige was subsequently released, his big-league career seemingly finished. A year and a half later, Satch got another chance when Veeck signed the ageless hurler to a Browns contract in July 1951. In his debut on July 18, he hurled eight innings in an eventual loss to the Washington Senators at Sportsman’s Park.

The seventh-place Browns (44-63) were in accustomed territory as they prepared to play the Tigers in the second game of a three-game set as part of a season-long 22-game homestand. Paige was one of the few bright spots for the Browns and skipper Marty Marion, the former Cardinals All-Star shortstop who had replaced Rogers Hornsby in the dugout about two months earlier. Paige had strung together 27? scoreless innings over 12 appearances as a reliever (May 8 to June 11). On June 20, the 6-foot-3, 180-pound Alabaman hurled 10 scoreless innings of relief in a 5-5 tie against Washington; 11 days later he tossed 10? innings of relief against Cleveland only to suffer a heartbreaking loss by surrendering two runs in the 19th inning. Paige’s unlikely performance thus far in ’52 was vindicated when New York’s Casey Stengel named him to the AL All-Star team, though he didn’t pitch in the game.

Paige (7-6, 3.00 ERA), making his 35th appearance and second start of the season, faced off against 35-year-old right-hander Virgil Trucks, long considered one of the hardest throwers in baseball. “Fire” Trucks entered the season with a stellar 103-72 career record in parts of 10 seasons, yet was in the midst of a confounding campaign. Despite his unsightly record (4-13), Trucks had already authored a no-hitter and one-hitter against Washington for the last-place Tigers (36-68). [Trucks would go on to toss his second no-hitter of the season, against New York, on August 25 en route to a 5-19 record].

Paige and Trucks weren’t strangers. Trucks told the author that while growing up in Birmingham he’d sneak into games at Rickwood Field to see Paige pitch for the Birmingham Black Barons in the late 1920s. Coincidentally, when Trucks was traded to the Browns for the 1953 season, Paige became his first black teammate, and they struck up a close friendship that included a barnstorming event featuring the two hurlers in 1959.

A Wednesday match-up of the league’s two worst teams drew a sparse crowd of 6,162 to Sportsman’s Park. The Browns threatened first when they filled the bases with no outs in the second on singles by Jim Delsing and Bobby Young and a walk to Joe DeMaestri. Paige hit a sharp grounder to first baseman Walt Dropo, who initiated a 3-2-3 double play by firing a strike to catcher Joe Ginsberg. Trucks whiffed Gordon Goldsberry to end the frame. The Browns had another good scoring opportunity in the fifth when Goldsberry led off with a double, only to have Trucks retire the next three batters in succession.

Described as a “venerable NEGR0,” in the insensitive parlance of the time, Paige rolled through the first five innings, yielding only three hits. The Tigers had their “first real chance,” opined the Detroit Free Press, when Neil Berry and Fred Hatfield lined consecutive two-out singles in the sixth. Paige dispatched cleanup hitter Dropo on a routine fly to left fielder Ray Coleman.

After Paige set down the Tigers in order in the seventh and eighth, Clint Courtney collected the Browns’ sixth hit, a one-out double. But once again, Trucks defused the threat, retiring Jim Dyck and then corralling Delsing’s “high bounder” and throwing to first to end the frame.

The Tigers seemed to have Paige on the ropes in the 10th. But the oldest player in the league, whom the United Press tabbed as “Old Mr. Unbelievable,” had a few more tricks up his sleeve. After Cliff Mapes led off with a double, Paige intentionally walked Ginsberg, setting up a potential double play. Light-hitting rookie Al Federoff’s bunt was perfectly placed to the third-base side, filling the bases with no outs. Skipper Fred Hutchinson sent Johnny Pesky to pinch-hit for Trucks, who had been on a roll, yielding only two of his six hits since the third inning. The move backfired as Pesky grounded sharply to first baseman Goldsberry, whose strike to Courtney nailed Mapes at the plate. Johnny Groth followed with a hard bouncer to rookie third baseman Dyck, whose missile to Courtney erased Ginsberg. Facing Berry with runners on second and third, Paige lofted “three very fast, sharp breaking curves,” wrote the Post-Dispatch. “Each one started for Neil Berry’s chest, then broke right over the heart of the plate.” Berry was called out on strikes to end the frame. The Browns’ defense and Paige’s performance were “hailed as actual victory,” gushed the Post-Dispatch. “[Paige] broke the Tigers’ spirit.”

Armed with what the Free Press described as “unusual baffling control,” Paige retired all six batters he faced in the 11th and 12th innings. One of those outs was by Dropo, who meekly grounded back to Paige to finish the game hitless in five at-bats. Frustrated by Paige the entire game and once falling after whiffing at a pitch, Dropo “exchanged heated words” with the pitcher at one point, according to the Post-Dispatch.

St. Louis got a break when Young led off the 12th with a sharp blow that caromed off second baseman Federoff’s glove for the Browns’ first hit against Hal White. (The right-hander had relieved Trucks to begin the 10th.) After Fred Marsh advanced Young to second on a sacrifice, Al Zarilla, pinch-hitting for Paige, was intentionally passed to set up a double play. Both Marsh and Zarilla moved up a station when Goldsberry’s grounder was too slow to turn a twin killing. White loaded the bases by intentionally walking Coleman to set up a do-or-die scenario with rookie Bob Nieman. The Cincinnati native, who ended the season leading the Browns in homers (18), RBIs (74), and batting average (.289), stroked a single over shortstop Berry’s head to drive in Young for the dramatic winning run, ending the game in 3 hours and 1 minute.

Nieman’s clutch single made a winner out of Paige, who yielded only seven hits and struck out a career-high nine batters in the longest outing of his big-league career. “[He] outpitched one of the standouts of the decade,” praised the Free Press. Reporters gathered around the affable hurler in the clubhouse after the game. “I told Marty that I had 100 outs in my arm last night and I sure used them all up,” said Paige in his Alabama drawl. “I made up my mind that there wasn’t gonna be no morning workout,” he continued, making reference to manager’s Marion’s practice of holding early-morning practices after losses.

The most excited person after the game might have been Bill Veeck, who kept an office and a small apartment in Sportsman’s Park, which he also owned. “This is the greatest baseball thrill I have had in many years,” said the cash-strapped owner, whose controversial stunts, such as 3-foot-7 pinch-hitter Eddie Gaedel and grandstand manager day (both of which occurred within a week the previous August), had infuriated other baseball owners.16 But “Ole Satch,” who never forgot the trust the master showman had in him, knew Veeck must have been an anxious, miserable wreck during the game. “I was thinking of ‘Old Burrhead’ (Paige’s pet name for Veeck) when I was going through those extra innings.” Paige finished his most productive campaign in the majors with a 12-10 record and a 3.07 ERA in 138 innings.


Very good condition. This listing includes the 2 complete entire original newspapers, NOT just a clipping or a page of them. STEPHEN A. GOLDMAN HISTORICAL NEWSPAPERS stands behind all of the items that we sell with a no questions asked, money back guarantee. Every item we sell is an original newspaper printed on the date indicated at the beginning of its description. U.S. buyers pay priority mail postage which includes waterproof plastic and a heavy cardboard flat to protect the purchased item from damage in the mail. Upon request by the buyer, we can ship by USPS Media Mail to reduce postage cost; however, please be aware that USPS Media Mail can be very slow in its time of transit to the buyer. International postage is quoted when we are informed as to where the package is to be sent. We do combine postage (to reduce postage costs) for multiple purchases sent in the same package.  We list thousands of rare newspapers with dates from 1570 through 2004 on Ebay each week. This is truly SIX CENTURIES OF HISTORY that YOU CAN OWN!

 Stephen A. Goldman Historical Newspapers has been in the business of buying and selling historical newspapers for over 50 years. Dr. Goldman is a consultant to the Freedom Forum Newseum and a member of the American Antiquarian Society. You can buy with confidence from us, knowing that we stand behind all of our historical items with a 100% money back guarantee. Let our 50+ years of experience work for YOU ! We have hundreds of thousands of historical newspapers (and their very early precursors) for sale.



Stephen A. Goldman Historical Newspapers has been in the business of buying and selling historical newspapers for over 50 years. We are located in the charming Maryland Eastern Shore town of OXFORD, Maryland.

Dr. Goldman is a consultant to the Freedom Forum Newseum and a member of the American Antiquarian Society. You can buy with confidence from us, knowing that we stand behind all of our historical items with a 100% money back guarantee. Let our 50+ years of experience work for YOU ! We have hundreds of thousands of historical newspapers (and their very early precursors) for sale.

We invite customer requests for historical newspapers that are not yet located in our extensive Ebay listing of items. With an inventory of nearly a million historical newspapers (and their early precursors) we are likely have just the one YOU are searching for.

WE ARE ALSO ACTIVE BUYERS OF HISTORICAL NEWSPAPERS, including large and small personal collections, bound volumes, significant individual issues, or deaccessions from libraries and historical societies. IF YOU WANT TO SELL, WE WANT TO BUY !!!

Powered by SixBit
Powered by SixBit's eCommerce Solution