Lewis J. Brown (February 1, 1858 – January 15, 1889) was an American Major League Baseball catcher and first baseman for seven seasons and played for six different teams from 1876 to 1884. Brown was primarily a catcher, but he also logged over 100 games as a first baseman. He also appeared twice as a pitcher.
Lew Brown | |
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Catcher/First baseman | |
Born: (1858-02-01)February 1, 1858 Leominster, Massachusetts | |
Died: January 15, 1889(1889-01-15) (aged 30) Boston, Massachusetts | |
Batted: Right Threw: Right | |
MLB debut | |
June 17, 1876, for the Boston Red Caps | |
Last MLB appearance | |
October 19, 1884, for the Boston Reds | |
MLB statistics | |
Batting average | .248 |
Home runs | 10 |
Runs batted in | 169 |
Teams | |
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Before playing in the major leagues, Brown was a member of the Boston Stars, a popular amateur team that played at Boston Common. He was teammates on that club with future major league player John Morrill.[1]
In 1876, Brown debuted in the major leagues. Two of his early teams - the 1877 Boston Red Caps and the 1879 Providence Grays - won league pennants.[1] Brown missed the 1882 season due to being blacklisted for "confirmed dissipation and general insubordination."[2] He retired from baseball after the 1884 season.
By 1887, he was working as a bartender at the Saracen's Head, a Boston saloon run by the widow of boxer Joe Goss. He played in a benefit game that year with other retired players at the South End Grounds, and he had gained a surprising amount of weight since leaving baseball.[3] By July 1888, Brown said that he had reduced his weight to 214 pounds and that he was hoping to play baseball again.[4]
In 1889, Brown died at the Boston City Hospital at the age of 30. The Chicago Tribune explained further: One night at the Saracen's Head, Brown was engaged in a friendly wrestling match with a customer, and the men did not stop wrestling when Mrs. Goss asked them to do so. She became angry and swung at the men with a piece of gas pipe, striking Brown in the knee. The injury led to the amputation of Brown's leg, and he was said to have been left in a weak and delirious state. He died of pneumonia during that hospitalization.[5]
Brown is interred at Forest Hills Cemetery.[6]
Boston Red Caps 1877 National League champions | |
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Providence Grays 1879 National League champions | |
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