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Eddie Collins, Bing Miller, and Tom Yawkey photograph, undated
Yawkey, Thomas A., 1903-1976
Eddie Collins, Bing Miller, and Tom Yawkey photograph, undated
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Yawkey, Thomas A., 1903-1976

BiographyInducted to the Hall of Fame in: 1980
Primary team: Boston Red Sox
Primary position: Executive

On his 30th birthday, Tom Yawkey came into a multimillion dollar inheritance left by his late uncle. Four days later, at the advice of Hall of Famer Eddie Collins, Yawkey bought the struggling Boston Red Sox franchise.

Over the next four-plus decades, Yawkey would become as synonymous with his franchise as perhaps any owner in baseball history. Along the way, Yawkey elevated his club from cellar dwellers to perennial contenders.

When Yawkey bought the Red Sox in 1933, the team had been consistently mired in baseball’s second division for more than a decade after selling Babe Ruth and many other star players to the New York Yankees. Upon assuming ownership, Yawkey opened his pocketbook and acquired some of the American League’s best players – including future Hall of Famers Joe Cronin, Jimmie Foxx, Rick Ferrell, Lefty Grove and Heinie Manush. By 1938, Boston was a contending team.

“Some men like to spend their dough on fast horses and other things that go fast,” Yawkey told writer Dan Daniel in 1937. “Some men like to go in for polo, for example, and spend thousands of dollars on ponies. Some go nuts for paintings, and give half a million for a hunk of canvas in a fancy frame. But my passion is baseball. My idea of heaven is a pennant winner. Boston would go nuts over a winner, and maybe someday we’ll get all the dough back. But in the meantime, don’t let anybody tell you Tom Yawkey is a sucker.”

Yawkey transferred his attention toward the minor leagues by the late 1930s, when the Red Sox purchased future All-Star prospects Bobby Doerr, Ted Williams and Dom DiMaggio from the Pacific Coast League. In 1942, Yawkey’s home-grown Red Sox recorded 93 wins, setting the franchise’s best mark since 1915.

When Williams returned home from World War II, the Red Sox delivered Yawkey his long-desired pennant in 1946.

Beyond the Red Sox’s fortunes on the field, Yawkey was tremendously popular in Boston for his generosity. To players like Williams, Yawkey was more than a savior for the franchise; he was a beloved grandfather-like figure.

“(Yawkey) had a heart as big as a watermelon,” the “Splendid Splinter” once said. “I loved the man from the bottom of my heart. He was unselfish, fair, sincere and honest.”

Yawkey established a long-lasting partnership between the Red Sox and the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in 1953, and set up a fund for Boston-area student athletes following the death of Red Sox player Harry Agganis in 1955.

“I was always taught to help others; that those of us fortunate enough to be born with material abundance should do what we can for those who are not,” Yawkey said. “I do what I can.”

Under Yawkey’s leadership, the Red Sox captured additional pennants in 1967 and 1975, falling one game short of a World Series Championship in each season.

But Yawkey's legacy is complicated. Despite his alleged readiness to sign quality ballplayers regardless of race, Yawkey repeatedly accepted his scouts’ claims that they could not find Black ballplayers good enough to play in the majors. The Red Sox became the last major league club to integrate, with infielder Pumpsie Green debuting in Boston a dozen years after Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier in 1947. As the sole owner of the Red Sox, Yawkey ultimately bears the responsibility for the inaction of his franchise.

Yawkey passed away on July 9, 1976. He was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1980.