Skip to main content

Mack, Connie, 1862-1956

Biographical/Historical Info
Mack, Connie, 1862-1956

Inducted to the Hall of Fame in: 1937

Primary team: Philadelphia Athletics

Primary position: Manager

"To me, the name of Connie Mack always has been synonymous with baseball, standing for everything that is best for the game he loved.” – Will Harridge.

Connie Mack was perhaps more synonymous with the team he managed than any skipper in baseball history. For 50 years, the slender Mack stood tall in the Philadelphia Athletics’ dugout in his trademark business suit and was known as The Grand Old Man of Baseball. During those five decades, Mack assembled two separate dynasties and won a total of nine AL pennants and five World Series titles.

Mack’s 65 years in baseball began as a catcher with the Washington Nationals in 1886. Throughout his playing career, he survived more on guile than raw ability. Mack was one of the first catchers to play directly behind home plate instead of setting up by the backstop. He was also famous for his abilities to fake the sound of a foul tip with his mouth and “tip” opposing players’ bats during their swings. After 11 major league seasons with Washington, Buffalo and Pittsburgh, Mack served three seasons as the Pirates’ manager before American League founder Ban Johnson asked him to establish a club in Philadelphia.

As manager, treasurer and part owner of the Athletics, Mack wielded unusual power during a tenure in Philadelphia that outlasted that of eight U.S. Presidents. The A’s were the American League’s first powerhouse franchise, capturing six of the league’s first 14 pennants – including four of five pennants between 1910-14.

But after winning World Series titles in 1910, 1911 and 1913, the A’s were swept in the 1914 Fall Classic by the Boston Braves and faced with an economic recession and the advent of the upstart Federal League, Mack took the unusual move of selling off the cornerstones of his championship clubs. Mack would repeat the decision after another Philadelphia dynasty won three straight pennants from 1929-31.

“No other manager in the history of the game ever handled more young players and brought more of them to stardom and to fortune,” wrote The New York Times in Mack’s obituary. “But it is probable that he will be best remembered for his sensational scrapping of championship machines.”

Even when his clubs bottomed out, however, Mack could be expected to rebuild his club back into winning form, piece by piece. Furthermore, he was genuinely beloved by his players for his leadership style that was both stern and gentle.

“He was a new type of manager,” The Times observed. “The old-time leaders ruled by force, often thrashing players who disobeyed orders on the field or broke club rules off the field. One of the kindest and most soft-spoken of men, he always insisted that he could get better results by kindness. He never humiliated a player by public criticism. No one ever heard him scold a man in the most trying times of his many pennant fights.”

Known as “The Tall Tactician,” Mack finally retired from the game of baseball after the 1950 season at the age of 87. In his unprecedented 53 years as a manager, Mack won 3,731 games – a feat that is unlikely to ever be matched. He received the Bok Award for his service to Philadelphia in 1929, which was a recognition typically saved for artists and business professionals. In 1937, Mack was part of the second class elected into the Hall of Fame.

"Humanity is the keystone that holds nations and men together,” Mack once said. “When that collapses, the whole structure crumbles. This is as true of baseball teams as any other pursuit in life."

Mack passed away on Feb. 8, 1956.

Read MoreRead Less
Sort:
Filters
54 results
Chicago Cubs World Series program, 1910 October 23
Object number: BL-2022-00030-008
Chicago Cubs (Baseball team)
1910 October 23
Connie Mack 87th Birthday photograph, 1949 December 22
Object number: B-1963-0828-0014
Mack, Connie, 1862-1956
1949 December 22
Connie Mack, Al Simmons, Earle Brucker, Skeeter Webb and Dave Keefe photograph, 1948 April 12
Object number: BL-1968-01451-1082
New York World-Telegram
1948 April 12
Connie Mack and Bobby Shantz Dugout photograph, circa 1949
Object number: BL-1968-01451-1101
New York World-Telegram
circa 1949
Connie Mack and Bob Dillinger photograph, 1950 March 01
Object number: B-1963-0828-0016
Mack, Connie, 1862-1956
1950 March 01
Connie Mack and Carl Scheib photograph, 1950 April 18
Object number: B-1963-0828-0008
Mack, Connie, 1862-1956
1950 April 18
Connie Mack and Clark Griffith photograph, 1919
Object number: B-1937-0018
Mack, Connie, 1862-1956
1919
Connie Mack and Eddie Collins photograph, 1930 September 20
Object number: BL-1968-01451-1093
New York World-Telegram
1930 September 20
Connie Mack and Eddie Rommel in Dugout photograph, between 1928 and 1930
Object number: BL-1968-01451-1092
New York World-Telegram
between 1928 and 1930
Connie Mack and Grandson photograph, 1947 August 20
Object number: B-1963-0177-0015
Mack, Connie, 1862-1956
1947 August 20
Connie Mack and Jack Littrell photograph, 1952 March 03
Object number: BL-1968-01451-1100
New York World-Telegram
1952 March 03
Connie Mack and Lefty Grove, 1928 September 12
Object number: BL-1968-00196-082
Mack, Connie, 1862-1956
1928 September 12