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Veeck, Bill

Biographical/Historical Info
Veeck, Bill

Inducted to the Hall of Fame in: 1991

Primary team: Chicago White Sox

Primary position: Executive

He was the man who brought a midget to home plate and explosives to the outfield of Comiskey Park. But beyond the flash, legendary owner Bill Veeck’s open-minded approach brought positive changes to the game of baseball.

Veeck was just four years old when his father, sportswriter William Veeck, Sr., was named president of the Chicago Cubs. As a teenager, the younger Veeck learned about team management while he worked as a vendor, ticket salesman and junior groundskeeper.

In 1941, Veeck partnered with former Cubs star Charlie Grimm to buy the Triple-A Milwaukee Brewers. Arriving in Milwaukee with just 11 dollars in his pocket, Veeck put his creative mind to work. He gave away live animals during Brewers games, scheduled morning games for night-shift workers and staged weddings at home plate. Five years and three American Association pennants later, Veeck sold the Brewers for a $275,000 profit.

After a stint in the Marines in World War II, during which he lost his right leg, Veeck sought a path into the major leagues. Devising a debenture-stock group that enabled financial backers to put the majority of their money into loans for the team, Veeck was able to become a minority owner of the Cleveland Indians for $268,000 in 1946.

Relishing his first chance in the big leagues, Veeck immediately enlivened a franchise that hadn’t won a World Series since 1920. He put the Indians’ games on the radio, staged a ‘Good Old Joe Earley Night’ for a fan who complained that the Indians were honoring everyone except the average Joe and regularly presented fireworks after games.

In 1947, Veeck made his biggest imprint to date when he signed Larry Doby as the first African-American player in American League history. Doby, who many believed would be the first African-American player throughout Organized Baseball before Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier, was the Indians starting center fielder a year later.

“One by one, (Indians manager) Lou (Boudreau) introduced me to each player,” Doby recalled. “All the guys put their hand out – all but three. As soon as he could, Bill Veeck got rid of those three.”

The following year, Veeck signed 42-year-old Negro League legend Satchel Paige, making Paige the oldest rookie in major league history. Later that fall, the Indians completed their transformation by winning their first World Series in 28 years. The Indians set an all-time record by drawing 2.6 million fans that season.

Never a man to look back, Veeck famously buried the Indians’ 1948 championship flag in 1949 when it was clear the team was not going to repeat. An expensive divorce settlement forced him to sell his stake in the team.

Veeck re-emerged two years later when he bought the struggling St. Louis Browns franchise. Though the Browns shared Sportsman’s Park with the more successful Cardinals, Veeck immediately ruffled the Redbirds’ feathers by hiring former Cardinals stars Rogers Hornsby and Marty Marion as managers. He also decorated Sportsman’s Park – at which the Cardinals were only tenants – exclusively with Browns memorabilia.

Though the stadium felt more accommodating, the Browns still struggled in 1951. Anxious to attract more fans, Veeck came up with arguably his most creative publicity stunt.

“What can I do,’ I asked myself, ‘that is so spectacular that no one will be able to say he had seen it before?’” Veeck recalled. “The answer was perfectly obvious: I would send a midget up to bat.”

On Aug. 19, 1951, a 3-foot-7 inch man named Eddie Gaedel walked to the plate as a pinch hitter for the Browns in the bottom of the first inning in the second game of a doubleheader against the Tigers. Wearing the uniform number “1/8,” Gaedel used his miniscule strike zone to draw a walk on four pitches. He was promptly replaced for a pinch runner at first base, completing his day as the shortest man to ever play in the major leagues. The next day, American League president Will Harridge denounced the stunt as a mockery of the game and voided Gaedel’s contract.

“I try not to break the rules but merely to test their elasticity,” Veeck would later say.

Five days after the Gaedel stunt, Veeck was at it again. He introduced Grandstand Manager’s Day in which fans were given placards that told manager Zack Taylor whether the team should steal a base, bunt or change pitchers. With Taylor sitting back in a rocking chair, Veeck and the fans skippered the Browns to a 5-3 victory over the Philadelphia Athletics.

“I have discovered in 20 years of moving around a ballpark that the knowledge of the game is usually in inverse proportion to the price of the seats,” Veeck said.

Attendance doubled for the Browns even though the team remained in the cellar from 1951-52. But despite Veeck’s best efforts, the Browns’ financial issues – coupled with increasing pressure from opposing owners – forced him to sell the team to a group from Baltimore after the 1953 season.

Veeck was back in baseball in 1959 when he bought a controlling interest in the Chicago White Sox. Later that year, the White Sox captured their first AL pennant in 40 seasons and set a team attendance record with 1.4 million paying fans. True to form, Veeck immediately made his mark by installing baseball’s first “exploding scoreboard” at Comiskey Park and adding players’ names to their uniforms.

Poor health forced Veeck to sell the White Sox in 1961, but he returned to the owner’s box at Comiskey in 1975. In his later years, Veeck was as active as ever. He conducted trades in a hotel lobby during the Winter Meetings, in full view of the public. He was the man who encouraged announcer Harry Caray, a future Ford C. Frick Award winner, to sing “Take Me Out to the Ballgame” to the Chicago faithful. And in 1979, Veeck saved his most explosive promotion for last when he hosted “Disco Demolition Night,” an event that caused a riot at Comiskey and forced the White Sox to forfeit a game to the Detroit Tigers.

After he sold the White Sox in 1981, Veeck would spend much of the next few years in the bleachers at Wrigley Field watching Cubs games. He passed away on Jan. 2, 1986.

Veeck was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1991.

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Bill Veeck Fishing negative, 1943
Object number: BL-1954-00230-121
Look magazine
1943
Bob Feller and Bill Veeck Negotiations photograph, 1946 December 30
Object number: B-1963-0120-017
Peoples, Tom
1946 December 30
Bob Feller in Conversation with Bill Veeck photograph, possibly 1949
Object number: BL-1968-04131-0023
New York Herald Tribune (Firm)
possibly 1949
Bob Feller with Bill Veeck photograph, 1948 January
Object number: BL-1968-04131-0029
New York Herald Tribune (Firm)
1948 January
Comiskey Park brick
Object number: B-1980-0087
Comiskey, Charles A.
undated
Connie Mack, George Weiss, Joe Cronin and Bill Veeck photograph, 1948 December 14
Object number: B-1963-0177-0001
Mack, Connie, 1862-1956
1948 December 14
Satchel Paige and Bill Veeck photograph, 1948 July 08
Object number: BL-1968-01451-0963
New York World-Telegram
1948 July 08
Object number: BL-1997-05302-026
Veeck, Bill
1949 September 10
The Sports Beat newspaper column, 1947 July 12
Object number: BL-1997-00571-052
Doby, Larry
1947 July 12
Sports Beat newspaper column, 1951 October 13
Object number: BL-1997-00571-112
Irvin, Monte, 1919-2016
1951 October 13
St. Louis Browns Baby Brownies certificate and letter, 1952 June 16
Object number: BL-2022-00064
Veeck, Bill
1952 June 16
Tommy Connolly, Bill Veeck, Rudy Schaffer, and Earl J. Hilligan photograph, 1947 May 22
Object number: BL-1968-01451-0098
New York World-Telegram
1947 May 22