Joe Quinn (second baseman) explained

Joe Quinn
Position:Second baseman / Manager
Birth Date:1862 12, df=yes[1]
Birth Place:Ipswich, Queensland, Australia
Death Place:St. Louis, Missouri, U.S.
Bats:Right
Throws:Right
Debutleague:MLB
Debutdate:26 April
Debutyear:1884
Debutteam:St. Louis Maroons
Finalleague:MLB
Finaldate:23 July
Finalyear:1901
Finalteam:Washington Senators
Statleague:MLB
Stat1label:Batting average
Stat1value:.261
Stat2label:Home runs
Stat2value:29
Stat3label:Runs batted in
Stat3value:794
Stat4label:Managerial record
Stat4value:23–132
Stat5label:Winning %
Stat5value:.148
Teams:As player

As manager

Joseph James Quinn (25 December 1864[2]  - 12 November 1940) was an Australian second baseman who played 17 seasons in Major League Baseball. He was the only Australian-born player to reach the major leagues until Craig Shipley in 1986.

Early life

Quinn was born in a squatters' camp outside Ipswich, Queensland, to poor immigrants from Ireland,[3] Patrick Quinn and Catherine, née McAfee. Quinn's father was a swagman and the family traveled Australia so that his father could find work. As a teenager, he moved with his family to rural Iowa. Despite not playing baseball before coming to the United States, he landed his first professional contract after playing only three years of amateur baseball in Dubuque, Iowa.

Career

Quinn started his career in 1884 with the Union Association's St. Louis Maroons, which won the pennant. He was one of few players from that league to later find success in the National League. Throughout his career, Quinn was known for his defensive skills, and he led NL second basemen in fielding percentage twice.

Quinn also had two stints as a big league manager, with the St. Louis Browns in 1895 and the Cleveland Spiders in 1899. His Browns club went 11–28 under his guidance, and the Spiders were even worse, going 12–104. His career .148 winning percentage is one of the lowest in baseball history.

He was, as a player, arguably the best hitter on the Spiders team that he managed, which is considered to have been the worst team in major league history.

He umpired two games; one each in 1894 and 1896.

In the offseason, Quinn was a mortician, and he owned a funeral home after his playing days ended. He died at age 77 in St. Louis, Missouri.

Quinn was inducted into the Baseball Australia Hall of Fame on 4 May 2013.

In 2014, the Australian sports writer Rochelle Llewelyn Nicholls published a biography of Joe "Undertaker" Quinn as Joe Quinn – Among the Rowdies.[4] [5]

See also

References

Notes

  1. Web site: Joe Quinn . mlb.com . 5 March 2020 .
  2. Some sources give 1862 as his year of birth.
  3. Book: Nicholls . Rochelle Llewelyn . Joe Quinn Among the Rowdies: The Life of Baseball's Honest Australian . 1 October 2014 . McFarland . 978-1-4766-1531-8 . 25 April 2024 . en.
  4. http://www.macarthuradvertiser.com.au/story/2142393/the-secrets-out-american-baseball-legend-was-actually-a-campbelltonian/?cs=1185 "The secret's out: American baseball legend was actually a Campbelltonian"
  5. Book: Llewelyn Nicholls, Rochelle. Joe Quinn – Among the Rowdies. McFarland & Company. 2014. 978-0786479801.

Sources

External links

, or Retrosheet