Lou Castro Explained

Luis Castro
Position:Second baseman
Bats:Right
Throws:Right
Birth Date:25 November 1876
Birth Place:Medellín, Antioquia, Colombia
Death Place:New York City, U.S.
Debutleague:MLB
Debutdate:April 23
Debutyear:1902
Debutteam:Philadelphia Athletics
Finalleague:MLB
Finaldate:September 27
Finalteam:Philadelphia Athletics
Statleague:MLB
Stat1label:Batting average
Stat1value:.245
Stat2label:Hits
Stat2value:35
Stat3label:Runs scored
Stat3value:18
Teams:
Highlights:

Luis Miguel Castro (November 25, 1876 – September 24, 1941), nicknamed "Jud" and "Count", was a professional baseball infielder who was born in Medellín, Colombia. He is considered the first Latin American to play in recognized Major League Baseball. Castro was a second baseman who played 42 games with the Philadelphia Athletics in their pennant-winning 1902 season.[1]

Early life

Luis Miguel Castro was born to Nestor Castro, a banker, and Inez Agnes Vasquez in Medellín on November 25, 1876. Castro's father fled the country during a of civil war; that experience was apparently traumatic for the young Castro, who told a Philadelphia reporter in 1902 (during another period of civil war) that he would "never go back home" because of the political violence. "If they don’t have a rebellion every few months the whole country gets an impatient idea that something has gone wrong. Then they begin a revolution to right it."[2]

Castro attended Manhattan College, a Catholic school, then located in Harlem. In 1895, at 18, he joined the college's Manhattan Jaspers baseball team, playing as a right-handed utility infielder, outfielder, and even as a pitcher; he was named by Sporting Life as one of the top college players on the East Coast by 1898.

Career

Castro was signed by Philadelphia Athletics manager Connie Mack while he was playing semi-pro ball in the Connecticut League. He was a replacement for Nap Lajoie, whose contract with the Athletics had been challenged in court by the cross-town Philadelphia Phillies; when the Pennsylvania Supreme Court barred Lajoie from playing for any other team in the state, the future Hall-of-Famer was traded to the Cleveland Bronchos, and Castro was called up as his replacement.

In his brief 42-game stint with the Athletics, he posted a .245 batting average, with one home run and 15 runs batted in, 35 hits, 18 runs scored, 8 doubles, 1 triple and two stolen bases in 143 at bats. Castro proved a decent hitter but a poor defender, and played sparingly through the second half of the season. Nevertheless, the Athletics would eventually win the American League pennant, and Castro, well-liked among his teammates, reportedly took it upon himself to act as master of ceremonies at the team's celebratory banquet.

Castro was released by the Athletics in 1903. He played in the Eastern League (today's International League), first with the Rochester Bronchos, who later traded him to the Baltimore Orioles; Castro hit .329 and led the league in triples (23). The next year he signed a $2,000 contract with the Portland Browns of the Pacific Coast League, briefly acting as team captain. On the West Coast, his foreign ancestry was more apparent, with one California newspaper describing him as walking "like a Mexican." Nevertheless, he was relatively well-liked and well known for his genial demeanor and practical jokes.

Castro played for various teams in the American Association and Southern Association, and managed teams in the South Atlantic and Virginia Leagues.

Ancestry

During his playing career, newspapers variously described Castro as being Colombian, Spanish, Mexican, Venezuelan, and Cuban. Castro himself was vague about his ancestry. In 1902, he claimed to be the nephew of Venezuela's then-president, Cipriano Castro, earning him the sobriquet "The President of Venezuela"; he later denied the relationship in 1909 (after President Castro had been deposed).

Castro applied for U.S. citizenship on July 10, 1917, noting his birthplace as Medellin, Colombia. However, in subsequent documents (a 1922 passport application and the 1930 US census) he listed his birthplace as New York. This has led to confusion about his birthplace. Baseball researcher Gary Ashwill suggests that Castro was not granted citizenship and, fearing reprisal, lied about his American birth from that point on. It is also possible that it was to receive economic benefits in his old age, as he did from the Association of Professional Baseball Players of America in 1937. What is clear is that Castro probably wanted to pass for an American citizen by birth.

Several baseball databases such as Baseball Reference and Baseball Almanac originally reflected his birthplace as New York, but the discovery of the ship's information and passenger list provides a solid and perhaps irrefutable proof about his immigration to America. Despite the fact that he was not the first player who was brought by a team to play in the Major Leagues, Castro is recognized and credited as the first Major League Baseball player ever born in a Latin American country.

Death and legacy

Castro died in New York City at the age of 64. He was buried with no tombstone at St. Mary's cemetery in Queens, New York.[3] According to the Society for American Baseball Research, Castro is at Division 10, row 9, number 18 in this cemetery.[4]

On July 20, 2021, Queens State Senator Jessica Ramos unveiled a new tombstone for the first Latino to play in Major League Baseball on Colombian Independence Day, at Mount St. Mary Cemetery in Flushing.[5]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Remembering Luis Castro, the first Latino in MLB . .
  2. Web site: Lou Castro . Society for American Baseball Research.
  3. Book: Leonte Landino . Juan Vene . Las mejores anécdotas del béisbol . Ediciones B . Venezuela . 212 . 1.
  4. Book: Landino . Leonte . La Prensa del Beisbol Latino . Society for American Baseball Research.
  5. Web site: Queens senator honors first Latino MLB player on Colombian Independence Day – QNS.com. Julia. Moro. July 21, 2021. qns.com.