Charlie Gould Baseball player

Charles Harvey Gould (August 21, 1847 – April 9, 1917), nicknamed "The Bushel Basket", was an American Major League Baseball player during the 1860s and 1870s. He was the first baseman for the original Cincinnati Red Stockings of 1869 and 1870, the first team consisting entirely of professional players. He was the only native Cincinnatian on the club.Gould was noted as having an affable personality, and for being six feet tall, the only such player on the Red Stockings that tall. His height and long arms were physical traits that factored in his high fielding proficiency. He was rarely noted for making errors, or "muffing" the ball during his career, but it was his throwing error in the eleventh inning of a game between the Red Stockings and the Brooklyn Atlantics in 1870, that allowed the winning run to score, ending the Stockings' winning streak, which was at 84 games.He returned home in 1876 to lead the new club that was a charter member of the National League. In all he played about twelve seasons of "bare hand" first base for major teams.

Personal facts

Charlie Gould
Alias (AKA)Gould Charles Harvey
Birth dateAugust 21, 1847
Birth place
Cincinnati
Date of deathApril 09, 1917
Place of death
Flushing Queens

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Baseball player

Career startMay 05, 1871
Career endJuly 12, 1877
batting sideRight
former teams
History of the Atlanta Braves
Cincinnati Reds (1876–80)
position
First baseman
teams
Cincinnati Red Stockings
Baltimore Canaries
National Association of Base Ball Players
New Haven Elm Citys
History of the Atlanta Braves
Cincinnati Reds (1876–80)
throwing sideRight

Charlie Gould on Wikipedia