Jack Harper Baseball player

Charles William "Jack" Harper (April 2, 1878 – September 30, 1950) was a pitcher in Major League Baseball. He pitched eight seasons in the majors, from 1899 to 1906.Harper started his professional baseball career in 1898. After a short stint with the Cleveland Spiders, he had a good season with the Fort Wayne Indians of the Interstate League in 1900 (going 20-15). This got him into the majors for good.Over the next few seasons, Harper jumped from league to league, finally settling in with the Cincinnati Reds. He had his best season in 1904, when he went 23–9 with a 2.30 earned run average.On May 30, 1904, Harper hit Chicago Cubs first baseman Frank Chance three times in one game, the last of which knocked Chance out cold. By 1906, Chance had become the manager of the Cubs, and Harper was struggling on the mound. Chance traded for Harper, cut his salary by two-thirds, and sat him on the bench for the entire season.At that time, organized baseball had the reserve clause; Harper had to pitch for the Cubs or no team at all. He never played professional baseball again.

Personal facts

Jack Harper
Birth dateApril 02, 1878
Birth place
Galloway Pennsylvania
Date of deathSeptember 30, 1950
Place of death
Jamestown New York

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Baseball player

Career startSeptember 18, 1899
Career endJune 06, 1906
batting sideRight
former teams
Chicago Cubs
Cleveland Spiders
position
Pitcher
teams
Baltimore Orioles
Chicago Cubs
Cincinnati Reds
St. Louis Cardinals
Cleveland Spiders
throwing sideRight

Jack Harper on Wikipedia