John Morrill Baseball player

John Francis Morrill (February 19, 1855 – April 2, 1932), nicknamed "Honest John," was an American first baseman and manager in Major League Baseball who played from 1876 to 1890. Over the years he played all positions. Although he pitched a couple of games each season, he was primarily an infielder, and had a career batting average of .260. In an incredible season in 1883, he batted .316, played six different positions, and led the Boston Beaneaters to the National League pennant after taking over as manager from Jack Burdock in midseason.Morrill's parents were Irish emigrants to Boston. He was born in Boston, and raised five children. He died at the age of 77 in Brookline, Massachusetts, and interred at the Holyhood Cemetery.

Personal facts

John Morrill
Alias (AKA)Morrill John Francis; Morrill John F.; Honest John
Birth dateFebruary 19, 1855
Birth place
Boston
Date of deathApril 02, 1932

Search

Baseball player

Career startApril 24, 1876
Career endJuly 08, 1890
batting sideRight
former teams
Atlanta Braves
Boston Reds (1890–91)
position
Manager (baseball)
Infielder
teams
Atlanta Braves
Washington Nationals (1886–89)
Boston Reds (1890–91)
throwing sideRight

John Morrill on Wikipedia

External resources

  1. http://thedeadballera.com/Obits/Obits_M/Morrill.John.Obit.html