Sadie Houck Baseball player

Sargent Perry "Sadie" Houck (March 1856 – May 26, 1919) was a professional baseball player from 1879 to 1888. He played eight seasons of Major League Baseball, principally as a shortstop, for the Boston Red Caps, Providence Grays, Detroit Wolverines, Philadelphia Athletics, Baltimore Orioles, Washington Nationals, and New York Metropolitans.Houck was considered a solid defensive shortstop. During his prime years from of 1881, 1883 and 1884, he led either the National League or the American Association in assists (1883, 1884), putouts (1883), double plays (1881, 1883), and fielding percentage (1884) by a shortstop.Houck had a career batting average of .250 and ranked fourth in the National League with 35 extra base hits as a rookie in 1879. He was added to the National League's "blacklist" in September 1881, allegedly for being "addicted to drink," and barred from playing for or against any National League team. He was reinstated in 1883.

Personal facts

Sadie Houck
Alias (AKA)Houck Sargent Perry
Birth dateJanuary 01, 1856
Birth place
Washington D.C.
Date of deathMay 26, 1919
Place of death
Washington D.C.

Search

Baseball player

Career startMay 01, 1879
Career endSeptember 23, 1887
batting sideRight
former teams
Atlanta Braves
New York Metropolitans
position
Shortstop
teams
Atlanta Braves
Baltimore Orioles (19th century)
Detroit Wolverines
Providence Grays
New York Metropolitans
Philadelphia Athletics (American Association)
Washington Nationals (1886–89)
throwing sideRight

Sadie Houck on Wikipedia