Sam Crane Baseball player

Samuel Newhall Crane (January 2, 1854 – June 26, 1925) was an American second baseman and manager in Major League Baseball born in Springfield, Massachusetts. Crane played for eight different major league teams during his seven-year career that spanned from 1880 to 1890. During two of those seasons, he acted as a player-manager, once for the 1880 Buffalo Bisons of the National League and the 1884 Cincinnati Outlaw Reds of the short-lived Union Association.His career ended when he was arrested after having an affair with the wife of a fruit dealer and stealing $1,500 from the husband. After his playing days, Sam had a long and distinguished career as a sportswriter. In 1895, when he was writing for the New York Advertiser, he had become the center of a controversy when he wrote an article that harshly criticized the owner of the New York Giants, Andrew Freedman. Freedman, upon learning of existence of the article, barred Sam from entering the Polo Grounds. When Crane showed up for the August 16 game, he learned that his season pass was taken and his efforts to purchase a ticket were foiled.It was his connection to baseball as a player, manager, and sportswriter that lent credibility to his assertion that Cooperstown, New York be the location for a "memorial" to the great players from the past. Cooperstown was, at the time, the place that many people believed where Abner Doubleday had invented the game of baseball. It was this idea of a memorial that eventually led to the creation of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in 1939.Crane died at the age of 71 of pneumonia in New York City, and is interred at the Lutheran All Faith Cemetery in Middle Village, New York.

Personal facts

Sam Crane
Alias (AKA)Crane Samuel Newhall
Birth dateJanuary 02, 1854
Date of deathJune 26, 1925

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Baseball player

Career startMay 01, 1880
Career endJune 28, 1890
batting sideRight
former teams
San Francisco Giants
Buffalo Bisons (NL)
position
Second baseman
teams
Pittsburgh Pirates
San Francisco Giants
Detroit Wolverines
New York Metropolitans
Cincinnati Outlaw Reds
Washington Nationals (1886–89)
Buffalo Bisons (NL)
St. Louis Maroons / Indianapolis Hoosiers
throwing sideRight

Sam Crane on Wikipedia