Alfred Lawson Baseball player

Alfred William Lawson (March 24, 1869 – November 29, 1954) was a professional baseball player, manager and league promoter from 1887 through 1916 and went on to play a pioneering role in the US aircraft industry, publishing two early aviation trade journals. In 1904, he also wrote a novel, Born Again, clearly inspired by the popular Utopian fantasy Looking Backward by Edward Bellamy, an early harbinger of the metaphysical turn his career would take with the theory of Lawsonomy. He is frequently cited as the inventor of the airliner and was awarded several of the first air mail contracts, which he ultimately could not fulfill. He founded the Lawson Aircraft Company in Green Bay, Wisconsin, to build military training aircraft and later the Lawson Airplane Company in South Milwaukee, Wisconsin, to build airliners. The crash of his ambitious Lawson L-4 "Midnight Liner" during its trial flight takeoff on May 8, 1921, ended his best chance for commercial aviation success.

Personal facts

Alfred Lawson
Birth dateMarch 24, 1869
Birth place
London
Date of deathNovember 29, 1954
Place of death
San Antonio
Resting place
Cremation
Known for
Baseball

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Baseball player

Career startMay 13, 1890
Career endJune 02, 1890
batting sideRight
former teams
Atlanta Braves
Pittsburgh Pirates
teams
Atlanta Braves
Pittsburgh Pirates
throwing sideRight

Alfred Lawson on Wikipedia

External resources

  1. http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1499&dat=19810205&id=MmcaAAAAIBAJ&sjid=xSsEAAAAIBAJ&pg=4434,3295769
  2. http://www.lawsonomy.org/Lawsonomy11.html
  3. http://www.onmilwaukee.com/sports/articles/lawson.html
  4. http://www.wisconsinaviationhalloffame.org/blog/?tag=alfred-lawson