Kewanee Boilermakers
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Kewanee Boilermakers
The Kewanee Boilermakers were a minor league baseball team based in Kewanee, Illinois. From 1908 to 1913, the Boilermakers played exclusively as members of the Central Association, hosting home games at Terminal Park. The 1948 Kewanee A's succeeded the Boilermakers in minor league play. The Boilermakers moniker was adopted and still in use by Kewanee High School. History Minor league baseball began in Kewanee, Illinois when the 1908 Kewanee "Boilermakers" became charter members of the Class D level Central Association, with Kewanee fielding a minor league baseball team for the first time. Kewanee was joined by the Burlington Pathfinders, Keokuk Indians, Jacksonville Lunatics, Oskaloosa Quakers, Ottumwa Packers, Quincy Gems and the Waterloo Lulus as charter members in the eight–team league, beginning league play on May 7, 1908. The Kewanee use of the "Boilermakers" moniker corresponds to local industry. The local Kewanee Boiler Company, was a large manufacturing factory in ...
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Streator Speedboys
Streator is a city in LaSalle and Livingston counties in the U.S. state of Illinois. The city is situated on the Vermilion River approximately southwest of Chicago in the prairie and farm land of north-central Illinois. As of the 2020 census, the population of Streator was 12,500. History Although settlements had occasionally existed in the area, they were not permanent. In 1824, surveyors for the Illinois and Michigan Canal which would extend from Chicago's Bridgeport neighborhood to the Illinois River, a tributary of the Mississippi River, arrived in this area of the Vermillion River, followed by homesteaders by the 1830s. In 1861, miner John O'Neill established a trading post called "Hardscrabble" (ironically an early name for the Bridgeport neighborhood), supposedly because he watched loaded animals struggle up the river's banks. Another name for the new settlement was "Unionville". Streator received its current name to honor Worthy S. Streator, an Ohio industrialist ...
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Fred House (baseball)
Willard Edwin "Fred" House (October 3, 1890 – November 16, 1923) was a Major League Baseball pitcher who played for the Detroit Tigers in . He died in Kansas City, Missouri in 1923 of appendicitis. References External links

1890 births 1923 deaths Detroit Tigers players Major League Baseball pitchers Baseball players from Missouri Kewanee Boilermakers players Deaths from appendicitis {{US-baseball-pitcher-1890s-stub ...
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Rowdy Elliott
Harold Bell Elliott owdy(July 8, 1890 – February 12, 1934) was a catcher in Major League Baseball who played for the Boston Doves, Chicago Cubs and Brooklyn Robins in parts of five seasons spanning 1910–1920. Listed at 5' 9", 160 lb., Elliott batted and threw right handed. He was born in Kokomo, Indiana. Elliott spent 23 years in baseball between 1907 and 1929, which included his five in the majors and 20 in the minor leagues, while losing most of 1918 when he joined the United States Navy during World War I. On February 23, 1920, Elliott married Helena McKerman, a native of North Dakota, in Alameda County, California. He died at the age of 43 at Harbor Hospital in San Francisco, California San Francisco (; Spanish for " Saint Francis"), officially the City and County of San Francisco, is the commercial, financial, and cultural center of Northern California. The city proper is the fourth most populous in California and 17th ... from injuries received in a fa ...
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Tom Drohan
Thomas F. Drohan (August 26, 1887 – September 17, 1926) was a professional baseball pitcher from 1908 to 1917. He played one season in Major League Baseball for the Washington Senators. Drohan was 5 feet, 10 inches tall and weighed 175 pounds."Tom Drohan Statistics and History"
baseball-reference.com. Retrieved October 9, 2011.


Career

Drohan was born in , in 1887. He started his professional baseball career in 1908. That season, he had a

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Al Demaree
Albert Wentworth Demaree (September 8, 1884 – April 30, 1962) was an American professional baseball pitcher, who played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the New York Giants, Philadelphia Phillies, Chicago Cubs, and Boston Braves, from 1912 to 1919. Demaree posted an 80-72 won-loss record with a 2.77 earned run average (ERA), with 514 strikeouts, and 15 shutouts, in 1,424 innings pitched. Although a weak hitter, posting a .118 batting average (54-for-456), he was an above fielding pitcher, recording a .980 fielding percentage, committing only 7 errors in 352 total chances In baseball statistics, total chances (TC), also called ''chances offered'', represents the number of plays in which a defensive player has participated. It is the sum of putouts plus assists plus errors. ''Chances accepted'' refers to the total .... External links Al Demareeat SABR (Baseball BioProject) 1884 births 1962 deaths Major League Baseball pitchers New York Giants (NL) players Philadelph ...
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Dave Callahan
David Joseph Callahan (July 20, 1888 – October 28, 1969) was a Major League Baseball outfielder who played for two seasons. He played for the Cleveland Naps from 1910 to 1911. Career Callahan made his debut for the Naps around the same time as a young Shoeless Joe Jackson. Cleveland's manager, Jimmy McAleer James Robert "Loafer" McAleer (July 10, 1864April 29, 1931) was an American center fielder, manager, and stockholder in Major League Baseball who assisted in establishing the American League. He spent most of his 13-season playing career with t ..., seemed more hopeful about Callahan's prospects, saying that Callahan was the best outfielder to arrive in Cleveland in a decade. Callahan spent two years with the team, but he played in only 19 games before leaving the major leagues in 1911. References External links 1888 births 1969 deaths Cleveland Naps players Major League Baseball outfielders Kewanee Boilermakers players Springfield Senators players Eau Clair ...
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Hick Cady
Forrest Leroy "Hick" Cady (January 26, 1886 – March 3, 1946) was a backup catcher in Major League Baseball who played for the Boston Red Sox (1912–17) and Philadelphia Phillies (1919). Cady batted and threw right-handed. He was born in Bishop Hill, Illinois. In a seven-season career, Cady was a .240 hitter with one home run and 74  RBI in 355 games played. Cady managed in the minors in 1922 and 1924. Cady died in a hotel fire in Cedar Rapids, Iowa Cedar Rapids () is the second-largest city in Iowa, United States and is the county seat of Linn County, Iowa, Linn County. The city lies on both banks of the Cedar River (Iowa River), Cedar River, north of Iowa City, Iowa, Iowa City and north ..., at the age of 60. References External links Baseball Almanac* 1886 births 1946 deaths People from Bishop Hill, Illinois Boston Red Sox players Philadelphia Phillies players Major League Baseball catchers Baseball players from Illinois Accidental deaths in Io ...
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Coonie Blank
Frank Ignatz Blank (October 18, 1892 – December 8, 1961) was a catcher in Major League Baseball Major League Baseball (MLB) is a professional baseball organization and the oldest major professional sports league in the world. MLB is composed of 30 total teams, divided equally between the National League (NL) and the American League (AL), .... He played in one game for the St. Louis Cardinals on August 15, 1909, and was hitless in two at-bats. External links 1892 births 1961 deaths Baseball players from Missouri Major League Baseball catchers St. Louis Cardinals players Jacksonville Lunatics players Kewanee Boilermakers players Burlington Pathfinders players Guthrie Senators players Taylorville Christians players Lyons Lions players {{US-baseball-catcher-1890s-stub ...
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Marty Berghammer
Martin Andrew Berghammer (June 18, 1888 – December 21, 1957) was a Major League Baseball shortstop who played for four seasons. He played for the Chicago White Sox in 1911 and the Cincinnati Reds from 1913 to 1914. He also played for the Pittsburgh Rebels of the Federal League The Federal League of Base Ball Clubs, known simply as the Federal League, was an American professional baseball league that played its first season as a minor league in 1913 and operated as a "third major league", in competition with the e ... in 1915. Berghammer was a member of the St. Paul Saints club for ten seasons before starting his managerial career. He was obtained by the Saints from the Pittsburgh Feds and played as a shortstop in St. Paul, but shifted to second base in 1918 and developed a reputation as one of the best second sackers in the league. Known as the Tulsa Spitfire, he became the manager of the Milwaukee Brewers in 1929, taking over as director of the club after Jack Lelivelt ...
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Moline, Illinois
Moline ( ) is a city located in Rock Island County, Illinois, United States. With a population of 42,985 in 2020, it is the largest city in Rock Island County. Moline is one of the Quad Cities, along with neighboring East Moline, Illinois, East Moline and Rock Island, Illinois, Rock Island in Illinois and the cities of Davenport, Iowa, Davenport and Bettendorf, Iowa, Bettendorf in Iowa. The Quad Cities have an estimated population of 381,342. The city is the ninth-most populated city in Illinois outside the Chicago Metropolitan Area. The John Deere World Headquarters, corporate headquarters of Deere & Company is located in Moline, as was Montgomery Elevator, which was founded and headquartered in Moline until 1997, when it was acquired by Kone Elevator, which has its U.S. Division headquartered in Moline. Quad City International Airport, Black Hawk College, and the Quad Cities campus of Western Illinois University-Quad Cities are located in Moline. Moline is a retail hub for the Il ...
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Moline A's
Moline may refer to: Places in the United States * Moline, Illinois, the largest city of that name in the United States * Moline Township, Rock Island County, Illinois * Moline, Kansas * Moline, Michigan, an unincorporated community * Moline, Ohio, an unincorporated community People * Charles Moline (1863–1927), Anglo-Austrian businessman and cricketer * Edgar Moline (1855–1943), Anglo-Austrian cricketer * Georganne Moline (born 1990), American hurdler * Jack Moline (born 1952), American Conservative rabbi * Matt Moline, ex-husband of Kathy Griffin * Pierre-Louis Moline (c. 1740–1820), French dramatist, poet and librettist * Robert Moline (1889-1979), Australian Anglican bishop and Archbishop of Perth Other uses * Moline Automobile Company (1904–1919), American automobile manufacturer in Moline, Illinois * Moline Plow Company, a former American manufacturer of plows and other farm implements based in Moline, Illinois * Moline High School, Moline, Illinois * Moline ...
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