Li'l Rastus
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Ulysses Simon Harrison (born ), known as Li'l Rastus and Rastus Simon, was an African American teenager who served as a mascot of the
Detroit Tigers The Detroit Tigers are an American professional baseball team based in Detroit. The Tigers compete in Major League Baseball (MLB) as a member of the American League (AL) Central division. One of the AL's eight charter franchises, the club was f ...
baseball team from 1908 to 1910.


Tigers mascot

In the early 1900s, it was not unusual for Major League Baseball teams to casually retain one or more Street children, urchins to act as mascots or Batboy, batboys. Their employment might only last as long as a team's winning streak, and often their only wages were food and shelter. On July 4, 1908, the ''Detroit Free Press'' reported that the Tigers had begun traveling with a new mascot, "Rastus," who had been "picked up by Germany Schaefer, [Germany] Schaefer" during the team's recent road trip to Chicago. "He will have a home as long as the present streak lasts," the report added. Harrison served as a mascot for the next three months for the pennant-winning Tigers, who would rub the youth's head for good luck. He traveled with team and even warmed up Tigers pitchers from time to time. Harrison was dismissed as the Tigers' mascot near the end of the 1908 season, shortly before the Detroiters captured the American League pennant. "Rastus, the negro mascot, has been chased again," wrote the ''Detroit Free Press''. "Hughie Jennings, [Manager Hughie] Jennings let him out today and they got a world's series decision. It looks as if Rastus is gone for good." Harrison's services were quickly enlisted by the National League champion Chicago Cubs, the Tigers' 1908 World Series, World Series opponent, who went on to win the series four game to one. Despite his firing, the Tigers brought Harrison back for another pennant-winning season in 1909. By the start of the 1909 World Series, World Series, Harrison numbered among a half dozen Tigers mascots, including two other boys, one white and one black, who acted as chief mascots. At season's end, Harrison returned home to St. Louis. Before the start of the 1910 season, the ''Detroit Free Press'' commented on his itinerant life: Harrison was relieved of his duties as mascot for the second and final time in June 1910. After his "unconditional release," he worked briefly as a driver for an ash hauling company.


Relationship with Ty Cobb

Ty Cobb emerged as Harrison's "main defender and patron," according to sportswriter H. G. Salsinger. Unlike other Tigers players, Cobb did not rub Harrison's head for good luck, and ensured that he avoided detection while traveling in Racial segregation in the United States, segregated trains and hotels. During the 1908 and 1909 offseasons, Cobb brought Harrison to Augusta, Georgia to work as a Domestic worker, domestic and assistant at Cobb's automobile showroom. By 1916, Harrison was a 24-year-old married man working as chaffeur for Detroit construction mogul F. H. Hubbard, a job he might have secured with Cobb's assistance. A photo of Harrison and Cobb shaking hands at Navin Field appeared in the ''Detroit News'' in 1918.


See also

* Rastus * Louis Van Zelst


References


Bibliography

{{DEFAULTSORT:Lil Rastus Year of death missing Major League Baseball team mascots Detroit Tigers