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Henry Kimbro now recognized as the 1947 MLB batting champion

Discussion in 'GatorGrowl's Diamond Gators' started by gatorjjh, Jul 11, 2024.

  1. gatorjjh

    gatorjjh A Gator with a Glass half full attitude Moderator VIP Member

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    BY JOEY KNIGHT TAMPA BAY TIMES
    The patriarch rarely spoke of his previous life. Henry Kimbro, a workaholic dad of three who ran a gas station and cab company in his native Nashville, had no time for chit-chat or reminiscing.With his Negro League statistics being added to the MLB historical record, Kimbro is now recognized as the 1947 MLB batting champion.

    Even his own kids, throughout prepubesence, were unaware they lived with one of the most feared leadoff hitters in the rich history of the Negro Leagues.

    “I didn’t find out until I was in high school, and he wouldn’t tell me,” said Dr. Harriet Kimbro-Hamilton, the second-oldest of three children born to Kimbro and his Cuban wife, Erbia.

    “I was at his gas station that he had … and a lot of the older ballplayers, all of his old cronies that he played with, they would come by. So one of them named Butch McCord came up to me and said, ‘Did you know your dad was a hell of a ball player?’ I was like, ‘Who are you talking about?’ He said, ‘Your dad.’ “

    In a sense, Kimbro’s lack of pretension reflected the league in which he flourished for a dozen years — understated and woefully under-represented.

    Until now.

    In May, Major League Baseball announced that Negro Leagues stats — specifically from seven different Negro Leagues from 1920-1948 — officially have been added to its historical record. As a result, Josh Gibson, arguably the best-known Negro League player, is the all-time major-league batting champion (.372) and career leader in slugging percentage (.718).

    And Henry Kimbro? A quarter-century after his death, he is recognized as the MLB batting champion for 1947, when he hit .385 for the Baltimore Elite Giants. A dude named Ted Williams is fifth (.343).

    “It does (mean something) because they’re finally getting the recognition that they deserved,” said Maria Drew, Kimbro’s youngest daughter and the assistant director of admissions at St. Petersburg College. “It’s kind of twofold because it’s sad, because most of these guys have passed on and they will never know that that is the case.”

    But at least posterity will know. For Drew and her siblings, that’s a significant step for at least two generations of Black players who statistically were marginalized, segregated and often subject to harsh discrimination.

    “That means that a wrong has been corrected, because of course the greatest thing that came out of this move was Josh Gibson,” said Kimbro-Hamilton, 70, who published a book on her father’s life and career. “That’s a major, major move for Major League Baseball to recognize the greatness that was already there, side by side.

    “All the biggies that everybody knows about, but not only them, but people like my father who were not known, they were baseball greats. And they were very, very gifted. And if it had not been for the barrier of segregation, then they would’ve taken their place in baseball history long before this. … So that has been corrected.”

    A man of few words
    Drew, 58, recalls her father — whose five kids include two older children from previous relationships — as a humble, hard-working paradox: a chain smoker who remained athletic and trim, a victim of the Jim Crow South who bore no long-term bitterness, and a living, breathing reservoir of baseball memories who had little time for nostalgia.

    “I’m learning it almost as everybody else because, I’ll be honest, when I was a kid he was very modest,” said Drew, a widow who has resided in St. Petersburg since 2000. “He never talked about baseball. It wasn’t really until I got into middle school and high school that I realized he was a baseball player in another life. And only when I would ask him about it, he would tell me about it.”

    Through probing and prodding, Drew and her siblings learned that Henry Kimbro was a sleek, stocky (5-foot-8, 175 pounds) slap hitter who amassed a .300 career batting average (per baseball-reference.com) with three clubs over a dozen Negro League seasons (1937-1948). Most of his career was spent with the Baltimore Elite Giants, who pronounced the middle word as “e-LIGHT.”

    Though not noted for his power, he was one of the few players to launch a home run over Briggs Stadium in Detroit. He ultimately started in five East-West All-Star games (and was a late substitute in another), and hit .300 or better four times.

    But hardship seemed to accompany every hit. Kimbro and his teammates often were denied entry to hotels or restaurants, and were forced to sleep and eat inside the vehicles transporting them from town to town.

    In one of his rare revelations, he told his daughter about his team’s sprawling station wagon that couldn’t quite accommodate every player. “Everyone, their stuff, the equipment, everything fit in the car except for one person,” Drew recalled her dad telling her.

    “And they would draw straws to see who literally would ride on the hood of the car. And they weren’t going from say, St. Pete to Clearwater. These guys were going from New York to Birmingham to Kansas City to Baltimore. … And back then, cars didn’t go like, 80 miles an hour. … And it wasn’t always a nice day either. I mean, that’s ridiculous.”

    A bad rap
    Equally ridiculous, according to Kimbro-Hamilton, was the reputation Kimbro acquired over time. One of the oldest of 10 children born in Nashville, Kimbro’s father died at an early age. That tragedy, coupled with the fact that the nearest segregated school was 12 miles one way, resulted in Kimbro dropping out in the sixth grade to help his family survive.

    Because he had a limited education, Kimbro felt he couldn’t communicate well, Kimbro-Hamilton said. That fact, along with an incendiary sense of self-pride, led to him being labeled as aloof, sullen and often difficult to manage.

    “That was just a farce. He was one of the smartest men I ever met, and I’ve met quite a few smart men in my time,” said Kimbro-Hamilton, who earned a doctorate in sports administration at Temple and became the first women’s basketball coach at Bethune-Cookman.

    “My father was a very smart man. He was an astute businessman. … He was way more than he thought he was.”

    But he possessed the self-awareness to realize he never could have silently withstood the discrimination and death threats leveled against Jackie Robinson when he broke Major League Baseball’s color barrier in 1947. By then, Kimbro was 35, his window for big-league entry virtually shut.

    “He was a man that had a great heart, he was a very good man. But you couldn’t step on his toes,” Kimbro-Hamilton said.

    I said, ‘Daddy, could you have done what Robinson did?’ He said, ‘Oh, hell no.’ And this is what he said, ‘Because somebody would’ve been in the jail, and somebody would’ve been under the jail.’ And you knew what that meant. White players, all they had to do was step on his toes, or look like they were going to step on his toes, and it would’ve been over.”

    Kimbro seemed to soften as he approached his septuagenarian years, evolving into an ambassador of his marginalized pastime who would spend hours at a Negro League memorabilia shop in Nashville swapping memories with old peers or sharing them with strangers. He died in the summer of 1999 at age 87 and was inducted posthumously into the Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame five years later.

    Today’s he is enshrined in Major League Baseball annals. Call it validation arriving in increments, generation by generation.

    “He was a huge influence in my life,” Drew said. “I love my mother to death, but you have certain bonds with certain parents, and he was mine. … I used to say, ‘Didn’t you used to get angry (at the discrimination)?’ He was like, ‘No, that’s just the way it was.
     
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  2. Gatorrick22

    Gatorrick22 GC Hall of Fame

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    So... when are they going to count the minor leagues too? The A league, AA league and AAA league in these stats?
     
    Last edited: Jul 12, 2024
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  3. shelbygt350

    shelbygt350 VIP Member

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    It is sad, in fact horrid, that many a great baseball player in the USA was denied the opportunity to play MLB. But now some 75 years later to reinvent history....which is simply deception.

    Josh Gibson was a great hitter in the Negro League for 12 years. Played in 50 games a year, a total of 602 games. If a white guy say in the 1950s played 4 years in the Majors and a total of 602 game with amazing stats would he be eligible for the HOF? No.

    So why kid ourselves. All this does is divide people into thinking why are we rigging the stats to favor one skin tone over another....oh wait DEI. I say we then include the Women's League for the WW II era.
     
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  4. GatorLurker

    GatorLurker GC Hall of Fame

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    So maybe we throw out all of the white only year stats in MLB as well?

    There is a problem and I don't know if MLB came up with the right solution. But the great Negro League players would have been stars in MLB. To what level we will never know. But Willie Mays started in the Negro Leagues and he was a decent ball player. LOL. Satchel Paige was 42 years old (and probably older) when he had his MLB debut and could still get guys out.

    White team owners used to say if any of them (and you know who they were talking about) were good enough they would play. What a crock.
     
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  5. jaxg8r

    jaxg8r VIP Member

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    Sadaharu Oh, and his 868 NPB HR's, says konnichiwa. And just for context, Phil Niekro was getting MLB hitters out when he was 48 years old. "To what level we will never know". Yet, some assume to know.

    Revisionist history. A riddle, wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma.
     
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  6. gatorjjh

    gatorjjh A Gator with a Glass half full attitude Moderator VIP Member

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    Henry Kimbro
    upload_2024-7-12_7-3-54.jpeg

    [​IMG]
    1945 Baltimore Elite Giants. Henry Kimbro is bottom row, third from right.
     
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  7. candymanfromgc

    candymanfromgc Moderator VIP Member

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    Ted Williams missed 4 seasons due to war. He should get credit for at least 800 hits and 160 homers. Lets just add them to his stats. Kofax had his career cut short, lets give him at leadt 1000 ks and 2 more no hitters.
     
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  8. jdgator

    jdgator VIP Member

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    Exactly. It's always to DIVIDE. Always.
     
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  9. gatorjjh

    gatorjjh A Gator with a Glass half full attitude Moderator VIP Member

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    Henry Kimbro, an all-star centerfielder mostly for the Baltimore Elite Giants, died #OTD in 1999 at the age of 87. A slap-hitting leadoff man, he led the league in runs four times and walks twice, and won a batting title in 1947.
    [​IMG]
     
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  10. TheBoss

    TheBoss Premium Member

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    This derives from a problem created 400 years ago with no obvious solution. That was a purposeful decision to divide and the division still exists. Proposals to make right today what was done wrongly so long ago surely will have flaws that counteract some or all of the benefits. Recognizing the accomplishments of black players hardly qualifies as a NEW purposeful effort to divide and it doesn't reflect well on one to shout too loudly and be excessively offended that some other person intends to improve and old problem. Recognition of Negro League players and their performance takes nothing away from white players of the same era- and nothing from white fans today, but the actions of white society certainly significantly harmed the ability of Negro League players to earn a living that fit their job performance.

    Political ideology is fine, as is opposing inclusion and equity for a despised group, but don't be shocked that others have a different ideology and different feelings about exclusion and inequity. It's no more offensive to argue a Negro League player was better than white players in segregated MLB, than to argue the steroid assisted-sluggers had an unfair advantage over clean sluggers. Or to argue about the merits of 1890 players vs. 1990 players, Ruth vs. Aaron, Cobb vs. Rose. All of those arguments are subjective and the limited objective data is of questionable reliability to use for comparison.

    I'll briefly address the Straw Man logical fallacy- a mistaken belief, based on an unsound premise. No one has actually made proposals to give Negro League players credit for hits they didn't hit or pitching wins they didn't pitch, so that assertion not only is meaningless in a discussion, it tends to harm the credibility of the person using it. The Straw Man often appeared in the past to justify racial segregation, as well as many other bad things. It's no more credible today.
     
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  11. GatorLurker

    GatorLurker GC Hall of Fame

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    Mr. Paige was not a knuckleballer.

    Hoyt Wilhem was even older and also a knuckleballer and would have been an even better pitcher to prop up for your lame argument.
     
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  12. 74nole

    74nole GC Hall of Fame

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    A quote from Chief Bill Gillespie (In The Heat Of The Night) Carroll O’Connor—

    “Sometimes I just get so tired”……
     
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  13. jaxg8r

    jaxg8r VIP Member

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    Nice rebuttal to my main point concerning Sadaharu Oh's NPB home run record. Lame indeed. But, keep fixating on the past, instead of trying to create a better future. Look how well that's been working for us.
     
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  14. INGATORSWETRUST

    INGATORSWETRUST GC Hall of Fame

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    People divide by race today for politics, power, influence and money. Back then the division was due to prejudice. Bathrooms, water fountains, hotels, restaurants, schools, buses, sports, … all had white only signage. Going back further they were excluded from voting, land ownership, marrying outside your race. Even the military divided soldiers by skin color. Sad times in history. Today’s division is equally wrong and does not allow healing or unification
     
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  15. TheBoss

    TheBoss Premium Member

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    I don't see the distinction between "...politics, power, influence and money..." and "...Bathrooms, water fountains, hotels, restaurants, schools, buses, sports, … excluded from voting, land ownership, marrying outside your race..." The first four factors are abstract words that represent the reality of the later factors. Different words to describe the same thing. There has been a long series of movements both forward and back along a single continuum. Racial injustice didn't disappear and later return.
     
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  16. Spurffelbow833

    Spurffelbow833 GC Hall of Fame

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    A minor footnote from history, also in 1947:

    [​IMG]

    Jackie Robinson--the 3150th black major league baseball player, give or take, who mysteriously began receiving death threats in his second season in the majors.
     
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  17. TheBoss

    TheBoss Premium Member

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    I don't get the joke. If the threats began in the SECOND season, that really would be mysterious. Threats for Robinson began when he signed with the Dodgers (long before he took the field) and continued throughout '46 when he played in the IL with Montreal and continued until his death. There was nothing mysterious about it. Every black American was at risk of murder at any moment, even when they did their best to avoid attention. Someone who actually called attention to themselves by integrating baseball, trying to vote or not stepping off the sidewalk fast enough was subject to sudden death. That was a joke, wasn't it?
     
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  18. Spurffelbow833

    Spurffelbow833 GC Hall of Fame

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    Since the '20-'48 stats were made MLB official stats, Robinson's rookie year is now his 1945 season with the Kansas City Monarchs. He spent the entire 1946 season in the Dodgers minor league organization, then moved up to the major league club in '47, making what we once mistakenly believed to be his rookie year as the first black player in the majors merely his second year in the majors behind over 3000 black players who reached the big leagues before he did. His rookie year passed without incident, like that of all the other black players who had entered the majors before him dating back to 1920, but then all hell mysteriously broke loose in his second year in the majors, when he suddenly began receiving death threats from without and ostracization from within, getting barred from rooming and dining with his own teammates on the road.

    I'm just saying there are severe consequences to messing around with history that are being ignored here. You can't have it both ways. You can either honor Robinson and the walk he walked when it was his burden to bear in order to be the first, or you can take it away from him.
     
  19. TheBoss

    TheBoss Premium Member

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    While I have read about Robinson since his playing days, including about his life before college, the army and pro baseball, I never have heard that anecdote. I've heard the opposite, but can only guess about the accuracy of either. On the other hand, as I said above, life was dangerous for nearly every black American in the period you mention. It's a bit hard to buy that, "His rookie year passed without incident." The abuse he suffered that year is thoroughly documented and messing with that history shouldn't be ignored. I think you're mistaken to believe recognition of Robinson's Negro League play takes anything away from him among baseball fans.

    Messing around with history has become popular. History generally is written by those in control, certainly, that is true about US history. Those in control who wrote US history chose which facts to emphasize and which to ignore. That wasn't so different than history written at other times and places. For example, the French considered Joan of Arc a great leader and a saint. The English considered her a heretic and killed her with that justification. In general, the French version is more popular now, but part of Joan's heretical behavior was having short hair and dressing and behaving like a man, so some current revisionists might choose to mess with history to hide or emphasize the implications of that behavior. US history that addresses the lives of black Americans is at the center of disagreements just like this baseball issue, but we get to choose how we assess the accuracy and value of opinions about that history.

    The best Negro League players probably were comparably as good as- maybe in some cases better than- their white contemporaries. Because white society excluded black players from white baseball, it is impossible to compare the actual skills and performance in an objective manner for players other than those who lived late enough to find their way into MLB. Players like Mays, Aaron, Doby, Campanella, Paige and others immediately moved to the very top of objective measurements, but most Negro League players were too old for anything other than subjective guesses. Of course, it also is impossible to compare in a meaningful manner early white players to whites who played later and the same for earlier and later black players.

    Some white fans are offended by some efforts to make those impossible comparisons. I like recognizing that there were some superior players were in the Negro Leagues and excluded from MLB. However, the more one tries to make objective comparisons, the more futile the effort. In the case of this one obscure player, Kimbro, our message board has seen carefully worded posts that protest a nearly meaningless comparison, but we also see efforts to compare Gator players of different eras, also nearly meaninglessut not so offensive.
     
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  20. manigordo

    manigordo GC Hall of Fame

    I especially appreciate you suggesting that adding the Negro League players doesn't diminish anyone. It was the black players who were historically diminished. Thank you.
     
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