NonSports Forum

Net54baseball.com
Welcome to Net54baseball.com. These forums are devoted to both Pre- and Post- war baseball cards and vintage memorabilia, as well as other sports. There is a separate section for Buying, Selling and Trading - the B/S/T area!! If you write anything concerning a person or company your full name needs to be in your post or obtainable from it. . Contact the moderator at leon@net54baseball.com should you have any questions or concerns. When you click on links to eBay on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network. Enjoy!
Net54baseball.com
Net54baseball.com
T206s on eBay
Babe Ruth Cards on eBay
t206 Ty Cobb on eBay
Ty Cobb Cards on eBay
Lou Gehrig Cards on eBay
Baseball T201-T217 on eBay
Baseball E90-E107 on eBay
T205 Cards on eBay
Baseball Postcards on eBay
Goudey Cards on eBay
Baseball Memorabilia on eBay
Baseball Exhibit Cards on eBay
Baseball Strip Cards on eBay
Baseball Baking Cards on eBay
Sporting News Cards on eBay
Play Ball Cards on eBay
Joe DiMaggio Cards on eBay
Mickey Mantle Cards on eBay
Bowman 1951-1955 on eBay
Football Cards on eBay

Go Back   Net54baseball.com Forums > Net54baseball Postwar Sportscard Forums > Postwar Baseball Cards Forum (Pre-1980)

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 09-21-2023, 03:15 AM
GeoPoto's Avatar
GeoPoto GeoPoto is offline
Ge0rge Tr0end1e
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2018
Location: Saint Helena Island, SC
Posts: 1,419
Default Henry "Hank" Thompson

(Some of you may recall an earlier thread regarding Sam Jethroe; well, here we go again.) I have a modest collection of cards and photos involving Hank Thompson, another of the significant players in the evolution of integrated major league baseball. For the next 21 days I plan to make a daily post including one of these items with a portion of Hank's excellent SABR biography written by Rick Swaine. I hope that you will find Swaine's treatment of Thompson's historic, if not always happy, story interesting and would love to see any pieces involving Hank that may be part of your collection.

We kick off with Swaine's introduction to the biography and a 1950s PM10 Pin-back/Button honoring Hank:

Hank Thompson, a New York Giants mainstay from 1949 to 1956, is the answer to a host of trivia questions about black players. He was the first acknowledged black player to play for the Giants. He was also the first acknowledged black player to take the field for the St. Louis Browns, having received a brief trial with the American League club in 1947. Thus he is the only black player to break the racial barrier for two different major-league franchises.

In his July 17, 1947, debut with the Browns, 12 days after Larry Doby’s debut with the Cleveland Indians, Thompson became the second black American Leaguer as well as the third black 20th-century major leaguer, after Doby and Jackie Robinson. Only 21 years old at the time, Thompson gained the lasting distinction of being the youngest black player to integrate a big-league team. Two days later, he and Willard Brown became the first black players to play together in the big leagues since Moses “Fleet” Walker and his brother Welday teamed up for Toledo in the 19th century. A few days after that, Thompson became the first black player to appear in an official major-league game at Yankee Stadium, and later that season he and Doby became the first black players to compete against each other in a big-league game. Interestingly, Thompson, not Jackie Robinson, who was stationed at first base his rookie year, was the first black major-league second baseman.

When Thompson led off for the Giants against the Brooklyn Dodgers in his National League debut on July 8, 1949, he became only the fifth black National Leaguer behind Robinson, Roy Campanella, Don Newcombe, and Dan Bankhead of the Dodgers. Facing Newcombe in his first plate appearance, he became the first black hitter to hit against a black pitcher in the big leagues. During the 1951 season, he would again make history when he and future Hall of Famers Monte Irvin and Willie Mays became the first three black major leaguers to load the bases, and in the World Series that fall, the same trio formed the first all-black big-league outfield.

And Hank Thompson literally was “The Man Who Killed Jim Crow.”

https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1695287549
Attached Images
File Type: jpg 1950'sPM10StadiumButtonThompsonwithAtchFront.jpg (70.9 KB, 391 views)
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 09-21-2023, 10:46 PM
Exhibitman's Avatar
Exhibitman Exhibitman is offline
Ad@m W@r$h@w
Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Beautiful Downtown Burbank
Posts: 13,115
Default

He has one of the nicest 1952 Topps cards, IMO:

__________________
Read my blog; it will make all your dreams come true.

https://adamstevenwarshaw.substack.com/

Or not...
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 09-22-2023, 03:12 AM
GeoPoto's Avatar
GeoPoto GeoPoto is offline
Ge0rge Tr0end1e
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2018
Location: Saint Helena Island, SC
Posts: 1,419
Default Hank Thompson -- Born somewhere in Oklahoma

Adam: Thank you for posting a beautiful example of Hank's 1952 Topps card.

Henry Curtis “Hank” Thompson was born in Oklahoma on December 8, 1925. Most sources list his birthplace as Oklahoma City, but in a 1965 interview, Hank claimed he was born 125 miles away in Muskogee. His father, Ollie Thompson, was a railroad worker who liked his liquor. His mother, Iona, was a cook and domestic worker. The family moved to Dallas, Texas, when Hank was an infant. His parents separated when he was still a youngster and divorced shortly thereafter. Young Hank lived with his mother, and it was the job of an older sister, Florence, to watch him while mom was at work – a job that proved too much for the young girl.

Growing up, Hank eschewed school for the streets of Dallas. At age 11, he had his first official brush with the law when he was picked up on suspicion of swiping some jewelry from a car, a crime he claimed he didn’t commit. Either the cops believed his protestations of innocence or couldn’t prove his guilt, so they busted him for truancy instead and shipped him to Gatesville Reform School, about 115 miles from Dallas.

Gatesville had a baseball program in which Hank got his first chance to play on an organized team. It motivated the youngster to keep his nose clean, but when he got out, he was sent to live with his father for a year. Thompson claimed that his father wouldn’t let him play ball and often beat him, so he was glad to go back to live with his mother.

https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1695373789
https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1695373794
Attached Images
File Type: jpg 1952BerkRossThompson2987Front.jpg (146.9 KB, 356 views)
File Type: jpg 1952BerkRossThompson2987Back.jpg (139.4 KB, 351 views)
Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old 09-22-2023, 02:25 PM
cgjackson222's Avatar
cgjackson222 cgjackson222 is online now
Charles Jackson
Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2021
Location: Virginia
Posts: 1,438
Default

Looking forward to this!

What an historical figure Hank Thompson was--the only man that was the first to integrate two MLB teams!

Thanks for doing this GeoPoto.
Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old 09-22-2023, 02:33 PM
Volod Volod is offline
Steve
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: NEOH
Posts: 1,070
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by GeoPoto View Post
]
Interesting read. Thanks for posting, George. Always liked Hank's 1952 Bowman card. One reason was that when I restarted collecting back in the '80's, I could recall as a kid finding it in a waxpack in my Uncle's corner grocery store very late in the year - figures since it was a high number, I guess. No Mays in that pack, though, dang it, just five commons.
Attached Images
File Type: jpg 1952 Bowman Thompson.jpg (196.0 KB, 329 views)
Reply With Quote
  #6  
Old 09-23-2023, 03:09 AM
GeoPoto's Avatar
GeoPoto GeoPoto is offline
Ge0rge Tr0end1e
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2018
Location: Saint Helena Island, SC
Posts: 1,419
Default Hank Thompson -- Youngblood fights for his country!

Charles: Thank you for the kind words.
Steve: Nice 1952 Bowman! Thanks for participating.

Still not interested in scholarly pursuits, Hank spent his free time hanging around Burnett Field, where the Texas League Dallas Steers played, rather than continuing his education. The Steers allowed him to shag flies and throw some batting practice, and soon a local semipro Negro team recruited the then 15-year-old. By the end of the following season, he’d attracted the attention of Kansas City Monarchs star Bonnie Serrell, who recommended him to the Monarchs, one of the premier franchises in the Negro American League. The next spring Monarchs secretary Dizzy Dismukes sent Thompson $25 train fare to the club’s training camp in New Orleans, and his professional career was under way. Playing on a veteran team that included future Hall of Famers Satchel Paige, Willard Brown, and Hilton Smith, as well as veteran stars Buck O’Neil and Newt Allen, the 17-year-old kid the veterans called “Youngblood” played right field and hit .314.

Thompson spent most of the next two years in the employ of Uncle Sam, serving as a machine gunner with the 1695th Combat Engineers. He was inducted into the Army in March 1944 and was mustered out with a couple of battle stars and the rank of sergeant on June 20, 1946. He fought in the Battle of the Bulge, later recalling, “If there was a moment in my life I did something for society, that was it.”

After his discharge Hank settled in as the Monarchs’ second baseman. The Biographical Encyclopedia of the Negro Leagues credits him with a .287 batting average while batting leadoff for the 1946 Negro American League pennant winners and hitting .296 in their loss to the Newark Eagles in that year’s “Colored World Series.”

The photograph, which shows Thompson in uniform with the Havana club, was taken before he broke into the major leagues as one of the first black players to do so. He is pictured with Mike Gonzalez and Herberto Blanco:

https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1695459816
Attached Images
File Type: jpg 1947 Thompson-Gonzalez-Blanco Negro League Photograph.jpg (144.3 KB, 321 views)
Reply With Quote
  #7  
Old 09-24-2023, 03:23 AM
GeoPoto's Avatar
GeoPoto GeoPoto is offline
Ge0rge Tr0end1e
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2018
Location: Saint Helena Island, SC
Posts: 1,419
Default Hank Thompson -- "Ametralladora"

Immediately after the regular 1946 season, Thompson joined up with Satchel Paige to barnstorm against a team of major leaguers put together by Cleveland great Bob Feller. In Feller’s opinion, Thompson, the youngest player on the Negro League squad, was also the best.

After the successful and lucrative tour, Thompson journeyed to Cuba to play third base for the Havana Reds in the Cuban Winter League. There he met his future wife, Maria Quesada. Hank played three winter seasons with Havana, hitting over .300 each year, leading the league in RBIs in 1947-48 and runs scored, hits, and triples in 1948-49. On the island he was known by the nickname “Ametralladora,” a Spanish word that translates to “machine gun” in English.

https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1695547325
https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1695547331
Attached Images
File Type: jpg 1948-49ElIndio#36HenryThompsonSGC6023Front.jpg (72.9 KB, 308 views)
File Type: jpg 1948-49ElIndio#36HenryThompsonSGC6023Back.jpg (78.7 KB, 306 views)
Reply With Quote
  #8  
Old 09-24-2023, 12:29 PM
egri's Avatar
egri egri is online now
Sco.tt Mar.cus
Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2015
Location: Norfolk, VA
Posts: 1,790
Default

Great cards! Here's mine:

__________________
Signed 1953 Topps set: 264/274 (96.35 %)
Reply With Quote
  #9  
Old 09-25-2023, 02:59 AM
GeoPoto's Avatar
GeoPoto GeoPoto is offline
Ge0rge Tr0end1e
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2018
Location: Saint Helena Island, SC
Posts: 1,419
Default Hank Thompson -- Jim Crow, RIP

Thank you egri; nice 1953 Topps!

In 1948 the Dodgers and Indians had been the only two teams to employ black players at the major league level, but other teams were starting to show interest. The February 9, 1949, edition of The Sporting News announced that the Giants had signed Thompson, Newark Eagles veteran star Monte Irvin, and Monarchs hurler Ford Smith to play for their Jersey City minor-league club in the International League. Thompson reportedly negotiated a $2,500 bonus for his signature.

But before Hank could start his career in the Giants organization, there was that “Jim Crow” matter to deal with.

On April 4, 1948, Thompson had shot and killed one James Crow in a Dallas bar. Hank was on his way from Kansas City to the Monarchs’ spring-training base in San Antonio when he stopped to visit his oldest sister, Margaret, and her husband. Visiting a local beer garden, they encountered Crow, who was nicknamed Buddy. Hank had played sandlot ball with Crow and knew him to be a dangerous character. So, when Crow threatened him with a knife, Thompson shot him three times across the chest with a .32 caliber automatic he was in the habit of carrying (the Dallas Morning Star and The Sporting News reported that Crow was shot six times). Hank left the bar not knowing if Crow had survived and promptly turned himself in the next morning when he found out that Crow had died. He was charged with murder, but his lawyer argued that it was a case of self-defense. Thompson was released on $5,000 bond and was soon on his way to San Antonio to continue his baseball career. With some help from the Giants, the case was eventually ruled justifiable homicide, clearing the way for his return to Organized Baseball.

https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1695632142
https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1695632148
Attached Images
File Type: jpg 1954NYJournalAmericanThompson1339Front.jpg (118.0 KB, 286 views)
File Type: jpg 1954NYJournalAmericanThompson1339Back.jpg (112.3 KB, 298 views)
Reply With Quote
  #10  
Old 09-25-2023, 06:12 AM
Kevin Kevin is offline
Kevin from Franklin Square, LI
Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2020
Location: Long Island
Posts: 668
Default

My uncle, Charley Feeney, covered the Giants from 1951 through 1957; he then went on the cover the Yankees for a bit (was offered the Jack Lang job at Newsday to cover the Mets in 1962 but turned it down). He settled in Pittsburgh for the rest of his career.

One day, the phone rang at my dad’s childhood home and dad answered. A low voice asked, “Is Charley there?” My dad replied his older brother was not home. The person on the other line identified himself as “Henry Thompson” and he was looking for $20. My dad repeated his brother was not home; Mr Thompson asked my dad to lend him $20. My dad replied, “I’m only 12 years old…”. There was a long pause. Finally the voice asked, “hmmmm…can I borrow $10?”

Cool piece my dad has: 1952 Spring Training NY Giants

https://x.com/kevinseanfeeney/status...186622978?s=46

Last edited by Kevin; 09-25-2023 at 06:26 AM. Reason: Added link
Reply With Quote
  #11  
Old 09-26-2023, 03:36 AM
GeoPoto's Avatar
GeoPoto GeoPoto is offline
Ge0rge Tr0end1e
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2018
Location: Saint Helena Island, SC
Posts: 1,419
Default Hank Thompson -- St. Louis Brown

Great story Kevin. It sounds like Hank.

Hank really hit his stride in 1947. The 21-year-old was hitting around .340 as the Monarchs’ shortstop when his contract was purchased by the St. Louis Browns in mid-July.

On Opening Day of the 1947 season, Jackie Robinson of the Brooklyn Dodgers had crossed Major League Baseball’s color line and set National League turnstiles humming wherever he played. Almost three months later, former Newark Eagles star Larry Doby broke the American League color barrier, prompting the Browns, mired in last place and drawing more flies than fans, to try to capitalize on the novelty of Negro players. The Browns reportedly purchased the contracts of Thompson and the veteran outfielder Willard Brown, one of the biggest names in the Negro Leagues, from the Monarchs on a conditional basis for a mere $5,000. Immediately plugged into the Browns lineup, Thompson played second base and batted seventh, going hitless in four at-bats and contributing an error to a 16-2 whipping by the visiting Philadelphia Athletics.

Despite a cool reception by the St. Louis players, Thompson performed adequately for the woeful Browns. His .256 batting average and .341 on-base average in 27 games both exceeded the team norm. Yet the Browns shipped him and Brown (who hit only .179 in 21 games) back to Kansas City in late August rather than pony up another $5,000 to retain their services.

Thompson finished his fragmented 1947 campaign hitting .344 and scoring 54 runs in 48 games for the Monarchs. With future major leaguers Curt Roberts and Gene Baker manning the keystone spots for the Monarchs in 1948, Hank moved to the outfield and hit a phenomenal .375 in 70 games, according to The Negro Leagues Book, while scoring 75 runs and driving in 58. He also began displaying good power, finishing with 11 homers and an imposing .633 slugging average. Hank is sometimes credited with leading the Negro American League that year with 20 stolen bases, but other references indicate that Sam Jethroe stole 29 for the Cleveland Buckeyes before his contract was purchased by the Brooklyn Dodgers during the season.

https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1695720891
https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1695720895
Attached Images
File Type: jpg 1955RedManTobaccoThompson1556Front.jpg (103.4 KB, 270 views)
File Type: jpg 1955RedManTobaccoThompson1556Back.jpg (100.3 KB, 281 views)
Reply With Quote
  #12  
Old 09-27-2023, 03:22 AM
GeoPoto's Avatar
GeoPoto GeoPoto is offline
Ge0rge Tr0end1e
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2018
Location: Saint Helena Island, SC
Posts: 1,419
Default Hank Thompson -- Joins New York Giants

Thompson, Irvin, and Smith began the 1949 campaign with the Jersey City Giants. Smith posted a mediocre 10-8 record for the season, but Thompson and Irvin spent the first half of the year tearing up the International League. Irvin, the bigger Negro League name, outshone Thompson with Jersey City, although Hank’s .296 batting average, 14 homers, sensational .447 on-base percentage, and lusty .565 slugging average in 68 games was pretty impressive. When the pair were called up to the parent club in July, Hank, who’d bounced between shortstop and left field with Jersey City, took over the parent Giants’ regular second-base job. While Irvin stumbled in his first big-league exposure, Thompson hit a credible .280 and belted nine homers in 75 games. He was originally slotted in the leadoff spot, but was shifted to the third spot in the Giants batting order late in the season.

Before his promotion to the Giants, Hank and Maria Quesada had been married in Brooklyn. That offseason he didn’t play in the Cuban Winter League for the first time since 1946-47.

Caption accompanying the photograph: Leo Durocher, Giants Manager, welcomes Henry Thompson of Los Angeles, left, and Monte Irvin of Orange, N.J., right, first Negro players to wear Giant uniforms. (7-6-49):

https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1695806123
Attached Images
File Type: jpg 1949Irvin-Durocher-ThompsonPhotographFront.jpg (110.4 KB, 258 views)
Reply With Quote
  #13  
Old 09-27-2023, 06:03 AM
cgjackson222's Avatar
cgjackson222 cgjackson222 is online now
Charles Jackson
Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2021
Location: Virginia
Posts: 1,438
Default

That's a fantastic picture of Thompson, Durocher and Irvin. Thompson and Irvin had so much talent--its a shame Irvin got injured.

Durocher was so pivotal in promoting the meritocracy of integration. Leo "the Lip" has many famous quotes, but one with the Giants organization was " “I’m only going to say one thing about color: You can be green or be pink on this team. If you can play baseball and help this team you’re welcome to play.”
Reply With Quote
  #14  
Old 09-28-2023, 03:23 AM
GeoPoto's Avatar
GeoPoto GeoPoto is offline
Ge0rge Tr0end1e
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2018
Location: Saint Helena Island, SC
Posts: 1,419
Default Hank Thompson -- Most Double Plays

The next spring (1950), the Giants shifted Thompson to third base to clear second base for newly acquired Eddie Stanky. Often hitting in the cleanup spot, Hank enjoyed an excellent all-around season, batting .289, smacking 20 homers, and driving in a team-leading 91 runs in 148 games. In the field he participated in 43 twin killings in 138 appearances at third, breaking Pie Traynor’s 25-year-old National League record for double plays by a third baseman. Thompson’s record stood until 1974, when Atlanta’s Darrell Evans participated in 45 double plays in 160 games at third base.

https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1695892851
https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1695892854
Attached Images
File Type: jpg 1950BowmanThompson9332Front.jpg (102.9 KB, 239 views)
File Type: jpg 1950BowmanThompson9332Back.jpg (110.9 KB, 244 views)
Reply With Quote
  #15  
Old 09-28-2023, 04:57 AM
Kevin Kevin is offline
Kevin from Franklin Square, LI
Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2020
Location: Long Island
Posts: 668
Default Addendum

I went to see dad on Monday. I brought the story up and he corrected me:

Dad was 15.

Mr Thompson asked for $100 initially and then lowered it to $50!

Great thread…
Reply With Quote
  #16  
Old 09-29-2023, 03:10 AM
GeoPoto's Avatar
GeoPoto GeoPoto is offline
Ge0rge Tr0end1e
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2018
Location: Saint Helena Island, SC
Posts: 1,419
Default Hank Thompson -- Unfulfilled Promise

On a team filled with pleasant surprises – unsung veterans enjoying career years and unheralded rookies making headlines – Hank Thompson was the 1951 Giants’ biggest disappointment. After his strong 1950 performance, the 25-year-old third sacker had been counted on to be a force in the middle of the New York lineup. Instead, he lost his regular job in midseason and ended up watching the club’s sensational stretch run for the pennant from the bench. Although he subsequently won back the Giants’ regular third-base job and starred for the 1954 world champions, he never fulfilled his early promise.

Opening Day of that fateful 1951 season found Thompson manning third base and hitting in the third spot against the Boston Braves. He got off to a horrible start, but by June 4 his average was up to a respectable .278 and his seven home runs were the second highest total on the club. But by July 18, the Giants 88th game of the season, Hank’s average was down to .239 and he’d added only one homer to his total. That day he was spiked by Chicago’s Frank Hiller and knocked out of action. The next afternoon outfielder Bobby Thomson, who’d lost his center-field job to rookie sensation Willie Mays almost two months earlier, was installed at third base.

A few days later, it was announced that Thompson had been optioned to the Giants’ Ottawa International League farm club with pitcher Al Corwin coming up to take his place. But Hank never actually reported to Ottawa, instead spending his time with the Giants working himself back into shape. He was activated and saw his first action since the injury when he appeared unsuccessfully as a pinch-hitter on August 1. Over the next two weeks, he made five more pinch-hitting appearances with only a lone single before he was optioned to the Giants’ Minneapolis Millers farm team in the American Association.

https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1695978480
https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1695978484
Attached Images
File Type: jpg 1951ToppsRedBackThompson3354Front.jpg (98.8 KB, 228 views)
File Type: jpg 1951ToppsRedBackThompson3354Back.jpg (114.9 KB, 220 views)
Reply With Quote
  #17  
Old 09-30-2023, 03:01 AM
GeoPoto's Avatar
GeoPoto GeoPoto is offline
Ge0rge Tr0end1e
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2018
Location: Saint Helena Island, SC
Posts: 1,419
Default Hank Thompson -- In Right for "The Shot"

Hank found his batting eye in Minneapolis, slamming seven homers and hitting .340 with a torrid 1.209 OPS (on-base percentage plus slugging average) in 14 games. Thanks largely to his phenomenal hitting, the Millers won 12 of the games in which he participated to climb back into the American Association pennant race before his recall to New York on August 28.

Back with the Giants, Thompson resumed his place on the bench behind hot-hitting Bobby Thomson. Several sources credit Hank with contributing greatly to the Giants’ sensational stretch drive, but that was not the case. After starting 68 of the Giants’ first 88 games at third base, he didn’t start another game the rest of the season. In fact, his only notable contribution to the “Miracle of Coogan’s Bluff” came on September 16 when he replaced Bobby Thomson at third base after Bobby was ejected in the fourth inning of the second game of a doubleheader with the Pirates. Hank banged out two hits and drove in the go-ahead run with a ninth-inning fly ball in a 6-4 Giants victory. His only other action after his recall was seven unsuccessful pinch-hitting appearances.

On the play immediately preceding Bobby Thomson’s “Shot Heard ’Round the World,” Giants right fielder Don Mueller broke his ankle sliding safely into third base on a Whitey Lockman double. Therefore, Hank Thompson was pressed into service in right field for the World Series. Though Hank hadn’t played the outfield for the Giants all year, he’d played left field during his two-week stint in Minneapolis because the Millers’ third-base job was manned by future Negro League Hall of Fame third baseman Ray Dandridge.

Hank didn’t exactly distinguish himself in the garden or at the plate in the Fall Classic. He committed two damaging errors in right field and hit only .143 for the Series as the Yankees won in six games.

https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1696064310
https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1696064324
Attached Images
File Type: jpg 1951BowmanThompson4131Front.jpg (158.5 KB, 209 views)
File Type: jpg 1951BowmanThompson4131Back.jpg (167.9 KB, 219 views)
Reply With Quote
  #18  
Old 09-30-2023, 06:57 AM
cgjackson222's Avatar
cgjackson222 cgjackson222 is online now
Charles Jackson
Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2021
Location: Virginia
Posts: 1,438
Default

Hank Thompson, Willie Mays and Monte Irvin form the first all African American outfield for the 1951 World Series.
Attached Images
File Type: jpg FirstAllBlackOutfield.jpg (193.6 KB, 219 views)
Reply With Quote
  #19  
Old 10-01-2023, 03:28 AM
GeoPoto's Avatar
GeoPoto GeoPoto is offline
Ge0rge Tr0end1e
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2018
Location: Saint Helena Island, SC
Posts: 1,419
Default Hank Thompson -- 1952 Season

Great photograph, Charles. Thank you for showing it.

After he finished the 1951 season with a .235 batting mark and only eight homers in 87 games, there didn’t appear to be a regular role for Thompson with the Giants in 1952. Then left fielder Monte Irvin, the reigning National League RBI king, broke his leg before the start of the season. Thus, the Giants began their defense of the National League pennant with Thompson and newly acquired veteran Bob Elliott platooning in left field. Hank handled his assignment well enough that he was entrusted with the Giants center field job when Willie Mays was inducted into the Army in late May. Eventually Hank moved back to third base for the last third of the season, swapping positions with Bobby Thomson. For the season, Hank started 51 games in center field, 43 at third base, and 17 in left field, while also filling in at second base and right field. He finished with a .260 batting average, 17 homers, and 67 RBIs in 128 contests, while recording a solid .798 OPS. In the offseason, he signed on with Roy Campanella’s All-Stars, touring the South with an all-black team that featured Campanella, Irvin, Larry Doby, Joe Black, Harry Simpson, and George Crowe. Willie Mays even put in a couple of appearances with the All-Stars while on furlough from the service.

https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1696152317
https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1696152324
Attached Images
File Type: jpg 1952BowmanThompson5551Front.jpg (83.6 KB, 200 views)
File Type: jpg 1952BowmanThompson5551Back.jpg (91.4 KB, 194 views)
Reply With Quote
  #20  
Old 10-02-2023, 03:12 AM
GeoPoto's Avatar
GeoPoto GeoPoto is offline
Ge0rge Tr0end1e
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2018
Location: Saint Helena Island, SC
Posts: 1,419
Default Hank Thompson -- 1953 Season

Thompson spent the first month of the 1953 campaign warming the Giants’ bench while highly touted rookie Daryl Spencer was tried at third base. Finally inserted back into the hot corner spot in mid-May, he responded with his finest big league season. He appeared in only 114 games, sitting out most of the first month of the season and missing most of the last month after suffering a concussion when a bad-hop grounder knocked him out. Yet he slammed 24 homers and drove in 74 runs while hitting .302. His .567 slugging average was the seventh highest in the National League that year, and his outstanding .967 OPS was the sixth highest mark.

https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1696237884
https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1696237891
Attached Images
File Type: jpg 1953Topps#20Thompson8346Front.jpg (102.9 KB, 187 views)
File Type: jpg 1953Topps#20Thompson8346Back.jpg (116.1 KB, 179 views)
Reply With Quote
  #21  
Old 10-03-2023, 03:01 AM
GeoPoto's Avatar
GeoPoto GeoPoto is offline
Ge0rge Tr0end1e
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2018
Location: Saint Helena Island, SC
Posts: 1,419
Default Hank Thompson -- Shines in 1954

In 1954 Hank shook off a painful chipped kneecap suffered early in the campaign to set a career high with 26 homers, while hitting .263 and driving in 86 runs in 136 games for the world champion Giants. He also walked 90 times, finishing ninth in the league in on-base percentage and tenth in OPS.

Thompson enjoyed his best day as a major leaguer on June 3 of that year. Playing in St. Louis, he homered in his first three times at bat before the Cardinals intentionally walked him in the top of the seventh inning with no outs and a man on second. Hank did get a chance for his fourth homer, but could only manage a single to drive in his eighth run of the game.

In the Giants’ four-game World Series sweep of the heavily favored Cleveland Indians, Hank posted an amazing .611 on-base percentage, hitting for a .364 average and breaking Lou Gehrig’s record by drawing seven bases on balls. He also earned accolades for his flawless defense and alert baserunning.

https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1696323586
https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1696323591
Attached Images
File Type: jpg 1954ToppsThompson6754Front.jpg (135.2 KB, 170 views)
File Type: jpg 1954ToppsThompson6754Back.jpg (168.0 KB, 175 views)
Reply With Quote
  #22  
Old 10-04-2023, 01:38 AM
GeoPoto's Avatar
GeoPoto GeoPoto is offline
Ge0rge Tr0end1e
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2018
Location: Saint Helena Island, SC
Posts: 1,419
Default Hank Thompson -- Production Tails Off

Still just 29 years old, with two fine seasons behind him going into the 1955 campaign, Thompson should have been at the peak of his career. But his average dropped to .245 and his home run output fell to 17. The next year he injured his shoulder in spring training and lost his regular job to light-hitting rookie Foster Castleman. For the season, he hit only .235 with eight homers in 83 games, although he excelled as a pinch-hitter, hitting .333 with a pair of homers in 24 pinch at-bats.

https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1696405031
https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1696405034
Attached Images
File Type: jpg 1955BowmanThompson7834Front.jpg (109.9 KB, 162 views)
File Type: jpg 1955BowmanThompson7834Back.jpg (116.6 KB, 160 views)
Reply With Quote
  #23  
Old 10-05-2023, 03:09 AM
GeoPoto's Avatar
GeoPoto GeoPoto is offline
Ge0rge Tr0end1e
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2018
Location: Saint Helena Island, SC
Posts: 1,419
Default Hank Thompson -- Winding Down

Before the 1957 season, Thompson was sent down to the minor leagues with a missed exhibition game in San Diego probably having some bearing on the demotion. Playing the outfield for Minneapolis, he endured nagging leg injuries and hit only .243 with a pair of homers in 78 games before leaving the team in late July. In subsequent interviews, he remembered ending his playing days on that note, but he did in fact try to resurrect his career with Ponce in the Puerto Rican Winter League after the season – an effort that lasted only three games before his career as a professional baseball player was truly over.

https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1696496881
https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1696496884
Attached Images
File Type: jpg 1957ToppsThompson8716Front.jpg (106.1 KB, 154 views)
File Type: jpg 1957ToppsThompson8716Back.jpg (117.8 KB, 146 views)
Reply With Quote
  #24  
Old 10-06-2023, 03:08 AM
GeoPoto's Avatar
GeoPoto GeoPoto is offline
Ge0rge Tr0end1e
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2018
Location: Saint Helena Island, SC
Posts: 1,419
Default Hank Thompson -- Problem Child?

Thompson’s off-the-field behavior had been a problem throughout his baseball career. He began drinking as a teenage semipro player and admitted to being an alcoholic by the age of 17. In the service he went AWOL on one occasion and spent time in the stockade for fighting on another. He liked to carry a gun, which led to his killing a man before joining the Giants. In 1953 a violent altercation with a cab driver made headlines, prompting the black publication Our Sports to publish a profile of Thompson entitled “Problem Child?”

Stanley Glenn, a catcher with the Negro League Philadelphia Stars before entering Organized Baseball said, “Hank was a little bit off-center. He had a drinking problem and a woman problem. … But he was all baseball on the field.”

Former Monarchs teammate Sammy Haynes remembered, “He (Thompson) had a lot of little kid in him … but he had a temper and liked to play rough.”

https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1696583172
https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1696583181
Attached Images
File Type: jpg 1952ToppsThompsonRedBack2564Front.jpg (104.8 KB, 151 views)
File Type: jpg 1952ToppsThompsonRedBack2564Back.jpg (120.9 KB, 147 views)
Reply With Quote
  #25  
Old 10-07-2023, 03:51 AM
GeoPoto's Avatar
GeoPoto GeoPoto is offline
Ge0rge Tr0end1e
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2018
Location: Saint Helena Island, SC
Posts: 1,419
Default Hank Thompson -- Under Irvin's Watch

Well-respected strong man Monte Irvin, a longtime teammate, apparently exerted a positive influence on Hank. “Every once in a while Thompson would get out of line and Monte would get on his case,” recalled former teammate and coach Bill Rigney.

In his autobiography Nice Guys Finish First, Irvin said, “Hank was known as a carouser.” He recalled when Leo Durocher came over to his locker and said, “Monte, I’m going to put you in charge of Hank while we’re in St. Louis. Watch him and make sure he doesn’t go astray. Make sure he gets to the hotel on time. Make sure he catches the bus. You’re in charge of him.”

It’s probably no coincidence that Thompson’s performance began deteriorating in 1955, the year the Giants cut Irvin in midseason.

https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1696672221
Reply With Quote
  #26  
Old 10-08-2023, 03:16 AM
GeoPoto's Avatar
GeoPoto GeoPoto is offline
Ge0rge Tr0end1e
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2018
Location: Saint Helena Island, SC
Posts: 1,419
Default Hank Thompson -- In and out of trouble

Not surprisingly, Hank’s troubles worsened after he left baseball. He couldn’t hold a job, and though he’d made good money with the Giants, he’d blown it as fast as he earned it. During his first year out of baseball, he was arrested for stealing a car, and soon after that he was charged with unlawful entry and third-degree assault of a woman he claimed was his girlfriend when she refused to lend him money. The car-theft matter was subsequently dropped, but he spent a week in jail and paid a fine for the assault charge. He and Maria divorced in 1959, and he was still living in Brooklyn in 1961 when he held up a local bar where he was well known, having previously hocked his 1954 World Series ring there. He was convicted of stealing $37, but was released on probation with orders to leave New York after Giants owner Horace Stoneham and Baseball Commissioner Ford Frick interceded on his behalf. That fall Stoneham gave Hank a job at the Giants’ spring training facility in Casa Grande, Arizona, but the former player soon hooked up with an old girlfriend and moved to Los Angeles.

By 1963, Hank had drifted to Houston, where he stole $270 from a liquor store at gunpoint. He was convicted of armed robbery and sentenced to ten years in the Texas corrections system.

https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1696756471
https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1696756482
Attached Images
File Type: jpg 1952ToppsThompsonBlackBack4694Front.jpg (109.6 KB, 122 views)
File Type: jpg 1952ToppsThompsonBlackBack4694Back.jpg (114.6 KB, 120 views)
Reply With Quote
  #27  
Old 10-09-2023, 03:15 AM
GeoPoto's Avatar
GeoPoto GeoPoto is offline
Ge0rge Tr0end1e
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2018
Location: Saint Helena Island, SC
Posts: 1,419
Default Hank Thompson -- Dead at 43

Thompson reportedly got his life together in prison. He joined Alcoholics Anonymous, found religion, became a trustee, coached the prison baseball team, and began counseling first-time offenders. His fall from World Series hero to 31-year-old has-been in two short years is graphically documented in “How I Wrecked My Life – How I Hope to Save It,” which was published in Sport Magazine in 1965 while he was still in jail.

Apparently Hank said all the right things, because he was paroled in 1966 after serving four years. He moved to Fresno, California, where his mother lived, got a job as a playground director, and began working with troubled teens. Plans for a movie about his life, starring Sidney Poitier, were reported in early 1969. During the summer Thompson appeared at a Giants old-timer’s game and told friends he’d quit his job in Fresno and would be working for the team. But he died suddenly of a heart attack at his mother’s home in Fresno on September 30, 1969.

Like his baseball career, Thompson’s life ended prematurely. He had always lived fast – arrested at 11, drinking at 15, playing professional baseball at 17, becoming a war hero and an alcoholic at 19, making his major-league debut at 21, and setting World Series records at 28. But he was already past his prime at the age of 29, out of the major leagues at 30, and through with baseball at 31. When he died, he was only 43 years old.

https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1696842670
https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1696842674
Attached Images
File Type: jpg 1954BowmanThompson.958-952FieldAvg5723Front.jpg (101.4 KB, 114 views)
File Type: jpg 1954BowmanThompson.958-952FieldAvg5723Back.jpg (108.5 KB, 111 views)
Reply With Quote
  #28  
Old 10-10-2023, 03:05 AM
GeoPoto's Avatar
GeoPoto GeoPoto is offline
Ge0rge Tr0end1e
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2018
Location: Saint Helena Island, SC
Posts: 1,419
Default Hank Thompson -- Career Highlights

Hank Thompson was a truly unusual talent. Despite a pedestrian .267 lifetime batting average, he combined power with a sharp eye at the plate to finish with an excellent .825 career OPS. For comparison purposes, Hall of Fame third-base contemporary George Kell retired with a .781 career mark. In fact, according to Baseball-reference.com, “Thompson has a higher Adjusted OPS than ten of the third basemen in the Hall of Fame, although his career was much shorter than most of them.”

Listed at a smallish 5-feet-9 and 174 pounds (he personally claimed to be only 5-8˝ and 168), Thompson managed to generate tremendous power with the bat. He was reportedly awarded $2,000 for hitting a homer into the distant center-field bleachers during a Cuban Winter League game. The back of his 1957 Topps baseball card states, “He has been known to put the ball out of the park high over the Polo Grounds 450 feet sign many times.” A bit of hyperbole, maybe, but he obviously had a reputation for hitting the ball a long way.

Though not a prolific base stealer in the major leagues, Thompson was fast on the bases. In fact, his power-speed rating ranked seventh and eighth in the league in 1950 and 1953 respectively.

Hank demonstrated this rare blend of speed and power on August 16, 1950, when he hit two inside-the-park homers in one game against the Dodgers at the Polo Grounds. He was the first big leaguer to accomplish that feat since 1939, and it wasn’t matched again until Dick Allen did it in 1972.

https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1696928487
https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1696928495
Attached Images
File Type: jpg 1954BowmanThompson.956-951FieldAvg7723Front.jpg (101.7 KB, 106 views)
File Type: jpg 1954BowmanThompson.956-951FieldAvg7723Back.jpg (109.5 KB, 103 views)
Reply With Quote
  #29  
Old 10-10-2023, 11:33 AM
brian1961 brian1961 is offline
Member
 
Join Date: May 2009
Posts: 1,323
Default

George, I want to sincerely thank you for your biographical posts on the life of Hank Thompson. I knew he'd led a very troubled life, but I had little knowledge why. Your work here is very commendable, and fascinating. As an author (self-published hobby book) I know these posts require a lot of digging, not to mention the work to carefully load up the images. All to say I very much appreciate your work; it was well-written.

I'm sure glad Hank had Manager Durocher and teammate Monte Irvin at crucial points in his career; I know they were instrumental in encouraging him, whilst keeping him on the straight and narrow.

Thanks for the mention of Hank's 2 inside-the-park home runs in one game. WOW!. I did not know that. His feat was extra sweet since he hit those against their arch-rivals, the Brooklyn Dodgers. Moreover, he hit them at home, which, if he hit the ball in the right place, with his speed, he could pull off the inside four-bagger, and he did!!! I grew up in the suburbs of Chicago, and still remember when Dick Allen hit his 2 for the White Sox.

Wishing you all the best, sir. --- Brian Powell

Last edited by brian1961; 10-10-2023 at 11:39 AM.
Reply With Quote
  #30  
Old 10-11-2023, 03:19 AM
GeoPoto's Avatar
GeoPoto GeoPoto is offline
Ge0rge Tr0end1e
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2018
Location: Saint Helena Island, SC
Posts: 1,419
Default Hank Thompson -- Distinguished, but Troubled, Career

(Brian (and Dwight): Thank you for the feedback. You are very kind. However, just to be clear, I am not the author of the biography that accompanied this thread -- that distinction belongs to Rick Swaine. I lifted his text from SABR. The cards and photos are mine. This post completes my portion of this thread. Thanks for listening.)

In nine big league seasons, Thompson came to bat 3,529 times in 933 games, blasting 129 homers, driving in 482 runs, and walking 493 times. For the equivalent of a little less than six seasons of regular duty (600 plate appearances), this translates to an impressive average of around 22 homers, 82 RBIs, and 84 bases on balls per year. A left-handed hitter who was often platooned, he ranked among the National Leaders in such diverse categories as on-base-percentage, slugging, OPS, triples, home runs, homers per times at bat, bases on balls, stolen bases, sacrifice flies, and times hit-by-pitch – a category in which the early black major leaguers dominated.

On defense Thompson was extremely versatile, playing regularly at third base, shortstop, second base, and all three outfield positions at various times. He was somewhat error-prone at third base, his primary position, so he didn’t enjoy a particularly good defensive reputation. But his range factor at the hot corner was good and his defensive win shares seem to indicate he was a better than average third sacker.

Hank Thompson never truly capitalized on his ability. After his baseball career ended, he admitted he had a serious alcohol problem and had been an alcoholic while he was playing, though he claimed that he never drank during or before a game. “I’d say 99 percent of my trouble came right out of a bottle,” he estimated shortly before his death.

“I became a baseball has-been at 32,” he said. “I couldn’t move around third base. Balls were going by me that I should have had. I was disgracing baseball and I still kept boozing it up. He played his last major-league game on September 30, 1956, the same day fellow pioneer Jackie Robinson made his last big-league appearance.

https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1697015605
https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1697015612
Attached Images
File Type: jpg 1956ToppsThompson0072Front.jpg (105.2 KB, 89 views)
File Type: jpg 1956ToppsThompson0072Back.jpg (119.7 KB, 92 views)
Reply With Quote
  #31  
Old 10-12-2023, 06:44 AM
jingram058's Avatar
jingram058 jingram058 is offline
J@mes In.gram
 
Join Date: Sep 2020
Location: In the past
Posts: 1,894
Default

I think this is an Ernest Withers photo a youthful Willie Mays and Hank Thompson in Memphis with Lou Chiozza, a Memphian who had played for the Phillies and Giants in the 1930s. Lou Chiozza somehow worked behind the scenes ensuring that Willie Mays and Hank Thompson went to the Giants. I think this photo was made at the Lorraine Motel where Dr. King was assassinated years later.
Attached Images
File Type: jpg Mays-Chiozza-Thompson.jpg (191.7 KB, 78 views)
__________________
James Ingram

Successful net54 purchases from/trades with:
Tere1071, Bocabirdman, 8thEastVB, GoldenAge50s, IronHorse2130, Kris19, G1911, dacubfan, sflayank, Smanzari, bocca001, eliminator, ejstel, lampertb, rjackson44, Jason19th, Cmvorce, CobbSpikedMe, Harliduck, donmuth, HercDriver, Huck, theshleps

Completed 1962 Topps
Completed 1969 Topps deckle edge
Completed 1953 Bowman color & b/w
*** Raw cards only, daddyo! ***
Reply With Quote
  #32  
Old 10-14-2023, 02:07 AM
Volod Volod is offline
Steve
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: NEOH
Posts: 1,070
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by jingram058 View Post
..... Lou Chiozza, a Memphian who had played for the Phillies and Giants in the 1930s. Lou Chiozza somehow worked behind the scenes ensuring that Willie Mays and Hank Thompson went to the Giants. I think this photo was made at the Lorraine Motel where Dr. King was assassinated years later.
Thanks for the very entertaining and informative thread, George. Man, there's just no overestimating the power of luck, I guess. If only Chiozza had played for the Cleveland Indians....baseball history might have been far different.
Reply With Quote
  #33  
Old Yesterday, 08:27 PM
Lordstan's Avatar
Lordstan Lordstan is offline
M@rk V3l@rd3
Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Allentown, PA
Posts: 3,790
Default

wow. Just found this post. Great read. Lots of interesting Characters have passed through baseball.

Here is my card contribution to the thread

__________________
My signed 1934 Goudey set(in progress).
https://flic.kr/s/aHsjFuyogy

Other interests/sets/collectibles.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/96571220@N08/albums

My for sale or trade photobucket album
https://flic.kr/s/aHsk7c1SRL
Reply With Quote
Reply




Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On

Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
FS: 1954 Topps Hank "Henry" Aaron PSA 5 - Well Centered! pdxprospect 1950 to 1959 Baseball cards- B/S/T 4 03-20-2022 01:12 PM
I "found" a T209-2 BE Thompson in a pack! sgbernard Net54baseball Vintage (WWII & Older) Baseball Cards & New Member Introductions 10 08-12-2018 08:05 PM
FS 1991 Bowman "The Shot Heard Round the World" Autographed Branca and Thompson Northviewcats Autographs & Game Used B/S/T 1 09-18-2015 12:54 PM
FS: Booklet Signed by Author of "Tropic of Cancer" Henry Miller SOLD quinnsryche Everything Else, Football, Non-Sports etc.. B/S/T 0 12-20-2013 06:07 PM
Now that the Henry Yee "Witch Hunt" has been squashed. Show your auction winnings. thekingofclout Net54baseball Sports (Primarily) Vintage Memorabilia Forum incl. Game Used 12 12-16-2010 07:48 AM


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 04:39 AM.


ebay GSB