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Tris Speaker, baseball announcer '31-33?
Published by: cfz 2010-03-18
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  • Tris Speaker was a famous baseball player & is in its Hall of Fame. He died on Dec.8, 1958 in Lake Whitney,TX. He was one of the early radio announcers of baseball. My question is: Was he an announcer from '31-33, announcing games for the White Sox & Cubs? Total baseball VII lists him as an announcer for the Cleveland Indians in '49, I believe.


  • Bluestreak -- I am indeed a baseball fan, though there are admittedly bigger fanatics. Are you going to put my old acquaintance John Schulian in there, even if he's writing other things? Knew him back when he was in Chicago (and came close to going to write for the NY Times.) Just this morning I saw Stump's reference to Frances Fairburn Cobb in one of the books on my library shelf. I'll take a look at Thurston. Luciaphile and I bounced some ideas around on Emil Hauser. Luciaphile has some great library access. Thank you for the kind comments and best regards, Omnivorous-GA
  • Hall of Fame on BabyNamer::
    American baseball pitcher and announcer. Inducted into the Baseball Hall Tris Speaker. Baseball player. Inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1937
    http://www.babynamer.com/category/48
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  • Bluestreak -- The claim re: Speaker and the Indians is worth checking. The Indians brought Jimmy Dudley on to announce in 1948 and he became a Cleveland baseball legend on the radio. In 1949, Speaker was already helping Hank Greenberg with player development for the Indians, according to Internet references that I've seen. I can't swear that Tristam WASN'T broadcasting then, as I came along as an Indians fan in 1950. But again, it might be nice to have a second source. Google search strategy: "Tris Speaker" + radio + Indians Best regards, Omnivorous-GA


  • Bluestreak -- Speaker was definitely a Chicago radio announcer in this period. I have an AP article from Chicago titled "Less Lively Ball is Slow on the Ground, But as Fast in Air as Old One, Says Speaker." The article appears May 8, 1931 in the NY Times and describes him as a radio announcer "specializing in baseball." It doesn't indicate whether he's broadcasting for the Cubs, White Sox or both. By 1935 he's back in baseball, managing his first year for Kansas City in the American Association. Best regards, Omnivorous-GA
  • Quotes - G (Baseball World)::
    God, my family and baseball. The only problem - once baseball season starts Joe DiMaggio's comment that he was going to make people forget Tris Speaker.
    http://www.geocities.com/colosseum/park/1138/quotes/quotesg.html
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  • Omnivorous, I want to thank you so much, for your continued help. I just now emailed the museum to see if they have any documentation that they might pass my way. If they do, I'll pass it on to Total Baseball, so they can correct the under-crediting of Tris as an expert baseball broadcaster. Again, you have my thanks. I also wanted to get your imput on my remaining 48 unanswered questions. I have 30 answered. Are you finished working on my list? I haven't had much activity in the last 3-4 days, & I'm wondering if the researchers have worked on my list as much as they're going to. I'm going to ask a few others, like luciaphile, sparky4ca, johnny_phoenix & journalist. I could just as easily post 20 different questions. Any thoughts? Bluestreak


  • Bluestreak -- The NY Times publication of the AP article (dateline: Chicago) was "Less Lively Ball is Slow on the Ground, But as Fast in Air as Old One, Says Speaker," May 8, 1931. It describes him as a radio announcer "specializing in baseball." It doesn't indicate whether he's broadcasting for the Cubs, White Sox or both. It doesn't say for what radio station he's broadcasting. I pulled this reference from Proquest Historical Newspapers, which has articles indexed and on-line at major libraries. It obviously would also be on microfilm at some libraries. In doublechecking here, I tried some alternate strategies but there just isn't much on the Internet about early days of radio. At one time, I worked for Zenith Radio and knew a number of contacts for historical sources in Chicago. Zenith had owned WJAZ; WGN was broadcasting in the early 1930s (and would be the first guess for where Speaker was announcing); I believe that WFLD was too. It's interesting to see the hostility of baseball owners to radio broadcasts. "Radio Ban Expected by American League" says an Oct. 20, 1932 AP story. Particularly opposed are the Philadelphia, NY and Washington DC franchises which even ban telegraph reports for broadcasters to use in a play-by-play. Several alternate searches were tried: "early radio" + Chicago + baseball Best regards, Omnivorous-GA


  • Omnivorous, Although I was hoping for a more extensive, detailed documentation on Tris, given the parameters of the question, you have definitely submitted a sucessful answer. Could you please resubmit your comment as an answer, so I may rate & tip you. Thank you so very much & please excuse my tardiness. I am just now going over all the questions & responses to see if I missed any promising leads. Bluestreak


  • Onmivorous! You're back with me! Always great to hear from you. I started as a baseball researcher. I have one reference to Speaker's announcing career in Chicago and am seeking further documentation. Yours is my second reference. I'd like something substantial to forward to Total Baseball so they can update their Speaker entry. I also have stuff that Speaker was a Cleveland spring training hitting coach and helped their outfielders get their stuff together. I don't believe that he ever went on the road with them as part of the team though. My references seem to indicate that '49 wasn't the only season that he served as "expert commentator" in the broadcasting booth" for the Indians. But I'd like to have independant confirmation. Alway glad to hear from you, omnvorous! P.S. I have an article from Baseball Magazine where Speaker complains that his name is not Tristram. He says some writer just assumed it was and he was never able to stop everyone else from jumping on the bandwagon. I also see it everywhere. Poor Tris. What's a Texan to do.


  • Bluestreak -- I sent a note to a friend who has worked for the Chicago Sun-Times, thinking that she might have access to their archives. Though she's too busy to look right now, she made a suggestion that you might find helpful in future research: >Try the Museum of Broadcast Communications; Bruce Dumont is the executive >director. It had been housed in the Downtown Cultural Center; it may have >moved recently to Navy Pier or to the new Goodman Theatre Center in the Loop. They're available on the web: http://www.museum.tv/index.shtml Best regards, Omnivorous-GA


  • Thank you Omnivorous, You sound like a baseball fan. I am too. I'm creating the first sports writers directory. I have about 600 writers and I'm still working on about 100 of them. I posted a few here, but I've got lots more for a future day. Good work on Speaker. Any chance you might look in on James Thurston, dancer? You have all my appreciation for helping me so much. Bluestreak





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