#OTD (Sep 28) in 1920, A grand jury indicts eight #Chicago #WhiteSox players for conspiring with gamblers to throw the 1919 World Series.

#BlackSox #Histodons

Today in Labor History September 28, 1920: Eight members of the Chicago White Sox were indicted by a grand jury for conspiring with gamblers to throw the 1919 World Series in what became known as the Black Sox Scandal. The players were acquitted by the jury, but they were still banned for life from professional baseball by Major League Baseball’s first commissioner, Kenesaw Mountain Landis, thus ruining their careers. Yet New York gangster, Arnold Rothstein, who orchestrated the Black Sox scandal, was never punished. The biggest loser in the Black Sox case was probably Shoeless Joe Jackson. Had he not been banned for life, he might have gone on to become one of the greatest hitters of all time, possibly even better than Ty Cobb. Jackson hit .408 in 1911, his rookie year. Babe Ruth said he modeled his batting style after Jackson. Landis was a virulent racist, but with the power to actively upheld the league’s ban on black players. It should be pointed out that the players had no union back then and wages were incredibly low, particularly on the White Sox, so low, in fact, that most players had to have other jobs to support their families. White Sox owner, Charlie Comisky, was particularly hated for his miserliness. Yet he had previously helped organize the Players League, in the late 1800s, as a rebellion to the greed of the other major leagues. The Players League was a worker-run cooperative, operated entirely by the players, with the players earning a direct stake in the profits.

Landis was also famous for fining Standard Oil $29 million (that would be nearly $1 billion in today’s dollars). John D. Rockefeller, owner of Standard Oil, said Landis would be dead long before he paid the fine. He was right. A court of appeals reversed the fine in 1908. Landis was also infamous for persecuting leftists and labor leaders (mostly foreign-born socialists, anarchists and Wobblies), including Big Bill Haywood, of the IWW, for resisting World War One. Landis referred to the leftist defendants as "scum," "filth," and "slimy rats." Haywood received a 20-year sentence, jumped bail, and fled to the Soviet Union, where he remained until his death. He is one of two Americans buried in the Kremlin wall, along with communist journalist John Reed. Haywood kept a portrait of Landis on his apartment wall, in Moscow, quite likely so he could spit on it each day. Reed, who covered the war resisters’ trial, wrote the following about Landis:

“Small on the huge bench sits a wasted man with untidy white hair, an emaciated face in which two burning eyes are set like jewels, parchment-like skin split by a crack for a mouth; the face of Andrew Jackson three years dead ... Upon this man has devolved the historic role of trying the Social Revolution. He is doing it like a gentleman. In many ways a most unusual trial. When the judge enters the court-room after recess, no one rises—he himself has abolished the pompous formality. He sits without robes, in an ordinary business suit, and often leaves the bench to come down and perch on the step of the jury box. By his personal orders, spittoons are placed by the prisoners' seats ... and as for the prisoners themselves, they are permitted to take off their coats, move around, read newspapers. It takes some human understanding for a Judge to fly in the face of judicial ritual as much as that.”

#workingclass #LaborHistory #blacksox #mlb #baseball #shoelessjoejackson #baberuth #IWW #socialism #anarchism #communism #immigrant #rockefeller #racism

#OTD in 1920, eight players on the #Chicago #WhiteSox #baseball team are indicted in Cook County IL for conspiracy to throw the 1919 #WorldSeries.

https://www.writersofwrongs.com/2017/09/white-sox-players-indicted-for-throwing.html

#BlackSox

White Sox players indicted for throwing Series

News, notes, articles and book excerpts from authors of crime history.

The Writers of Wrongs

#OTD in 1921: #Baseball Commissioner #Landis rules that eight #Chicago #WhiteSox players involved in throwing the 1919 World Series will never again play organized ball.

https://www.writersofwrongs.com/2018/08/eight-black-sox-players-banned-from.html

#BlackSox

Eight "Black Sox" players banned from baseball

News, notes, articles and book excerpts from authors of crime history.

The Writers of Wrongs

@gocu54 @MarvinFreeman @emarktaylor @baseball

Just a reminder that every player who cheated in the #BlackSox scandal was banned for life.
Not a single Asstros player, other than a retired Corea got any punishment

Yes, I am sad that Pete Rose passed away. He was a legend and he was a great. I first remember him when he played in the 1980 World Series with the Phillies. When I was 11-12 years old I played on a Little League team called the Reds, and Rose earned his legendary status playing for the Cincinnati Reds. All of that. More hits than any player in history. Legend.

He also bet on baseball games. He claims he never threw a game and he only bet on his own team. He was banned from Major League Baseball for life and good riddance. He always came off to me as if he were an insufferable prick and I had no problem with the ban. No Hall of Fame for Charlie Hustle, even though he does hold the MLB record for hits.

Now that he’s passed, and it is sad that he’s passed for sure, the conversation is going to happen again. Should his ban be lifted and should he be allowed into the Hall of Fame.

I say no. As long as Shoeless Joe Jackson remains banned for betting on baseball, specifically as a member of the 1919 Chicago Black Sox team that threw the World Series (against the Cincinnati Reds, of course) then Pete Rose remains banned too. Rose was a brilliant player but by all accounts he wasn’t even close to as good as Jackson (who was a .400 hitter one season). Who knows what Joe could have accomplished if he’d been allowed to play out his full career. There is also very little evidence of him actually participating in rigging games. Hell, he had a great series in 1919 when his co-conspirators were clearly tanking.

If they lift the ban on Joe Jackson then we can talk about lifting the ban on Pete Rose. Before then? I don’t give a shit what anyone says about Rose. If Jackson remains out then Rose remains out. That’s how it needs to be.

I have spoken.

https://robertjames1971.blog/2024/10/01/pete-rose/

#Baseball #blackSox #gambling #gamblingScandal #joeJackson #MajorLeagueBaseball #MLB #peteRose #phillies #reds #shoelessJoeJackson #whiteSox

Pete Rose

Yes, I am sad that Pete Rose passed away. He was a legend and he was a great. I first remember him when he played in the 1980 World Series with the Phillies. When I was 11-12 years old I played on …

Inside the Red Head's Head

Today in Labor History September 28, 1920: Eight members of the Chicago White Sox were indicted by a grand jury for conspiring with gamblers to throw the 1919 World Series in what became known as the Black Sox Scandal. The players were acquitted by the jury, but they were still banned for life from professional baseball by Major League Baseball’s first commissioner, Kenesaw Mountain Landis, thus ruining their careers. Yet New York gangster, Arnold Rothstein, who orchestrated the Black Sox scandal, was never punished. The biggest loser in the Black Sox case was probably Shoeless Joe Jackson. Had he not been banned for life, he might have gone on to become one of the greatest hitters of all time, possibly even better than Ty Cobb. Jackson hit .408 in 1911, his rookie year. Babe Ruth said he modeled his batting style after Jackson. Landis, like Cobb, was a virulent racist, but with the power to actively upheld the league’s ban on black players.

Landis was also famous for fining Standard Oil $29 million (that would be nearly $1 billion in today’s dollars). John D. Rockefeller, owner of Standard Oil, said Landis would be dead long before he paid the fine. He was right. A court of appeals reversed the fine in 1908. Landis was also infamous for persecuting leftists and labor leaders (mostly foreign-born socialists, anarchists and Wobblies), including Big Bill Haywood, of the IWW, for resisting World War One. Landis referred to the leftist defendants as "scum," "filth," and "slimy rats." Haywood received a 20-year sentence, jumped bail, and fled to the Soviet Union, where he remained until his death. He is one of two Americans buried in the Kremlin wall, along with communist journalist John Reed. Haywood kept a portrait of Landis on his apartment wall, in Moscow, quite likely so he could spit on it each day. Reed, who covered the war resisters’ trial, wrote the following about Landis:

“Small on the huge bench sits a wasted man with untidy white hair, an emaciated face in which two burning eyes are set like jewels, parchment-like skin split by a crack for a mouth; the face of Andrew Jackson three years dead ... Upon this man has devolved the historic role of trying the Social Revolution. He is doing it like a gentleman. In many ways a most unusual trial. When the judge enters the court-room after recess, no one rises—he himself has abolished the pompous formality. He sits without robes, in an ordinary business suit, and often leaves the bench to come down and perch on the step of the jury box. By his personal orders, spittoons are placed by the prisoners' seats ... and as for the prisoners themselves, they are permitted to take off their coats, move around, read newspapers. It takes some human understanding for a Judge to fly in the face of judicial ritual as much as that.”

#workingclass #LaborHistory #blacksox #mlb #baseball #shoelessjoejackson #baberuth #kenesawmountainlandis #IWW #bigbillhaywood #JohnReed #socialism #anarchism #communism #immigrant #rockefeller #WorldWarOne #antiwar #TyCobb #racism #soviet #kremlin #Revolution

#OTD in 1921: Commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis banned eight players from baseball forever. Though they had been acquitted in court, Landis ruled that the #Chicago #WhiteSox players conspired to throw the 1919 World Series to the underdog #Cincinnati #Reds.

https://www.writersofwrongs.com/2018/08/eight-black-sox-players-banned-from.html

#BlackSox #MLB #Histodons

Eight "Black Sox" players banned from baseball

News, notes, articles and book excerpts from authors of crime history.

The Writers of Wrongs

#OTD in 1920: A Cook County grand jury indicted eight #Chicago #WhiteSox players for conspiracy to commit an unlawful act - the throwing of the 1919 #WorldSeries against the Cincinnati Reds.

Read about it:
https://www.writersofwrongs.com/2017/09/white-sox-players-indicted-for-throwing.html

#Histodons #CrimeHistory #BlackSox

White Sox players indicted for throwing Series

News, notes, articles and book excerpts from authors of crime history.

The Writers of Wrongs

#OTD in 1921: #Baseball Comm. Landis announces lifetime ban against 8 players:
"Regardless of the verdict of juries, no player that throws a ball game, no player that entertains proposals or promises to throw a game, no player that sits in a conference with a bunch of crooked players and gamblers, where the ways and means of throwing games are discussed, and does not tell his club about it, will ever play professional baseball."

https://www.writersofwrongs.com/2018/08/eight-black-sox-players-banned-from.html

#MLB #BlackSox #Histodons #CrimeHistory

Eight "Black Sox" players banned from baseball

News, notes, articles and book excerpts from authors of crime history.

The Writers of Wrongs