Butts Wagner
Butts Wagner | |||
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Third baseman | |||
Born: Chartiers, Carnegie, Pennsylvania |
September 17, 1871|||
Died: Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania |
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MLB debut | |||
April 27, 1898, for the Washington Senators | |||
Last MLB appearance | |||
October 10, 1898, for the Brooklyn Bridegrooms | |||
MLB statistics | |||
Batting average | .226 | ||
Home runs | 1 | ||
Runs batted in | 34 | ||
Teams | |||
Albert Wagner (September 17, 1871 – November 26, 1928), was an American professional baseball player. He played one year of Major League Baseball[1] for two different teams during the 1898 season. He was Honus Wagner's older brother.[1]
Career
Born in Chartiers, Carnegie, Pennsylvania, he began the 1898 season with the Washington Senators and later on was loaned to the Brooklyn Bridegrooms.[1] On July 4, Wagner replaced an injured Duke Farrell in center field and hit a home run, the only home run of his career, along with a double and scored three runs in a 9-5 Bridegroom victory.[2]
Wagner died in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania at the age of 57, and is interred at the Chartiers Cemetery in Carnegie, Pennsylvania.[3]
Popular culture
Butts Wagner is depicted as an eccentric inventor during a boy's long dream sequence in the book The Mystery of the Wagner Whacker. Wagner invents an automatic bat machine, and the boy helps defend him from organized crime figures who want to steal the invention.[4] In the book Honus and Me, Joe Stoshack pretends to be Butts.
References
External links
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball Reference, or Baseball Reference (Minors)
- Major League Baseball third basemen
- American people of German descent
- Washington Senators (1891–99) players
- Brooklyn Bridegrooms players
- Warren (minor league baseball) players
- Canton Deubers players
- Steubenville Stubs players
- Akron Akrons players
- Lima Farmers players
- Toronto Canadians players
- Albany Senators players
- Wheeling Nailers (baseball) players
- Toronto Canucks players
- Toronto Maple Leafs (International League) players
- Kansas City Blues (baseball) players
- Providence Clamdiggers (baseball) players
- Providence Grays (minor league) players
- Montreal Royals players
- Baseball players from Pennsylvania
- 19th-century baseball players
- American expatriate baseball people in Canada
- 1871 births
- 1928 deaths