Heinie Manush was a fish out of water: a dead-ball hitter in the era of the blossoming home run. He also stood in the shadows of giants for many years, finishing in the top 10 in virtually every hitting category every year, but rarely winning. Still, Manush's Hall of Fame career is a testament to longevity: a lifetime .330 hitter, Manush played 17 years with 6 different teams, collecting over 2,500 hits.

Early Years

Henry Emmett Manush was born July 20, 1901, in Tuscumbia, Alabama. He spent his pre-baseball years helping out his father, a local pipefitter. When he was 18, he signed a minor-league contract with the Philadelphia Athletics, his older brother Frank's one-time team. However, in 1921, Baseball Commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis ruled that certain gentleman's agreements between owners without proper paperwork were illegal, and named several players free agents, including Heinie.

Playing With The Big Boys

Heinie (a grandmother's rather ribald nickname for Henry) moved to the Detroit Tigers farm system, and earned a place on the starting roster in 1923. At the time, he played in the outfield with both Ty Cobb and Harry Heilmann - both outstanding hitters. From 1923 to 1926, one of these 3 men won the American League batting crown. On the final day of 1926, Manush needed 5 hits to surpass Babe Ruth for the crown. He did so, going 6-for-9 in a doubleheader, including 4-for-4 in the 2nd game, the shortest game in American League history (at 55 minutes!)

Glory Days

Cobb retired in 1926, and Manush took over in center field. However, he struggled in 1927 (although batting a highly respectable .298 and leading the league in hit by pitches, a feat he repeated in 1928) and was traded to the St. Louis Browns. He played there for 2 years, both times finishing in the top 3 in batting. He was traded in 1930 mid-season to the Washington Senators for another future Hall of Famer, Goose Goslin.

He finished the year out batting .362 for the Nats, taking them to their last World Series, and he made it a memorable one. In Game Four, he was called out by Charley Moran. To protest the call, he grabbed Moran's tie, stretched its elastic band, and let it snap back in Moran's place. Shortly thereafter, Manush became the second player ever ejected from a World Series game.

End Of A Career

Manush continued playing for Washington, accumulating a 33-game hitting streak in 1933, and being named an All-Star in 1934. After another subpar season in 1935, he was traded to the Boston Red Sox, where he missed half the 1936 season with problems resulting from a dislocated shoulder. In 1937, he was again traded, this time to the Brooklyn Dodgers. By now, Manush served more as a bench coach than a player, although he still batted .333. He was traded one final time near the end of the 1938 season, to the Pittsburgh Pirates, where he retired in 1939.

After Baseball

He continued to player-manage in the minors until 1945, when he became a scout for the Boston Braves, and then the Pittsburgh Pirates. In 1953, his old team the Washington Senators picked him to be their hitting coach, and in 1955 he became their scouting director. In 1964, Manush was selected by the Veterans Committee to join the elite rank of the Major League Baseball Hall Of Fame.

Heinie Manush passed away May 12, 1971, in Sarasota, Florida.

Lifetime Statistics

 YEAR   TEAM   G   AB    R    H  2B  3B  HR  RBI  SB CS  BB  SO   BA
 1923 DET AL 109  308   59  103  20   5   4   54   3  5  20  21 .334
 1924 DET AL 120  422   83  122  24   8   9   68  14  5  27  30 .289
 1925 DET AL  99  278   46   84  14   3   5   47   8  3  24  21 .302
 1926 DET AL 136  498   95  188  35   8  14   86  11  5  31  28 .378
 1927 DET AL 151  593  102  177  31  18   6   90  12  8  47  29 .298
 1928 SLB AL 154  638  104  241  47  20  13  108  17  5  39  14 .378
 1929 SLB AL 142  574   85  204  45  10   6   81   9  8  43  24 .355
 1930 SLB AL  49  198   26   65  16   4   2   29   3  1   5   7 .328
      WSH AL  88  356   74  129  33   8   7   65   4  3  26  17 .362
      TOT AL 137  554  100  194  49  12   9   94   7  4  31  24 .350
 1931 WSH AL 146  616  110  189  41  11   6   70   3  3  36  27 .307
 1932 WSH AL 149  625  121  214  41  14  14  116   7  2  36  29 .342
 1933 WSH AL 153  658  115  221  32  17   5   95   6  4  36  18 .336
 1934 WSH AL 137  556   88  194  42  11  11   89   7  3  36  23 .349
 1935 WSH AL 119  479   68  131  26   9   4   56   2  0  35  17 .273
 1936 BOS AL  82  313   43   91  15   5   0   45   1  3  17  11 .291
 1937 BRO NL 132  466   57  155  25   7   4   73   6     40  24 .333
 1938 BRO NL  17   51    9   12   3   1   0    6   1      5   4 .235
      PIT NL  15   13    2    4   1   1   0    4   0      2   0 .308
      TOT NL  32   64   11   16   4   2   0   10   1  0   7   4 .250
 1939 PIT NL  10   12    0    0   0   0   0    1   0      1   1 .000
CAREER      2008 7654 1287 2524 491 160 110 1183 114 58 506 345 .330
* Bold denotes led league.

Sources

  • TheBaseballPage.com - http://www.thebaseballpage.com/past/pp/manushheinie/default.htm
  • Baseball-Reference.com - http://www.baseball-reference.com/m/manushhe01.shtml
  • BaseballLibrary.com - http://www.pubdim.net/baseballlibrary/ballplayers/M/Manush_Heinie.stm

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