http:\/\/Vimeo.com\/173608869<\/a><\/p><\/div>\nDonaldson followed up with a stellar season for Bertha in 1925, before moving on to the Lismore (MN) Gophers in 1926. \u00a0Lismore signed the profitable lefty for $450 a month, the use of a furnished house and the opportunity to pick up extra money pitching for other teams on off-days. \u00a0Not to be repetitious but – continuing to go where he could make the best living on the mound<\/em> – from 1928 to 30, Donaldson racked up wins and strikeouts for teams in towns like: Bertha; Melrose, Minnesota; Scobey, Montana; and St. Cloud, Minnesota; as well as for barnstorming squads like the Colored House of\u00a0 David.<\/p>\nIn the early 1930\u2019s, Donaldson – now entering his forties – played for such squads as his own John Donaldson All Stars (1931-33); The Kansas City Monarchs (1931 and 1934); Joe Green\u2019s Chicago Giants (1934-37); and even Satchel Paige\u2019s All Stars. Even as his career wound down, he continued to display the skills that had made him one of the most sought after ballplayers over the previous two decades.<\/p>\n
JOHN DONALDSON RECORDS 23-STRIKEOUT GAME … AT AGE 43<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\nOn June 3, 1934 – the then 43-year-old John Donaldson \u2013 went to the mound for Joe Green\u2019s Chicago Giants against the People\u2019s Club in Rockford, Illinois. Donaldson threw a complete-game, one-hit shutout, fanning 23 batters on the way to a 3-0 win.<\/strong><\/span><\/p><\/blockquote>\nJust how good was John Donaldson?\u00a0 Here are comments from a few who saw him pitch:<\/p>\n
\nHall of Fame shortstop and manager John Henry \u201cPop\u201d Lloyd<\/strong><\/span> said Donaldson was the greatest pitcher he ever faced.<\/li>\nNegro League ambassador Buck O\u2019Neil<\/strong> <\/span>said; \u201cJohn Donaldson \u2026 showed Satchel (Paige) the way, and the fact is, there are many people who saw them both who say Donaldson was just as good as Satchel.\u201d<\/li>\nHall of Famer manager John McGraw<\/strong><\/span> said \u201cI think he is the greatest I have ever seen.\u201d<\/li>\n<\/ul>\nA FEW OF JOHN DONALDSON\u2019S DOCUMENTED ACCOMPLISHMENTS<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n\n422 victories<\/strong><\/span><\/li>\n5,177 strikeouts<\/strong><\/span><\/li>\n14 no-hitters; two perfect games<\/strong><\/span><\/li>\nA 31-strikeout game (18 innings)<\/strong><\/span><\/li>\nMore than two dozen games of 20 or more strikeouts<\/strong><\/span><\/li>\nThree consecutive 500-strikeout seasons<\/strong><\/span><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n*You can put an \u201cat least\u201d in front of all these statistics. These are just the victories and strikeouts documented thus far by The Donaldson Network. <\/em><\/span><\/p><\/blockquote>\nWhile Donaldson clearly made history on the field, he is also credited with making it off the field.\u00a0 In 1949, the Chicago White Sox hired Donaldson as the first full-time African-American scout in the major leagues.\u00a0 The White Sox drew on Donaldson\u2019s half-century of experience in segregated baseball to help connect the team to the untapped talent of the Negro Leagues and Black baseball.<\/p>\n
PETE GORTON … AND THE DONALDSON NETWORK<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\nBBRT note: \u00a0Again, this post would not have been possible without the much appreciated past efforts and current assistance of Pete Gorton and the resources of The Donaldson Network. <\/span><\/em><\/p>\nPeter Gorton tells the John Donaldson story. at the Halsy Hall SABR Chapter meeting.<\/p><\/div>\n
Pete Gorton is the founder of The Donaldson Network, which has collected contributions from more than 550 authors, researchers and historians in the rediscovery of the lost legacy of John Wesley Donaldson.\u00a0 Gorton, who lives in Minneapolis, is a speech consultant and member of the Society for American Baseball Research (SABR) Negro Leagues Committee. He has studied the career of John Donaldson for the past 15 years; and shared in the SABR\/ Sporting News Research Award for his chapter on Donaldson in the book Swinging for the Fences: Black Baseball in Minnesota<\/em>. He also received the 2006 Coates Memorial Award for outstanding research in the field of Black baseball and the 2011 Tweed Webb Lifetime Achievement Award (recognizing long-term contributions to the field of Negro League research). \u00a0<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\nThe Center for Negro Leagues Baseball Research called The Donaldson Network: The most extensive research project that has ever been undertaken related to Black baseball.<\/strong><\/span><\/p><\/blockquote>\n___________________________________<\/p>\n
EXCERPTS FROM BASEBALL ROUNDTABLES’ 2016 INTERVIEW WITH PETE GORTON:<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n1) What set you on this “Mission?”<\/strong><\/p>\nI began looking into the story of John Donaldson in 2000 for a book my former high school Social Studies teacher was putting together. His project chronicled the history of Black baseball in Minnesota. I was a freelance television photographer at the time and had opportunities to dig into a story he pitched to me as a difficult challenge. He told me a couple of other established writers had turned it down because documenting John Donaldson’s story was “too difficult.”<\/p>\n
I had a connection – sort of – to John Donaldson. My hometown of Staples is 13 miles from Bertha, Minnesota, where Donaldson played three seasons (1924-25 and 1927.) Growing up, I had never heard of him \u2026. I was curious how such a great player could be so unknown.<\/p>\n
I made an appointment to go to the Bertha Historical Society. When I visited, the curator at the time showed me their collection of scorebooks, photographs and scrapbooks. There was a broadside poster on the wall that advertised \u201cJOHN DONALDSON \u2013 GREATEST COLORED PITCHER IN THE WORLD.\u201d<\/strong> \u00a0\u2026 \u00a0I knew then I needed to keep on the story and figure out why people did not know his name.<\/p>\nI continued to look for every mention of Donaldson in papers everywhere I traveled and began amassing a file collection that I knew people would eventually want to see. Meanwhile the book Swinging for the Fences: Black Baseball in Minnesota<\/em> came out and I had written the Donaldson chapter. This led to an invitation to attend a ceremony in Chicago.\u00a0 That invitation came from the Negro Leagues Baseball Grave Marker Project, who had discovered Donaldson was buried in an unmarked grave. They had raised funds, with a major contribution from Jerry Reinsdorf, owner of the White Sox, to have a marker designed and built to honor John Donaldson.<\/p>\nWhile attending the ceremony, I stood with some of the most renowned Negro League baseball historians in America. We stood over Donaldson\u2019s final resting place and I asked \u201cWhat do we really know about John Donaldson?\u201d I figured someone must have put his story together. The answer was \u201cnot enough\u201d and, at that moment, we started in earnest to document the remarkable career of John Donaldson.<\/p>\n
The legacy of John Donaldson is an example of what happens when a great human being is marginalized by segregation: history forgets.<\/p>\n
2) What do you see as John Donaldson\u2019s most significant achievement?<\/strong><\/p>\nIn my opinion, John Donaldson\u2019s most significant achievement was his ability to survive in the times in which he lived. I do not want to sound too melodramatic, but life for a black man in the early Twentieth Century was difficult. The average life expectancy for a black male in 1900 was 35 years.<\/p>\n
Donaldson was born in February of 1891 in Glasgow, Missouri. Just a few weeks prior to having, her first child, Ida Donaldson endured the lynching of a Black man in the streets of Glasgow. Imagine being eight-months pregnant and having this atrocity take place in your city. Incredible! John Donaldson knew from a very early age what it took for a Black man to survive in the segregated world. He went on to do so many wonderful things despite a society that did not think he was worthy of anything significant. He was a great ballplayer, but his life is an extraordinary example of what it was like to be Black in America. He endured his father being murdered by a railroad cop in 1923. His ability to navigate the miles and play baseball in at least 25 states and over 550 cities meant he showed exceptional courage to merely survive.<\/p>\n
So, I believe John Donaldson\u2019s greatest achievement includes baseball, but baseball is not his most resounding contribution. Donaldson\u2019s ability to excel on the field and survive off of it to become one of the all-time greatest ballplayers is his most significant contribution not just to baseball, but to society.<\/p>\n
MISSOURI SPORTS HALL OF FAME NOMINATION<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\nJohn Donaldson is a 2017 nominee for the Missouri Sports Hall of Fame due, in large part, to the work of The Donaldson Network.<\/strong><\/span><\/p><\/blockquote>\n3) What has been the most challenging aspect of the research?<\/strong><\/p>\nThe most challenging aspect of researching John Donaldson is the sheer amount of information we have been able to amass, yet people do not seem to easily grasp how significant he was.<\/p>\n
We have nearly 6,000 newspaper articles that are relevant to the career of John Donaldson. As I sit here today, there are at least 250 more that have yet to be processed. Each gives further detail to a story that encapsulates what Negro League baseball was all about. From the beginning to the end of the segregated era, John Donaldson was in the middle of it all. \u00a0The neglect of Donaldson\u2019s legacy in the annals of not only Negro League baseball history, but the entirety of baseball history, is a glaring omission.<\/p>\n
BBRT agrees, it is indeed time for John Donaldson to take his well-earned place in Cooperstown.\u00a0<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\nI tweet baseball @DavidBBRT<\/h3>\n Member:\u00a0 Society for American Baseball Research (SABR); The Baseball Reliquary; Baseball Bloggers Alliance.<\/strong><\/p>\n2016 MLB AWARDS POST<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\nIt’s baseball awards season. \u00a0BBRT made its predictions for the major awards before the finalists were announced. \u00a0For a look at whom BBRT likes and why, click here.<\/a><\/strong><\/span><\/p><\/blockquote>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"First Published in November 2016, career statistics updated in 2021. Leroy \u201cSatchel\u2019 Paige \u2013 Bullet Joe Rogan \u2013 Bob Gibson \u2013 Fergie Jenkins \u2013 Smokey Joe Williams \u2013 John Wesley \u201cCannon Ball\u201d Donaldson.\u00a0 Six great Black hurlers, who all brought lightening to the mound. \u00a0Six ferocious competitors who could strike fear in the hearts and […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[11],"tags":[],"yoast_head":"\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n\t \n