Henry Lucas (baseball)

Henry Victor Lucas (1858–1910) was a baseball executive in the late 19th century.

He was one of seven children of James H. Lucas who each of whom inherited a million dollars at his death in 1873.[1] In 1884, the 26-year-old Henry Lucas became president of the Union Association, though he clearly stacked the league in favor of his St. Louis Maroons. When the league folded at the end of 1884, Lucas arranged for his team to enter the National League at a cost of $2,500.

The team struggled in the NL and Lucas's brief baseball involvement ended when the Maroons folded after the 1886 season. Writer David Nemec said that "during the next few years he turned up at a ballpark or otherwise hinted that he might like to return to the game" but he had to settle instead for employment as a railway clerk with the Vandalia Railroad.[1]

He died in 1910 of heart disease at the age of 52.

Sources

gollark: Are you secretly a member of the Organization of Macroeconomic Safety Instructors?
gollark: Why are you OMSIMattHowell instead of just MattHowell?
gollark: While you *can* queue fake key/char events and thus type things, you don't know what you should type because you can't programmatically see the number. Galaxtone found an exploit where you could make it produce a fixed/known number, which let you automatically type out everything, but I fixed that.
gollark: Also, it's not a captcha. It is not designed to detect bots.
gollark: Because something something environments.

Notes

  1. Seymour, Harold, Baseball: The Early Years, Oxford, 1960, p.160
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.