Morrie Silver

Morrie E. Silver (July 28, 1909April 26, 1974)[1] was an American businessman based in Rochester, New York. He is best known for his work with the Rochester Red Wings minor league baseball team.

Business career

A native of Rochester, Silver attended East High School and was set to attend Cornell University, but had to change plans when his father became ill. He sold newspapers for the Rochester Times-Union, advancing to the circulation department.[2]

In 1937, Silver founded a school, the Columbia Institute for Music. He later opened a music store that was very successful during the post-war recorded music boom, the store at one time becoming the highest-grossing record store in the United States.[2] He sold the store and started the appliance distributorship M. E. Silver Corporation.[2]

Rochester Red Wings

In 1956, the St. Louis Cardinals announced that they would no longer field a farm team in Rochester,[1][3] where the minor league team, the Red Wings, was one of the oldest in baseball. A group spearheaded by Silver quickly attempted to raise funds to keep the team in Rochester. The resulting stock drive, which gathered 8,222 stockholders, was nicknamed "The 72-Day Miracle."[3][4] In 1957 the Rochester Community Baseball, Inc., with Silver the majority stockholder,[5] bought the Red Wings from the Cardinals, with Silver presenting them with a $500,000 check.[3]

Silver said, "I just couldn't imagine youngsters growing up in years to come not being able to see professional baseball in Rochester."[6]

Silver periodically worked in the front office of the Red Wings, serving as president in 1957, 1962, 1963, and 1965, and as general manager from 1966 to 1968.[1]

Death and legacy

Silver moved to Miami Beach in 1968, but continued to be involved in the operation of the Red Wings. Silver died of complications of a heart attack in Miami, Florida on April 26, 1974. He was survived by his wife, Anna, and a daughter, Naomi.[7] Naomi Silver remains as president and chief executive of the Red Wings.[8]

Red Wing Stadium, the home of the Red Wings, was renamed Silver Stadium upon Silver's retirement in 1968. The Red Wings played at Silver Stadium until 1996, after which the address of the Red Wing's new park, Frontier Field, was named One Morrie Silver Way. A statue near Frontier Field was dedicated to Silver in 2007.[4] The Morrie Silver Family Scholarship awards $5000 annually to young Red Wings employees who are attending school.[9]

Silver was elected to the Rochester Red Wings Hall of Fame in 1989,[5] and to the International League Hall of Fame in 2008.[1] The Red Wings retired the fanciful jersey number 8222 in his honor, using the number of initial Red Wings shareholders from 1956.[10]

gollark: > to work.<|endoftext|>What if the rules specify English grammar but not the interpreter?<|endoftext|>It's not.<|endoftext|>You can't just not be an interpreter.<|endoftext|>I mean, it's somewhat more "open to" than "actually encoding English", but you know.<|endoftext|>You said speech canNOT be implemented by users.<|endoftext|>It's not very interesting and you can't just not actually use it.<|endoftext|>I would prefer to just use a " editor" to follow more, but that doesn't make it *obinitely* a good thing.<|endoftext|>It is not!<|endoftext|>That is not what it is in the programming language.<|endoftext|>No, I mean, you can use python as a language, but it's a good language.<|endoftext|>[BACKTICKS EXPUNGED]python↑ sample output (`<|endoftext|>` is a delimiter of some sort)
gollark: After several hours training on Google GPUs that they let random people use for some reason, the model generates grammatically correct but nonsensical sentences.
gollark: It's very easy because someone else already did basically all the work and I just had to write a script to dump my Discord data package into a CSV file with pings and DMs scrubbed out.
gollark: My evil plan to train a small GPT-2 model on my Discord messages has begun.
gollark: Yes. But you shouldn't.

References

  1. "Morrie Silver" (PDF). International League Hall of Fame. Retrieved June 12, 2013.
  2. Mandelaro, Jim; Pitoniak, Scott (1996). Silver Seasons: The Story of the Rochester Red Wings. Syracuse University Press. p. 103. ISBN 0815627033.
  3. "Morrie Silver". baseball-reference.com. Retrieved June 12, 2013.
  4. "Morrie Silver Statue Dedication July 25, 2007". Rochester Red Wings. Retrieved June 12, 2013.
  5. "Red Wings Hall of Fame: S-Z". Rochester Red Wings. Retrieved June 12, 2013.
  6. Mandelaro and Pitoniak, p. 129.
  7. Mandelaro and Pitoniak, p. 161.
  8. "Front Office Staff". Rochester Red Wings. Retrieved June 12, 2013.
  9. "Morrie Silver Family Scholarship". Rochester Red Wings. Retrieved June 12, 2013.
  10. Maher, Michael (May 7, 2010). "A Review: Silver Seasons And A New Frontier". Going Nine Baseball. Archived from the original on August 19, 2014. Retrieved August 17, 2014.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.