| advertise add site services publishers database health videos | ![]() | about toolbar stats live show health store more stuff JOIN/LOGIN |
CLICK HERE: old age sex, older women nude, old granny fuck thankyoudrleonard.com | Old Mill Basin Neurology Services, Old Mill Basin Neurology... hqbk.com | Caring for the Elderly, Elder Health Care Services, Elder Care Home eldercarezone.com |
Henry Knox "Heinie" Elder (August 23, 1890 - November 13, 1958) was a Major League Baseball pitcher. Heinie Elder was born in Seattle, Washington, and died in Long Beach, California.
[edit] Playing careerAfter attending the University of Minnesota, and playing baseball for the "Golden Gophers" in his 1911 freshman season[1], Heinie Elder played one game in the major leagues, at age 22, as a left-handed relief pitcher for the Detroit Tigers on July 7, 1913. He pitched 3-1/3 innings and gave up 4 hits, 5 bases on balls, and 3 earned runs for a single-game and career earned run average of 8.10. [edit] Military service in two World WarsHeinie Elder is one of the few major league players to have served in both World War I and World War II. He was a Lieutenant Colonel in the U.S. Army[2][3]. He died in 1958 at age 68 in Long Beach, California. He was buried at the Los Angeles National Cemetery on Sepluveda Boulevard, north of Wilshire Boulevard, in Los Angeles, California. [edit] Major league "Heinies""Heinie" was a popular nickname for German baseball players in the early part of the 20th century, particularly those whose first name was Henry, as Heinie was a familiar form of the German equivalent Heinrich. Elder was one of 22 major league Heinies in the first half of the century. Others include: Heinie Beckendorf 1909-1910; Heinie Berger 1907-1910; Heinie Groh 1912-1927; Heinie Heitmuller 1909-1910; Heinie Heltzel 1943-1944; Heinie Jantzen 1912-1912; Heinie Kappel 1887-1889; Heinie Manush 1923-1939 - the only Hall of Fame "Heinie"; Heinie Meine 1922-1934, also known as "The Count Of Luxemburg"; Heinie Mueller 1920-1935; Heinie Mueller 1938-1941; Heinie Odom 1925-1925; Heinie Peitz 1892-1913; Heinie Reitz 1893-1899; Heinie Sand 1923-1928; Heinie Scheer 1922-1923; Heinie Schuble 1927-1936; Heinie Smith 1897-1903; Heinie Stafford 1916-1916; Heinie Wagner 1902-1918; and Heinie Zimmerman 1907-1919 - implicated in the Chicago "Black Sox" scandal. After the end of World War II, no further major league player has gone by the nickname "Heinie." [edit] Notes[edit] External links
Categories: 1890 births | 1958 deaths | Major League Baseball pitchers | Detroit Tigers players | Major League Baseball players from Washington (U.S. state) | University of Minnesota alumni | United States Army officers | American military personnel of World War I | American military personnel of World War II | Baseball pitcher, 1890s births stubs |
| ↑ top of page ↑ | about thumbshots |