Remember the Maine
Several sources say Harry Stees, who played for the 1897 Shamokin Coal Heavers in the Central Pennsylvania League died in the explosion of the USS Maine in Havana Harbor on February 15, 1898—it would make him the first professional player killed in action.
The Sporting Life also reported that he had died aboard the ship.
A small item in his hometown newspaper contradicts that story.
Nearly a month after the sinking of the Maine, The Harrisburg Telegraph ran the following Headlines:
“A Fool Joke”
Harry Stees was Never on the ‘Maine’ at Havana or Elsewhere
The paper said a letter had been published in The Daily, the newspaper in the nearby town of Sudbury, Pennsylvania signed by “Mrs. Harry Stees.” The letter asked for the paper if they could locate Robert Durnbaugh, a teammate of Stees with the Coal Heavers, and have Durnbaugh contact her.
In the Letter Stees is referred to as Theo. Contemporary references in the Telegraph and census records refer to Stees as T. Harry Stees. The paper said:
“A ‘Telegraph’ reporter located Mr Harry Stees without difficulty at the Peipher Line warehouse, on Walnut Street, this morning, and showed him the clipping. He stated that he was undoubtedly the individual referred to in the letter, but was positive that neither his wife nor mother had written such a communication to The Daily. ‘It’s some fool joke, put up on me by someone in town,’ he said. ‘I have been away from Harrisburg since last September when I returned with Durnbaugh from Shamokin, where we had been playing ball, and I never set foot on the Maine.’ Mr. Stees proposes to investigate the origin of the communication.”
There was no follow up on the story, but T. Harry Stees was a prominent figure in amateur and semi-pro baseball in Harrisburg into the 1930s.
It appears he was not the first professional player killed in action.
Anson’s Old Bat
Despite a broken ankle received while sliding on May 23 sidelined “Silent” John Titus for much of the season, the Philadelphia Phillies’ outfielder had his highest single-season home run total–eight in just 236 at bats, his previous high was four in 504 at bats in 1904.
The Philadelphia Record claimed it was due to a bat he had acquired that season:
“Cap Anson’s old base ball bat is helping the Phillies in their flight toward the National League pennant. This relic of early baseball is now owned by John Titus.
“When everything broke badly for Anson and he lost his fortune…that bat had to be auctioned off. Pat Moran, then a member of the Cubs, but now (Phillies Manager Charles “Red”) Dooin’s first lieutenant, was the purchaser of the club. He bid against several members of the cubs team.
“Moran had the bat shortened as soon as it was his, so that today it doesn’t look much like the clubs that Anson used, but Moran says that ‘the wood is there.’
“Titus was looking over Moran’s club one afternoon toward the close of (the 1910) season and asked to be allowed to hit a ball to the outfield with it…’Silent John’ used the bat just once and after that nothing but the possession of it would satisfy him.
“Immediately Titus began to negotiate with Moran for the bat…Finally Moran yielded, knowing that the bat would do Titus more good than it would do him.”
The Record described the bat:
“(D)irty and black from tobacco juice and frequent oiling, but the wood is in perfect shape. Probably no bat in baseball is as thick as this one. From the pitcher’s box it is said it reminds one more of a cricket bat in width.”
Titus told the paper:
“Anyone can hit with that bat of Anson’s. When a fellow is hitting, he feels that there is something to life, after all. What pleases a fellow more than to see a ball dropping over a fence? Another one I guess. Every player likes to hit home runs. It gives a player lots of ginger and confidence when he is hitting them on the nose.”
Several newspapers picked up versions of the story throughout the season, but there was no later mention of the bat, or its eventual fate, in the Philadelphia press.