Wednesday, June 24, 2020

Kenny Kuhn


Kenny Kuhn was an infielder who played in 71 games for the Cleveland Indians in 1955-57.

Kenneth Harold Kuhn was born March 20, 1937, in Louisville, Kentucky, the seventh of eight children of Charles, a former minor league baseball player, and Anna Kuhn. He was a 12-letter man at Male High School in Louisville, earning three varsity letters each in baseball, basketball, football, and track. He had college scholarship offers in basketball and football, but chose baseball, as reported in the Cleveland Plain Dealer of July 6, 1955:
CLEVELAND PAYS ROOKIE $30,000 
Signs Sought-After 18-Year-Old High School Shortstop to Bonus Contract 
By Harry Jones 
KANSAS CITY, July 5—The Indians today announced the signing of an 18-year-old shortstop, who as a bonus player, must remain on the Tribe’s roster for at least two years. 
He is Kenneth Harold Kuhn, a recent graduate of Louisville (Ky.) Male High School, where he was an all-state selection in football, basketball and track as well as in baseball. 
Sought by a number of major league teams, the left-handed hitting Kuhn reportedly received more than $30,000 from the Indians. He will join them here tomorrow. 
In announcing his signing General Manager Greenberg praised Kuhn as the “finest young infielder I have seen in a long time.” The youngster worked out in Cleveland last week. 
“We would have preferred not to make him a bonus player,” Greenberg said, “because we felt he would be much better off playing somewhere in the minors every day. 
“At the insistence of the boy and his father, we had to make him a bonus player. We couldn’t have signed him otherwise. He would have received a bonus from some other club. 
“At any rate, we’re very happy to have him with us. I sincerely think he’ll help us in the not too distant future at a position where we may need help.” 
Kuhn, who lives in Okalona, Ky., a Louisville suburb, batted over .500 in three years of high school competition and hit .400 in the Louisville Amateur Baseball Federation last summer. 
The five-foot-eleven, 175-pound youngster was originally scouted by Buzz Wetzel and later by John Schulte, who as a scout for the New York Yankees signed Shortstop Phil Rizzuto. 
“Kuhn is a better prospect than Rizzuto was when I signed him,” Schulte stated. 
Manager Al Lopez was greatly impressed when he saw Kuhn working out last week. 
“Ordinarily I don’t believe in signing bonus players,” he said, “but this boy is really something, for a kid he has the finest pair of hands and one of the strongest arms I’ve ever seen. 
“I don’t know how long it’ll be before he can play regularly for us, but I’d say he has a good chance of making it before that two-year bonus period is up. I would hate to have lost him.” 
In high school Kuhn was captain of the football, basketball and baseball teams. He participated in the broad jump and dash events for the track team, running the 100-yard dash in 10.2 seconds…

The next day the Plain Dealer ran a follow-up story:
Kuhn Knew Son Would Make It 
Staff Special 
KANSAS CITY, July 6—Charles Kuhn sat in a box seat next to the Cleveland dugout tonight, watching his 18-year-old son, Kenny Kuhn, work out with the Indians. 
“Something I’ve always wanted to see,” he said. “A son of mine playing big league ball.” 
A bonus player who received more than $30,000 to sign with the tribe, the awe-struck youngster wasn’t actually playing yet. But he was on the team and will remain so for at least two years. 
“I used to play some ball myself,” the elder Kuhn said. “I was a fair catcher and I got as far as Louisville in 1924. Then I hurt my arm and I was through. Couldn’t even throw to second base. 
“So I hoped a boy of mine would become a big leaguer. I knew Pee Wee Reese’s dad in Louisville and before either of us had any children we used to say we’d both have a son playing ball. 
“I remember when Peewee was born, Carl Reese came runnin’ over to my house and said: ‘Well, I’ve got mine. It’s your turn now.’ Peewee made it, all right, but his dad didn’t live to see him play. 
“Kenneth is my youngest son. None of my four other boys were good enough to play pro ball, though a couple of them played college football. I guess I always knew that Kenneth would make it, though. 
“Didn’t surprise me either that Kenneth picked Cleveland. Peewee tried to get him to sign with the Dodgers, but Kenneth has been wanting to play with the Indians for as long as he’s been old enough to throw a ball.” 
Charles Kuhn then went on to tell of his son’s athletic exploits at Louisville (Ky.) Male high school. At his graduation last month, the youngster was praised as the greatest athlete in the history of the school. 
“He was a quarterback in football and people have told me they have never seen a better one,” the elder Kuhn said. “I guess he could have gone to any big time college in the country. 
“Bear Bryant, who used to coach Kentucky, would call my boy ‘the little general.’ Blanton Collier, who is coaching Kentucky now, told me Kenneth could be the best quarterback in the country. 
“But Kenneth wanted to play baseball. The last game of football he played he said, ‘Dad, that’s it. From now on I’m a baseball player.’ They put his football jersey in a trophy case in the high school.” 
A left-handed hitting shortstop, young Kuhn was impressive both in batting and fielding practice tonight. He swung the bat smartly and fielded with flawless grace as his father sat on the sidelines watching. 
“He’s gonna make it, all right,” Charles Kuhn said. “I always knew that Kenneth was gonna make it.”
The day that article appeared, Kenny made his major league debut in Kansas City, pinch-running in the top of the 9th for Bobby Young, who had pinch-hit for shortstop George Strickland. Unfortunately he got a lot of attention that he probably didn’t want; here’s the July 8 Canton Repository’s account:
Red Skin! 
Indians’ Bonus Baby Falls, Rips Pants 
KANSAS CITY—Kenny Kuhn, the Cleveland Indians’ 18-year-old bonus baby, can always look upon his major league debut as a memorable one. 
He didn’t get a chance to handle the ball in his abbreviated appearance nor swing a bat but he garnered more attention without the spectacular. 
Kuhn was called upon by Manager Al Lopez to run for Bobby Young in the ninth inning. Rounding second on a single by Joe Altobelli, Kuhn tripped and fell. 
The net results—a large hole in his pants—much to the amusement of his teammates. Trainer Wally Bock did some patch work with a roll of tape and Kuhn took over in the field for shortstop George Strickland in the bottom of the inning. 
Hailing from Louisville, Ky., Kuhn undoubtedly will be the target of many ribbings from opponents’ benches. Some of his teammates were teasing him about his first pair of shoes getting in his way already.

His next appearance was two days later in Chicago, as reported in the July 10 Plain Dealer (all ellipses part of the original article):
CHICAGO July 9—Bonus boy Kenny Kuhn, who fell on his face and tore his pants in his major league debut in Kansas City Thursday, finally has his feet on the ground…Playing the last three innings at shortstop for the Indians today, the 18-year-old youngster managed to remain upright. 
Kuhn gave a good account of himself. He handled three ground balls with ease, one of which was a difficult chance. He had to move in quickly to scoop up a slow roller…Kenny made his first appearance at the plate in the ninth and hit a sharp grounder to the Chicago shortstop. 
Sam Dente, Kenny’s self-appointed guardian, told the boy not to feel bad because he fell down in his first big league game. “I got a hit my first time up,” Sam recalled, “and I was so excited I tripped over first base.”…Sam says he is looking after Kenny “because no one ever did it for me.” 
Spud Goldstein [Indians’ traveling secretary], who kidded Herb Score for months, now ribs Kuhn and the boy takes it good-naturedly. Spud told him he would have to pay for those pants he tore and Kenny said, “Okay, how much?”…Score had been in charge of the bat bag, but he’s an oldtimer now and Kuhn has the job. 
 Manager Al Lopez was criticized for using Kenny in a game of such great importance, but Lopez sincerely believes the boy can do the job in the field…
Soon after that Kenny developed a sore arm; it was reported that he wasn’t used to the amount of throwing done in daily workouts. It didn’t improve, so he was placed on the 30-day disabled list on July 22. His next appearance in a game was on September 24 in Detroit, when he got his first start. He played shortstop and batted seventh as the Indians’ Hank Aguirre shut out the Tigers, 7-0; he walked in the second and got his first major league hit off Ned Garver in the sixth, but didn’t make a play in the field. The next day, the last day of the season, he came into the game in the fifth inning and had a single in two at-bats and one putout at shortstop.


Kenny signed a new Cleveland contract in January 1956. He doesn’t seem to have had a very good spring training. From the Plain Dealer, March 2:
Kenny Kuhn, the bonus boy, has a sore arm again. He was on the disabled list for 30 days last season with the same ailment and people wonder now whether it is chronic.
March 9:
Young Kenny Kuhn has a perfect record: He has lost his hat every time he has run to first base. There is little else to report on the lackadaisical bonus boy. The intra-squad game lasted so long that most of the players got a late start to the dog track.
March 21:
The brass has become fed up, too, with Kenny Kuhn, the bonus boy. He won’t exert himself during practice and whenever someone offers him a bit of advice, he cuts in with “I know how it’s done.”…It’s a shame, for the boy seems to have a world of natural ability.
(The above item was picked up by the Associated Press and appeared in many newspapers.) March 23:
Kenny Kuhn, the bonus baby, still won’t cut loose for fear that he might re-injure his arm. Playing shortstop today, he lobbed the ball to first base, and once threw it wild.
March 31:
Peewee Reese was disturbed at learning of the lackadaisical attitude of 18-year-old Kenny Kuhn, the Indians’ bonus baby shortstop. Both live in Louisville, Ky., and Reese is Kuhn’s idol.
On April 11 the Indians played an exhibition game with the Giants in Louisville and Al Lopez, after receiving a number of telegrams from the city asking him to let Kenny play, put him in for the whole game and he scored the Indians’ only run in a 5-1 loss. Later in the month Kenny got to play in an exhibition game against the Dodgers in Jersey City, at the request of Pee Wee Reese. But he didn’t get into an actual American League game until June 5, when he replaced new regular shortstop Chico Carrasquel in the ninth inning. He was used exclusively as a pinch runner, pinch hitter, and late-inning infielder until he played the last three games of the season at shortstop at home against Detroit, batting sixth. For the year he had six hits in 22 at-bats, and played 48 errorless innings at short and twelve innings at second base, in a total of 27 games.

Over the winter Kenny played shortstop for Mexico City in the Veracruz League, managed by teammate Bobby Avila, and hit .338. He was one of a group of younger players asked by the Indians to report early to spring training, on February 18, and he quickly impressed new manager Kerby Farrell. From Gordon Cobbledick’s “Plain Dealing” column in the Plain Dealer of February 27:
Lonely, Over-Awed Kuhn of 1956 Develops Into Hustling, Chattering Player 
TUCSON, Ariz., Feb. 26—Just to show how wrong you can be unless you look inside a kid’s mind and read it accurately, let us consider the case of Kenny Kuhn. Let us, indeed consider the cases of two Kenny Kuhn’s. 
One would be the lonely-looking 18-year-old who got himself branded here last spring as the laziest boy in camp—a boy who did nothing until he was told to do it and who, since nobody thought often to tell him what to do, spent most of his time standing around like a lost soul. 
The other would be the hustling youngster of whom Kerby Farrell says, with undisguised enthusiasm, “He just could make it—and sooner than you think.” 
It seems apparent now that Kuhn—the Kuhn of 1956, that is—simply was a frightened, over-awed boy in his first baseball training camp who did little because he didn’t know what he was expected to do. 
Here in the rookie camp this spring he is a big leaguer, a veteran of a season and a half with the Indians, among a lot of youths from the sticks. The difference is startling. He hustles and chatters and behaves like a young man who knows where he’s going and how to get there. 
Farrell isn’t the only one who has been impressed. Eddie Stanky, seeing him for the first time, wonders why he has played so little in his brief career with the Indians. Red Kress confesses that he finds it hard to believe he’s the same boy who was here a year ago. 
Last night Hank Greenberg asked Farrell if he didn’t think it would be a good idea to send the $35,000 bonus baby to the minor league camp at Daytona Beach and pick him up later. 
“He might get more work over there than you can give him,” Greenberg suggested. 
And Farrell replied, “I’m aiming to give him plenty of work here. He’s going to do a lot of playing in the exhibition games, maybe as much as any other shortstop we’ve got.” 
His statement meant that Chico Carrasquel will have competition for the job he held last year, and that it won’t all come from George Strickland, who held it before that. 
“Sure, Kenny’s had only limited experience,” Stanky admits, “but if he’s as smart as I think he is he’s learned plenty just sitting on the bench and watching these last two seasons… 
Among Kuhn’s assets are two that appeal particularly to Farrell in the light of his knowledge of the Indians’ weaknesses: The boy is fast and he has the look of a solid hitter. On the basis of their performance last year the Indians need speed and they need base hits. A man—or a boy—who can deliver both will find employment in Cleveland. 
Because he is a bonus player, Kuhn must be kept by the Indians until August of this year. And because Farrell has admitted a distaste for what he calls “bench ball players,” it is likely that he’ll get a chance. Don’t be surprised if he makes it all the way.

On March 16 the Plain Dealer mentioned that Stanky was working with Kenny on his troubles making the pivot at second. The next day they published an interview with Jo West, a waitress at the Indians’ hotel in Tucson, which included this exchange:
Q—Do you have a son? 
A—No, I don’t. 
Q—If you did have one, would you want him to be like any one of the players in particular? 
A—Well, I sometimes think that if I did have a son I’d want him to be like Kenny Kuhn. You know, Kenny is so different this year. Last year he was quiet and I think a little unhappy. But he is such a darling boy now and so very polite.
On March 23 the Plain Dealer named Kenny the “best infielder for future,” saying:
Bonus status has kept him from normal minor league schooling, but he has made great strides in spite of that handicap. A solid left-handed hitter, unusually fast. Has fairly good hands, but hasn’t shown impressive arm. A longshot bet to be the Indians’ second baseman this year.

On April 11 it was reported that the second base job was still undecided. On the 14th Kenny spent the day in Louisville with his mother, after she had suffered a mild heart attack. On the 16th the season began, with George Strickland at second. Kenny didn’t play much, despite the raves during spring training; when his bonus period expired and he was sent down to Reading of the Class A Eastern League on August 19, he had only played in 34 games, mostly as a pinch runner or pinch hitter. At Reading he got off to a cold start but then warmed up, playing 21 games at second base and hitting .286 before the Eastern League season ended and he was brought back to Cleveland. He got into another six games with the Indians in September, including starting at second in four games at the end of the season. He wound up with nine hits, all singles, in 53 at-bats in 40 games with the Indians.

During the off-season Kenny was on the Cleveland reserve list, then on January 15, 1958, new Indians’ GM Frank Lane sold his contract to the Mobile Bears, their farm team in the Class AA Southern Association. Though he was on Mobile’s roster in spring training, by mid-March there was talk that he would make AAA San Diego as their second baseman, and that’s in fact what happened. 


On April 20, though, his father died. From the Sporting News’ Necrology section, April 30:
Charles Kuhn 
Charles Kuhn, former minor league player and father of Kenny Kuhn, San Diego second baseman, died at St. Joseph’s Infirmary, Louisville, Ky., April 20, following a heart attack. He was 58. 
A native of Louisville, Kuhn played with some of the leading semi-pro teams of that area while still in his teens. Before his twenty-first birthday, he was signed by the Philadelphia Athletics. However, an arm injury prevented his remaining in the game and he returned to Louisville, where he played with, and managed, amateur teams for many years. 
In addition to Kenny, who received a $35,000 bonus to sign with the Indians in 1955, other survivors are his wife and three [sic] children: Charles, now football coach at Male High in Louisville; Dave, a former All-Southeastern center for the University of Kentucky football team; Jack, Mrs. Betty Jean Dunn, Mrs. Frances Jane Franklin and Patricia.
Kenny was hitting .147 in 34 at-bats when, on May 15, he was assigned to the Dallas Rangers of the Class AA Texas League, a team with no major league affiliation. 


He played shortstop for Dallas, and hit .233/.331/.282 in 103 at-bats in 30 games, after which the Rangers returned him to the Cleveland organization. The Indians sent him to Burlington of the Class B Carolina League, where he finished out the season and finally found success. Playing primarily shortstop, he hit .309/.407/.415 in 265 at-bats in 67 games, and at one point had twelve straight hits. After the season he was returned to the San Diego roster. In December, Kenny’s wife Peggy gave birth to their first child.

On January 8, 1959, the Padres sold Kenny’s contract to Mobile, Cleveland’s AA team, and he spent the season there, playing second base and batting first and second in the order. He hit .305/.397/.353 in 550 at-bats, scoring 92 runs and leading the league in sacrifice hits with 20, as the Bears won the league championship. In September he was one of 22 Indians’ minor leaguers invited to Cleveland for instruction during the last week of the American League season. In October his contract was sold to Toronto of the International League, which was replacing San Diego as the Indians’ AAA affiliate.

From the Jeffersonville (Kentucky) Evening News, January 19, 1960:
Baseball Group to Meet Tuesday 
When the Louisville Chapter of Baseball Writers’ Association holds its second annual dinner at Freedom Hall, Tuesday, Jan. 26, Kenny Kuhn, former Male High four-letter athlete will be honored as the “professional baseball player of the year in Louisville.” 
Last summer Kuhn played second base for the Mobile ball club of the Class AA Southern Association. He went on a hitting spree in the late stages of the season, and wound up with a fine .305 mark for the year. Kenny is the property of the Cleveland Indians who paid him a bonus several years ago when he completed high school. Last summer was Kenny’s first full season as a regular in pro ball. Kuhn is expected to advance to the Toronto ball club of the Triple-A International League next summer. 
The brilliant young athlete who wrote all sorts of records in high school at Male High, now resides at Maple and Graham, Jeffersonville with his wife, (the former Miss Peggy Isler) and son. He is working the winter for an oil concern, and drives a truck to keep in condition. Kenny weighs 165 which is slightly below his high school weight. 
Amateur baseballers will also receive awards at the baseball writers’ dinner. Several hundred are expected to attend, including a number of baseball enthusiasts from Jeffersonville.
Late in spring training 1960 Kenny was still expected to be with Toronto, but at the last minute he wound up back with Mobile, and he spent another season as their second baseman. He had a very similar season offensively, except that his walks were way down, and he ended up at .294/.354/.352, generally batting second in the order. On September 28, Hal Lebovitz of the Cleveland Plain Dealer, in answering a question about “whatever happened to Kenny Kuhn,” said “There’s only a slight chance that he’ll ever make the majors.”

Toronto only lasted one season in the Indians’ organization; in 1961 the Salt Lake City Bees of the Pacific Coast League became the Cleveland AAA affiliate, and that’s where Kenny played that year, moving up one level. He didn’t play as regularly, getting into 54 games at second and 23 at third while pinch hitting quite a bit, and wound up with 278 at-bats in 107 games, hitting .259/.327/.324.

For 1962 Kenny was with the Bees again, and though he only played in one more game than in ’61 he started more and got 58 more at-bats, playing 84 games at second; he hit .259/.313/.315. That was the end of his professional career, at age 25. Apparently he retired the next spring when he was asked to go to the Mexican League.

Kenny next pops up in the Evansville Courier of October 18, 1964:
Major Stars in English 
ENGLISH, Ind.—Several established major and former minor league baseball players will compete at 1:30 p.m. today in an exhibition baseball game in this tiny Southern Indiana community. 
The game, sponsored by English’s Seth Denbo, will feature such stars as pitchers Jim O’Toole, Billy McCool, Joey Jay and Joe Nuxhall, catcher John Edwards and second baseman Pete Rose of the Cincinnati Reds; pitcher Frank Baumann, outfielder Floyd Robinson and infielder Al Weis of the Chicago White Sox; and first baseman Roy Sievers and possibly pitcher Jim Bunning of the Philadelphia Phillies. 
Top former minor league players will include Jack Littrell, third baseman in the Pacific Coast League; Kenny Kuhn, an outfielder [sic] in the Cleveland chain; Phil Shartzer, shortstop in the Southern Association; Lou Vassie, second baseman at Indianapolis a year ago; and Ray Holton, ex-catcher at Louisville. 
All are members of the Kentucky State semi-pro championship team from Louisville…
On June 2, 1965, Kenny got mentioned in the Jeffersonville Evening News, when he was named a coach for the Clarksville team in the Kentucky-Indiana Collegiate Baseball League; it was mentioned that he and Peggy now had four children. On June 13, 1971, the Cleveland Plain-Dealer did a “Whatever Happened to…?” feature on Kenny:
…Kuhn, now 34, lives in Jeffersonville, Ind., where he is the vice-president of Kentucky Fried Chicken, Inc.  of Louisville and in charge of their H. Salt Fish and Chips Restaurant Division. He travels to 17 cities once or twice monthly to check the expanding operation. Columbus is one stop. 
Kuhn attributes his baseball downfall to a practice session at the Stadium when he had only been with the Indians for two weeks. 
“All morning Coach Red Kress kept hitting me balls and I was throwing from the hole at shortstop and my arm started feeling tired. I told trainer Wally Bock that I had a strange feeling in it. It felt like it was asleep. 
“I didn’t throw for 20 days. I couldn’t even lift my right arm to comb my hair,” Kenny recalled. “I think it was strictly a matter of throwing too much. I could never throw after that.”
At some point Kenny and family moved to California, and in 1999 he and Peggy retired to Truckee, California, but continued to work. On July 16, 2010, Kenny died of pancreatic cancer at his daughter’s house in Layton, Utah. The Louisville Courier-Journal reported the next day:
Four-sport star at Male in 1950s dies at 73 in Utah 
KENNY KUHN: 1937-2010 
By C. Ray Hall 
Kenny Kuhn, one of the most versatile and accomplished high school athletes in Louisville history, died Friday. He was 73. 
In 1955, the Courier-Journal’s Johnny Carrico called Kuhn “possibly the greatest all-around athlete ever to come out of Louisville.” 
Kuhn died at his daughter’s home in Layton, Utah, after a two-year struggle with pancreatic cancer. 
Kuhn excelled in baseball, basketball, football and track in the 1950s. 
“He was Mr. Male for a long time,” his brother Charley said Friday. 
Kuhn, a 5-foot-11 guard, was Mr. Basketball in 1955, scoring 25 points in the Kentucky-Indiana All-Star Game in Indianapolis. He was a Courier-Journal All-state player three years in a row. He averaged 24.9 points a game as a senior and 22.6 for his career. 
In football, with brother Charley as his coach, Kuhn was an All-State quarterback with scholarship offers from several local schools, including Indiana. 
Bernie Crimmins, IU’s coach at the time, said, “If he decides to come to Bloomington, I’ll give him a police escort.” 
He didn’t have much time for track, but it didn’t take much. 
“He never was in track until it came state tournament time,” Charley said, “and he won the broad jump.” (In 1954, he missed the state record by a quarter-inch.) 
But baseball was his choice. Kuhn was one of baseball’s “bonus babies,” signing with the Cleveland Indians for an estimated $40,000 in 1955. 
Hank Greenberg, the Indians’ general manager, called the 18-year-old shortstop “the finest young infielder I’ve seen in a long time.” But Greenberg lamented the rule that kept bonus babies in the majors for two seasons before they could be sent to the minors. 
Over three seasons, Kuhn played 71 games in the majors, batting .210 with no home runs and seven RBIs. 
“He practiced and practiced,” his brother said. “He got up one morning, and he couldn’t raise his right arm up.” 
Doctors found damage to his tendons and ligaments, Charley said. The Indians switched Kenny to second base, but he never found his way back to the majors. He retired in 1963 rather than accept an assignment to play in the Mexican League. 
After baseball, Kuhn spent most of his career in development for food companies, including Kentucky Fried Chicken and Mister Donut. His last corporate job was in California, with Children’s Discovery Centers. In 1999, he and his wife, Peggy, retired to Truckee, Calif., where they worked at a Lake Tahoe resort. She was a concierge; he drove a van, occasionally delivering VIPs to the resort. 
“All the kids that worked at the resort loved Kenny,” Peggy said. “They ran his baseball card up to $1,700 bidding on it on eBay. Then one of the drivers that he worked with bought his glove (for about $2,300). They loved him, and they loved hearing his stories. What they loved most was he carried their bets into Reno for them.” 
Betting—especially on horse races—was one of Kuhn’s leisure pursuits. 
“He was never good at it,” Peggy said. “He loved it, though. My daughter (Carrie) just said a while ago we should save some of dad’s ashes and take them to Churchill Downs and throw them on the finish line.” 
Kenny and Peggy had four children—Carrie, Amy, Scott and Stan. The family plans a private memorial service in California.

Sunday, June 7, 2020

Russ Ellison


Russ Ellison pitched one inning for the Cleveland Indians in 1920.

George Russell Ellison was born January 24, 1897, in San Francisco, the only child of James and Alice Ellison. (Baseball Reference and other websites list him as George Ellison, but he was overwhelmingly called Russ or Russell.) In the 1900 census the Ellisons are living at 5 ½ Camp Street in San Francisco; James is 29 and a “brass moulder,” Alice is 25, and James’ 18-year-old sister, Lillie, is living with them. In 1910 they’re at 569 41st Street in Oakland, a house that they own, James is a laundry proprietor, and Lillie has moved on.

Russ attended Oakland High School, where he was a star pitcher. In his junior year the Oakland Tribune mentioned him on March 2, 1915: “Russ Ellison is the one seasoned player and he will probably do the brunt of the pitching this year. Russ has speed to burn, has a wonderful set of curves and besides can hit the ball.” He was the team’s top pitcher again in 1916, then he graduated and played semipro ball over the summer, for the Ambrose Tailors. I don’t know whether he started college that fall, as I didn’t find any references to him playing college baseball in 1917; he did play semipro again that summer, for the Chamber of Commerce team in the Bay Cities Commercial Baseball league, plus at least one game for Great Western Power. The Oakland Tribune described him as “pitching the most sensational ball of the league.”

In 1918 Russ pitched for the University of California. On April 16 he pitched the deciding game of the yearly series with Stanford, winning 4 to 2; he only allowed two hits but walked seven and threw four wild pitches while striking out seven—he was not known for his control. In May he was mentioned as pitching for Alameda in the semipro Mission League. On June 5 he filled out his draft registration, which lists him as a student, living with his parents on 41st Street, tall and slender with blue eyes and brown hair. Later there are references to Russ having served in the navy during the war; if so, it must have happened quickly after that, as the war ended in November. There is a gap in the newspaper mentions of him until March 1919.

In 1919 Russ pitched for California again. On April 11 the Stanford Daily reported:
Coach Carl Zamlock of the California Bears has been teaching Russ Ellison, his big pitcher, a few new tricks, according to reports from the Berkeley diamond. Ellison has been developing a new curve ball which is said to be better than the one he had last season. The big Blue and Gold hurler is pitching a high class brand of baseball this year, and Zamlock is counting upon him to start the California-Stanford series.
Russ was often referred to as big, tall, or other similar adjectives—he is today listed as having been 6-3, 185. Over the summer of 1919 he again pitched in semipro baseball, appearing with both the Crockett Sugarites and the Fruitvale Natives.

The 1920 census was taken in January, and it shows Russ living with his parents on 41st Street, in school, no occupation. James is now listed as an agent in the laundry field. That spring Russ spent his third season with the California team; he was described as a senior, though he will tell a later census-taker that he completed two years of college. The team had a good year and he was their top pitcher. In May they left on a tour, playing their way across the country to Massachusetts and winning most of the games along the way. This attracted the attention of major league teams, and Russ chose an offer from the Cleveland Indians and reported to them in Boston, where he signed a contract with them on June 24 and left with the team for Chicago. The Oakland Tribune reported on July 4:
LOCAL FANS PULLING FOR RUSS ELLISON 
Local fans are pulling strong for Russ Ellison, University of California pitcher, to make good with the Cleveland Indians. Russ writes that he is certain he can make the grade with some schooling from the veteran pitchers of the Indians, and he expects to pitch for his new club soon. Ellison pitched some smart games for the U.C. nine and has a pair of no-hit combats to his credit. He is a big fellow with a nice assortment of curves and a change of pace. Before signing with the Cleveland club Ellison turned down offers from the Red Sox and Braves.

Russ did not in fact pitch for his new club soon, except in batting practice. On July 26 Manager Tris Speaker allowed him to start an exhibition game against the Reds; he pitched five innings and lost, 4-3. On August 21—five days after teammate Ray Chapman was hit by a pitch and killed--he finally got into a real game, pitching the eighth inning in a 12-0 loss at Boston. Eddie Foster grounded out, Mike Menosky walked and Russ picked him off first, Tim Hendryx walked, and Stuffy McInnis struck out. Then it was back to batting practice.

From the September 22 Cleveland Plain Dealer:
Manager Speaker yesterday permitted pitcher Russell Ellison, the tall boy from the University of California, to return home. He is to report at the training camp in the spring. Manager Speaker is much impressed with his ability, Ellison getting the chance to work on the mound in batting practice almost daily…
This cost Russ a shot at appearing in the World Series, which the Indians won, though it probably wasn’t likely that he would have been put into a game. In November he left on a ship bound for Japan with other lesser-known professional players for a barnstorming tour; about half of the players, Russ included, came home earlier than planned after some unspecified scandalous behavior that led to Commissioner Landis decreeing that players’ wives be included on future tours.


In February 1921, before spring training, it was announced that Speaker had farmed Russ out to the Joplin Miners of the Western League. However, I found no indication that he ever reported to Joplin, and the next mention of him comes in the Portland Oregonian of July 22:
Portland Gets Ellison. 
OAKLAND, Cal., July 21.—Russell Ellison, ex-University of California pitcher, and who went to the Cleveland Indians, in the American league, and remained with that club a few months, today signed a contract with the Portland club, in the Pacific Coast league, and was immediately pressed into service by Manager Walter McCredie. He appeared on the hill in the game against the San Francisco Seals.
From the San Francisco Chronicle’s game story, the same day:
California’s Star Hurler Gets Rough Treatment in Trying to Beat the Seals 
Russ Ellison Has World of Stuff, but No Control, and Ten Runs Are Scored Off Him in the Two Innings and a Third That He is On the Hill 
By Ed R. Hughes 
Russ Ellison, the big pitcher of the University of California, tried to win a game for Portland yesterday at Oakland, and he is now convinced that the Seals are a good deal like the marines in treating ‘em rough. Russ has a lot of smoke, but poor control, and in the short time he worked the Seals got runs enough to win a couple of ball games. He toiled two innings and a third, and in that time he was nicked for ten runs. Walt McCredie finally had compassion on him and sent in Coleman, another collegian, who pitched splendid ball, but the damage had already been done. 
Ellison belongs to the Cleveland American League club, and he made the trip to Japan with Jack Doyle’s troupe. He did not stay there long, for he soon tired of the Mikado land and he came home long before the other barnstormers. 
Ellison may make a good pitcher some day, for he has the size and has a lot of natural stuff; but unless he can control the ball better than he did yesterday his opponents will beat him without taking the trouble to swing at the ball. In the first inning yesterday Fitz beat out a hit, and then Ellison walked Rath and Caveney, hit O’Connell with an untamed pitch, walked Bert Ellison, and that mess, with a couple of outs, scored four runs on only one scratch hit…
On July 31 Russ won a game against Vernon, and the Oregon Journal reported the next day:
In the second game Russ Ellison breezed the pill over in great style and retired the Tigers in the first three frames without allowing a ball to be hit out of the infield. There is only one fault with Ellison’s pitching—he is inclined to work too fast. The big fellow looked good and with careful coaching ought to develop into a comer…
August was a bad month for Russ, though, and it ended with a game on the 29th that was described in the next day’s San Francisco Chronicle:
In the afternoon Russ Ellison, former University of California pitcher, worked for Portland and the game was wrecked in the first inning, when the Oaks massed six hits good for six runs. Ellison’s support was awful in that round, King making a double-barreled error and others failing to handle the ball cleanly. 
Ellison was with Cleveland a brief while. He came back home and said: “What do you think? Tris Speaker tried to tell me how to pitch, and he’s an outfielder. What does he know about pitching?” 
Russ ought to be glad to have some one like Speaker tell him how to pitch if he is going to stay in baseball. For one thing, Speaker would tell him to forget trying to throw his fast one past the batsmen. That information would be valuable to Russ if he would heed it. 
The Oaks hammered Russell for sixteen hits in the afternoon, and they lost several others because of good catches. Some one ought to be able to tell Russ how to pitch.
Russ ended the season with a 3-7 record and a 5.57 ERA in 118 innings in 18 games, and he appeared on Portland’s reserve list over the off-season. Meanwhile, on October 26, the following story appeared on the society page of the Berkeley Daily Gazette:
Miss Ramselius Betrothed. 
The betrothal of Miss Elna Ramselius, daughter of Captain and Mrs. John Ramselius of Alameda, and George Russell Ellison, a former university man, was made known this afternoon at a daintily appointed luncheon given by the bride-elect in compliment to Mrs. Frederick Eilers (Alberta Foute). The Palace Hotel, across the bay, was the setting for the interesting party, to which about a score of the intimate friends of the hostess and honor guest were bidden. 
Miss Ramselius is a graduate of Miss Head’s School and one of the favorites in the younger exclusive set on this side of the bay. Ellison is the son of the James Ellisons of Piedmont and a member of the Delta Chi fraternity, the Winged Helmet and Big C honor societies. He won distinction on the varsity baseball team in college and took an active part in all campus affairs. The wedding is planned to be an event of the New Year. 
Mr. and Mrs. James Ellison are entertaining a group of young people at a dinner dance at the Palace Hotel this evening in honor of their son and his fiancée.
I don’t know whether Russ was out of his league socially here, or whether his father was actually a prominent laundry agent, but I find it interesting that this story and the similar ones run in the Oakland and San Francisco papers left out the fact that he was a professional baseball player. The Daily Gazette followed up on November 11:
Miss Ramselius Honored. 
Miss Elna Ramselius, one of the season’s most popular brides-elect, was honored at a luncheon given today by Miss Ramona Schacht at the Woman’s Athletic Club in San Francisco. The engagement announcement of Miss Ramselius to Russell Ellison was made recently and the luncheon today was one of the many smart affairs planned for her by friends…
Russ and Elna were married on February 25, 1922. A story in that day’s Oakland Tribune mentioned that “Ellison and his bride will go south for six weeks and then to Portland for an indefinite stay”—leaving out the details that the six weeks would include spring training in Pasadena and that the indefinite stay in Portland would be to pitch for the Beavers. From the same paper, two days later:
HONEYMOON IN THE SOUTH. 
George Russell Ellison and his bride have left for the southern part of the state, where they will travel for about two weeks, and will then return here for a few days before going to Portland. The young people will reside in the north for a while and later will come back to the bay region to establish their home…
On March 5 the society page of the San Francisco Chronicle ran this item:
Mr. and Mrs. George Russell Ellison are motoring in the southern part of the state, where they will travel for about six weeks. They will return here for a brief visit with Mrs. Ellison’s parents, Captain and Mrs. John Ramselius, and will then go north. Mrs. Ellison was Miss Elna Ramselius before her marriage, which took place a week ago at the home of her parents in this city. Ellison belongs to a well-known family in Oakland.
And the same day the Oregonian showed Russ on the Beaver training camp roster.

The March 15 Seattle Times reported that “Ellison, who is one of the two holdover pitchers, who will be retained for the first part of the season, appears to have loosened up a great deal, and he may come through and be a winner.” From the March 19 Oregonian:
It is almost certain now that the club will carry all its present pitchers up to May 15, when coast league rules require all teams to cut down to 20 men. That means that Russ Ellison and Walberg, the towering kid southpaw from Seattle with the zipping fast ball, are certain of berths until then. Ellison is rapidly becoming a finished pitcher, so he may hold his job as one of the regulars.

The PCL season began in early April, and on the 9th Russ was removed from the game in the 6th inning after failing to cover home plate. On April 30 the Oregonian ran a short item about the Beavers having eleven players who had served in the World War, including Russ in the navy; this item was reprinted in many newspapers in May and June. That total didn’t hold up for long, though, as the Oregonian reported on May 3:
Russ Ellison, the Beavers’ tall pitcher from the University of California, has gone home rather than be shipped to Tacoma. Informed that he wasn’t quite ripe for Pacific Coast league flinging, but that a few months’ steady work on a Class B club might be the making of him, Ellison told Tom Turner he would quit baseball first. He hopped a train for Berkeley Monday night. 
Ellison could be put on the suspended list, but the Portland club is treating him with consideration. In place of being suspended he will be listed as “voluntarily retired.”
By mid-May Russ was back pitching semipro ball in the Bay Area, for the Mayrose Butters. The October 1922 issue of the California Alumni Monthly mentioned his marriage to Elna and said that he was a securities salesman for Stephens and Company in Oakland. In December it was reported that the Beavers were trying to deal his rights to another team, and in January 1923 it was reported that he would join the San Francisco Olympic Club team, a team that seems to have mainly played against colleges. From the February 2 Oregonian:
Another announcement made at baseball headquarters chronicled the passing of a big young pitcher who showed much promise, but not much performance, to a smaller league. 
Russ Ellison, the University of California six-footer, whom Walter McCredie dug up in 1921 in Oakland, and who quit the club in a huff after training camp last spring when it was proposed to send him to Tacoma, has reconsidered his retirement from baseball. 
Ellison has been sold to Shreveport in one of the southern leagues. He has the stuff and if he ever learns the fine points of hurling, may be heard from further.
The Shreveport Gassers were in the Class A Texas League, one notch below the PCL. A preview of the team in the April 15 Beaumont Enterprise mentioned Russ as one of the newcomers, but that’s the only mention of him with the Gassers that I found. The Shreveport stats show someone who may have been named Ellison (“Ellison?”) playing two games, so I presume that’s him. Those two games seem to have been his final games of professional baseball.

Russ was counted twice in the 1930 census. On April 2 they counted him in the San Francisco City Prison, as a 33-year-old divorced World War veteran who was 25 at the time of his first marriage; the next day he was counted at 545 Post Street in San Francisco, as a 33-year-old divorced World War veteran who was 25 at the time of his first marriage and who was employed as a salesman of what looks like “investment securities.” He was listed as a guest in the home of 68-year-old Robert Chilton, a manager of Personal Affairs for the US Foreign Service, and his 24-year-old daughter Virginia. Elna was living with her parents, but gave her status as married. Unfortunately I could find nothing about the divorce, or about why Russ was in the city prison.

On August 7, 1931, the San Francisco Chronicle listed a marriage application for George R. Ellison of 1200 Francisco Street and Beverly S. Minns of Cupertino, near San Jose. Assuming this is Russ, the marriage didn’t last long. By 1932 Elna was married to Ernest W. Von Der Mehden, a salesman, and by 1935 they were living in Santa Rosa. In March of 1934 Russ was on the list of invitees for an old-timers game in Oakland. On September 9, 1936, Russ married Maude Josephine Whitman in Jackson County in southern Oregon; Maude’s first husband Robert Whitman had been killed in 1934 in “an automobile collision with a steer” on a highway east of Twin Falls, Idaho.

In the 1940 census Russ and Maude are renting an apartment at 2710 Webster Street in San Francisco; they are listed as having lived at the same place in 1935, though that would have been before they were married. Russ, 43, is a life insurance salesman who worked 12 weeks in 1939 and earned $200, while Maude, 47, has an eighth grade education and is a receptionist who worked 20 weeks in 1939 and earned $320. She was not employed for pay during the week of March 24-30, 1940, though.

In 1942 Russ again registered for the draft. He gave his address as 1239 Francisco Street in San Francisco, and the “person who will always know your address” is Maude, at the same address. His employer is the US government, Army Transport Service, Fort Mason, San Francisco.

A 1953 city directory shows Russ and Maude living at 112 Laverne Avenue in San Rafael. However, on September 1, 1955, Maude married William G. Rich in San Francisco; I didn’t find any information on her divorce from Russ.

On January 20, 1978, Russ passed away in San Francisco, four days short of his 81st birthday. On October 9, 1986, Elna Ramselius Ellison Von Der Mehden Malloch passed away at age 88, and on February 22, 1992, Maude J. Ratto Whitman Ellison Rice passed away at age 99.