Jimmy Hickman was an outfielder for the 1915 Baltimore Terrapins and the 1916-19 Brooklyn Robins.
David James Hickman, Jr., was born May 19, 1892, in Union
City, Tennessee, to David James Hickman, Sr., and Margaret Cox Hickman. At the
1900 census they were living on Welborne Street in Johnson City, Tennessee;
David Sr., 35, is a lumber dealer; Maggie is 34, Elsie 15, Herman 11, and David
Jr. 8.
The 1910 census shows the family still in Johnson City but
at 344 Boone Street. David Sr. is now a traveling shoe salesman, 21-year-old
Herman is a traveling hat salesman, Elsie is no longer living at home, and
17-year-old David Jr. is at Bingham Military School in North Carolina.
While he was listed as David in the censuses, he apparently
went by Jimmy or Jim. In 1913 he started playing professional baseball. From
the August 23 Greensboro Daily News:
Winston Gets Outfielder Hickman.
Bristol, Va.-Tenn., Aug. 22.—President K.S. Ashworth, of the Bristol club of the Appalachian league, today announced the sale of Outfielder Hickman, of the Bristol team, one of the fastest men in this league, to Winston-Salem, to report Monday. The consideration was not made public.
That was a lateral move, as both leagues were Class D. Jimmy
made his debut with Winston-Salem on August 25, as related in the next day’s Winston-Salem
Journal:
Hickman, who hails from the Appalachian League, and who played center field for the Twins [batting 4th], had a good day in the field and started off nicely at the bat, but when “Long Distance” Shore came in he had the misfortune to whiff the ozone on three consecutive occasions, much to his chagrin and mortification.
Same newspaper, September 5:
Immediately upon their arrival at the grounds the Field Day Stunts were pulled off. Friend Writer was selected as the starter of the occasion, but just why we were picked is a matter beyond our comprehension, for we never started anything in our life, unless, perhaps, it was ourself and there was a bottle of Coquie Kolie at the other end. But anyway, things got under way and Hickman was declared the winner of the 100 yard dash. Then Edwards and Lee wanted to run, so we had to start another one of those 100 yard things. Edwards won out by a neck. After that came the baserunning in which Hickman also came out a winner with the time of 15 ½ seconds.
I found no 1913 stats for Jimmy, for either of his teams. He
was on the Winston-Salem reserve list over the off-season, and in May 1914 he
signed a new contract. From the May 2 Winston-Salem Twin City Daily Sentinel:
Mr. Hickman, the bright youngster who was with the locals the closing weeks of the 1913 season, has been asked to rejoin the team and he will likely be found in the line-up here Monday afternoon against the Raleigh Capitals, and will be assigned to centerfield, the position now held by Charles Clapp. Besides being a first-class fielder, Hickman is a [illegible] artist on bases. He also possesses all of the snap and fighting spirit needed.
Sentinel, May 4:
Hickman, the youngster, who was with the Twins the latter part of last season, has arrived in the city and will probably be in the line up today. Local fans will remember that Hickman was perhaps the fastest man in the league on the bases. He reports that he is in fine shape and that he is hitting better this year than ever before. He will no doubt aid Manager Clancy materially in copping the 1914 rag.
The May 20 Sentinel asserted that “Without a doubt
‘Jim’ Hickman is the fastest man on his feet in the league.” On June 20 Sporting
Life reported:
In the game between Winston and Raleigh, at Winston, on May 5, centre fielder Hickman, of Winston, made two home runs and two singles. Two men were on bases each time he hit a homer. He was responsible for the scoring of eight of Winston’s ten runs.
On July 12 the Greensboro Daily News made this
cryptic comment:
The Charlotte Observer rises to the mark that Hickman is not one bit better than he thinks he is, that is as a ball player.
The Sentinel, August 15:
Some of the fans are persuaded to believe that Jim Hickman can star every day he chooses so to do. All the fastest man in the league needs to do is to perform just like every man who conducts a successful business—enter the contest with a determination to win. Jim is big league timber. It’s up to him to reach the goal.
Those two quotes taken together seem to imply something
about Jimmy’s attitude…On September 9, in the final game of the season, he hit
three consecutive home runs, the first North Carolina State League player to
hit more than two in a game. This was the deadball era, and the six teams in
the league combined to hit just 192 homers for the season. Winston-Salem led
the way with 57, of which Jimmy hit 20, leading the league as just two other
players were in double figures. He also stole 30 bases, ninth in the league,
and tied for the lead in triples with nine, hitting .301 in 112 games. And, he
did in fact aid Manager Clancy materially in copping the rag.
After the season Jimmy and teammate Buck Roberts were both
drafted by the Chattanooga Lookouts of the Class A Southern Association. The Sentinel
reported on October 2:
…Then there’s Hickman or ‘Hick’ as he is affectionately known to his scores of friends in the city. Hickman is a ball player of great promise and has a bright career ahead of him in the professional ranks. He is a hard hitter and one of the most brilliant fielders that has ever performed in this league. His speed on the bases is also very great. Our prediction is that both of these clever gardeners will make good with a rush.
On March 4, 1915, the Chattanooga Daily Times
introduced Jimmy to their readers:
GOOD BOOST FOR HICKMAN
Steve Gaston Says Johnson City Lad Will Make Team.
SPEEDY ON BASE PATHS, GROUND COVERER IN FIELD
Local Ball Tosser Pitched to Hickman in Inter-League Series Last Fall
“Home Run” Hickman, the Johnson City boy who was drafted by Chattanooga from the Winston-Salem club of the North Carolina league last fall, is due to make good in Chattanooga, according to Steve Gaston. Steve pitched against Hickman last fall in a special series between the Norfolk champions of the Virginia league and the Winston-Salem champions of the North Carolina league.
“Hickman is fast as lightning,” said Gaston yesterday. “He ought to make a corking good man in this league. He is a great baserunner and in the field he goes after everything in sight, covering acres of territory. At the bat he is not likely to bat .300 in this league, but he ought to hit above .250 and to send in many runs with his long drives. When he hits them, they travel, believe me.”
Manager McCormick is not expecting so good a hitter as Jacobson [Baby Doll, on his way to the majors] and indeed it would be unreasonable for him to do so. He will be satisfied if Hickman can bat around .265, make a bunch of long hits, steal a few bases and snag flies in the field in the manner of his distinguished predecessor. Hickman ought to more than fill these requirements, in the opinion of Gaston.
Jimmy and Buck ended up competing for the Lookouts’ center
field job in spring training. Roberts was sick when the season began, so Jimmy
had the job by default. But about a week into the season the team picked up
40-year-old former major league shortstop Kid Elberfeld, put him in center, and
released Jimmy, who had hit .179 in eight games.
Within a couple days Jimmy had signed to return to the North
Carolina State League, now with the Asheville Tourists. Winston-Salem
Journal, May 15:
Hickman and Wasum again contributed sensational catches, and “Hick” hit the longest home run ever seen on the local grounds [Asheville]. The ball was a terrific drive and cleared the fence in left center with yards to spare.
Jimmy played mainly left field for Asheville, and mostly
batted cleanup. From the June 1 Twin City Sentinel:
Fenton and several others popped one out of the lot during the course of the afternoon. How Hickman happened to fail to knock one out of the park is more than several fans can understand.—Asheville Citizen. An explanation is easy. Clancy’s pitchers were put wise to Jim’s “immense” weakness.
There were no clues as to what that meant. The Tourists
played their final game of the season on September 15; Jimmy hit .291 and led
the league with a .515 slugging percentage, while also leading in doubles (30),
triples (13) and home runs (14). On the 19th the Chattanooga
Sunday Times reported:
HICKMAN RECALLED FOR 1916 LOCALS
Hickman, the speedy North Carolina leaguer who was with the Chattanooga team for awhile this spring, has been recalled for 1916 service. The outfielder made a creditable record in the North Carolina circuit this season, both at the bat and in the field. He displayed a lot of crudeness while with Chattanooga and lots of native ability. It is not improbable that he will make a live wire next year. At any rate, the Kid will give the Johnson City boy another looking over, especially as a hitting fielder or two seems to be the Lookouts’ most crying need.
What the Times and their readers and the Lookouts
didn’t know was that Jimmy had sidestepped them and made his major league debut
on the 17th, under an assumed name, with the Baltimore Terrapins of
the outlaw Federal League, finishing up the second of its two seasons as a
third major league. From the September 17 Baltimore Sun:
Dave Hicks, the new outfielder who signed with the Diamondbacks yesterday morning, made quite an impression upon President Carrol W. Rasin. Hicks claims to be able to run 100 yards in less than 10 seconds. If he makes good Baltimore will have the speediest machine in the Federal League next season, provided, of course, these youngsters hold their jobs…
Same paper, next day:
Dave Hicks did not look so good on the offensive yesterday when he broke into the Terrapin line-up. However, the youngster slept on trains Wednesday and Thursday nights. He probably did not feel a whole lot like playing ball when he reached Pittsburgh. But Manager Otto Knabe put him in because he is a right-hand hitter and Allen, a southpaw, was sent to the firing line by the Rebels.
He handled three flies nicely in the outfield, and Steve Brodie, who found him in the sticks, thinks he will do after he gets next to the ways of the big leaguers. Brodie says Hicks has a good throwing arm, so there should not be many extra bases taken on the Terrapin gardeners in future games.
“Dave Hicks” played center field and batted third in the
lineup, as he would in each of the Terrapins’ final twenty games. He went
0-for-4 with a strikeout in his debut, but in the next day’s doubleheader he
was 4-for-7 with a double, a triple, a walk and a stolen base. His first major
league hit was a double off Ralph Comstock. The Sun reported on the 19th:
Dave Hicks played a great game in both battles and promises to become one of the stars of the diamond. His work easily outclassed that of any of the other youngsters Knabe has on his list.
And on the 21st:
Knabe, kidded by a local paper today for the numerous changes he has made in the last few months, came right back with a statement.
“We were away down at the bottom and could not win with the old fellows, who were considered stars,” he said, “so I signed a lot of youngsters to take their places. I expect to have a winner next year.”
He is especially sweet on Hicks, who, in centre field, looks like his one best bet. He stands up to the plate in good style and is a sure catch on fly balls.
On September 24 the word got out that Hicks was Hickman.
From that day’s Winston-Salem Journal:
HICKMAN GOES TO BALTIMORE FEDS
Former Twin Gets a Berth With that Team According to Reports
Asheville, Sept. 23.—Jimmie Hickman, he of the homerun brigade and one of the fastest outfielders who ever played in the Carolina league, a member of the Asheville team during the present [season] and formerly owned by Detroit has jumped to the Baltimore Federals, and is now playing with that team, according to reports received in Asheville yesterday.
Hickman left the Asheville team at the end of the Carolina season at Durham on September 15, and while several of the players thought that he was going to Detroit to report, that team owning him according to the terms of a contract made with Manager Clancy of the Winston team, where Hickman played last year, others knew that he was going to Baltimore and to join the Feds. Hickman has been playing under the name of David Hicks, it is stated, and he has been going fine, having secured three singles in one game which he recently participated in.
Hickman is a native of Johnson City, Tenn., and was formerly a student at Bingham Military School in this city [Asheville]. At the starting of the old Appalachian league he played with Johnson City and later was secured by Clancy for Winston, with which team he played last year. He was sold to Detroit and reported during the latter part of last year. Detroit farmed him out to Chattanooga last season and he started the season this year with the Lookouts, but owing to his inability to get along with the manager, it is stated that he asked to be sent to Asheville and Detroit granted the wish He is fast and worthy player [sic], and should make good anywhere.
This is the first mention I found of Jimmy being owned by
Detroit, but the story as related seems inconsistent with the fact that he was
drafted by Chattanooga from Winston-Salem after the 1914 season. Twin City
Daily Sentinel, September 25:
Manager Charlie Clancy is of the opinion that Jim Hickman’s action in jumping to the Federal league was a most unwise move. “If he fails to stick,” said Clancy last night, “he is done for in organized baseball for some time, anyway.” During the course of the conversation, Manager Clancy revealed the information that Herman Schwartje had also been made an offer by the Lunch Counter circuit, but that the German very wisely turned it down.
The Feds had a man working down thru this country only a few weeks ago. It was Steve Brodie, an old timer. He played against Manager Clancy for two years in the days gone by and the local pilot is still wondering how he managed to talk Jim Hickman into joining the Gilmore brigade. The Feds worked it this way. They would make the youngsters an offer to finish the season at a certain figure and then if they looked good enough they would be offered a contract, otherwise they would resume their original names and continue playing in O.B.
What makes Hickman’s jump seem all the more foolish is that the Tourist could have finished the season with the Detroit Tigers. He is the property of that club and was to have reported to Jennings at the close of the North Carolina league season. Of course if he failed to make good this year, in all probability Jennings would have let Providence or Chattanooga have him for another season.
On the 26th Jimmy hit his first major league home
run, against Pete Henning of the Kansas City Packers. On the 29th
the Sentinel of Winston-Salem had this to say:
We find it hard to get much news of David Hicks, alias Jim Hickman. Very few of the larger papers bother to run the box scores of Federal league games, thus we are finding it quite a task to keep tab on Hickman or (beg pardon) Hicks.
The Baltimore Sun continued to call him “Hicks” until
September 30, when they finally switched to “Hickman” without explanation. From
the Sentinel of October 2:
“How do your youngsters size up?” was a question that was fired at Otto Knabe, manager of the Baltimore Federals recently. Knabe smiled broadly, as he replied: “This Hickman looks like a real find. He is fast on the bases, has a good throwing arm and seems to know baseball, and I am sure that one of the outfield positions will surely go to this lad next season.” Hickman has been playing with the Baltofeds for several weeks, in fact ever since the North Carolina league season closed, under the name of David Hicks. It looks as tho he has made good.
The Terrapins finished their season at Newark on October 3.
Jimmy hit .210/.256/.321 in 81 at-bats. He signed a 1916 Baltimore contract but
also appeared on Chattanooga’s reserve list, as Organized Baseball did not
recognize the Federal League. In December a peace agreement was reached between
the two entities that resulted in the demise of the FL but also legitimized
Jimmy’s contract. Still, on January 9, 1916, the Chattanooga Times seemed
oblivious:
Another athlete who is not unlikely to make good this spring is Hickman, the Johnson City recruit, who tried out under McCormick for a few weeks last spring. After returning to the North Carolina league, Hickman made a phenomenal record all ‘round, being rated the best outfielder in the Tar Heel circuit.
Hickman failed to make good here last year because of some glaring weaknesses which possibly could be eradicated by careful coaching and experience. He judged a fly ball too slowly, often waiting until it began to descend so that although he made a lot of pretty looking catches he really made some of them hard that should have been easy. At the bat, he could not fathom a curve successfully and he was also a free swinger.
On the other hand, the youngster was a flash on the bases, tearing around the cushions a la Ty Cobb. He “looks good” in action and many fans were surprised when McCormick set him adrift.
Two days later the Times got word that Jimmy did not
belong to the Lookouts, and they backpedaled on their assessment of him:
Hickman was sent a contract by Chattanooga, but for a small salary as there was little chance of his becoming a regular Lookout. In fact, Manager Elberfeld writes that he probably would not have had the fielder report even if he had belonged to the club. However, the club regrets to lose him from the roster as he could have been placed and perhaps sold to some Class B club.
At the end of February Jimmy’s contract was purchased by the
Brooklyn Dodgers (more often referred to as the Robins in those days, after manager
Wilbert Robinson), and he joined them for spring training in Daytona. The Twin
City Sentinel commented on March 3:
Bennie Kauff, said to be the most conceited player in the National league, will have a good running mate in Jimmie Hickman. Hick studied for a year under such masters as Jack Corbett and Olin Perritt.
Jimmy made an immediate impression in Daytona. On March 8
the New York World reported:
Hickman continues to shine. He is doing splendid work in both batting and fielding. As usual, he landed on the pill for a home run.
And the next day:
DODGERS.
DAYTONA, Fla., March 9.—The Giants may have their Kauff and Rousch and the Yankees their Magee, but Manager Robinson of the Dodgers thinks he has the best outfielder secured by any of the big league clubs from the defunct Federal League in Centre Fielder Dave Dickman [sic], the former Baltimore player. In the first exhibition game here this season the Dodgers defeated the Stetson University nine, 15 to 10, and it was Hickman’s terrific hitting that enabled them to do so. Hickman went to bat five times. Once he was “shaded” at first by the ball when he bunted. In the other four times up he made three triples and a two-bagger.
“Hickman is as good a hitter as I have ever seen,” declared Robbie when the game was over. “I think he will be the sensation of the year.”
On the 10th the sour grapes continued to flow
from the south, as the Twin City Sentinel remarked:
Turner Barber has a deep cold on his lungs. We expect to hear that Jim Hickman has a case of conceituritis.
New York World, March 17:
HICKMAN IS SMALL, BUT HE ACTS LIKE A STAR.
Young Jimmy Hickman right now has all the earmarks of a star. The players like him, often stopping to watch when he cuts loose after a fly ball in high speed. That is an excellent sign, for be it known that old-timers rarely ever waste many glances at a busher until he has stood the test and assayed pure.
Hickman is small of stature but wiry built, and with the fleet foot of a Josh Devore or a Frank Gilhooey. At the bat he hits naturally, but hitting against spring pitching is not necessarily of the grade that wins the “old pennant” in the fall.
Aside from his ability, though, Hickman comes into the big league under circumstances that will surely give him a niche in the tablets of quaint baseball history. This young man, possessing a real sense of humor, claims to have been the only genuine human chattel since the days of slavery. His experience is varied by the fact that he assisted his owner in making the sale, giving all kinds of sample exhibitions of his muscular ability.
At the time of the demise of the Federal League, according to Hickman, he was the property of the Baltimore Federals. The crushing of the league, he says, left the Baltimore Club with several debts on its hands. One of the creditors was a clerk or assistant secretary. When the time came for a settlement the club president presented the clerk with Jimmy Hickman in lieu of coin. With a ball player among his possessions and no league to work him in, the clerk set about to peddle his wares to the most generous purchaser. Hickman declares in all seriousness that he was taken around like a horse and his muscles exhibited so that there could be no mistake about his strength, speed and lack of spavins. He worked hand in glove with his kind owner, and they finally worked up a sale with the Brooklyn Club through which the clerk got enough money to more than repay him for what he feared would be a loss in salary.
“My owner,” says the young man, in an amusing imitation of the sale of Uncle Tom, “never struck me once, but fed me well and furnished me with good cigars and cigarettes.”
Manager Robinson thinks well of Hickman, and right now he is the sensation of the Brooklyn camp. Umpires Rigler and Klem, here in training, declare the former slave one of the most natural ball players they ever saw.
“You can see that he simply loves to play ball for the fun of it,” says Charley Rigler, “and I never saw a ballplayer like that who did not make good.”
From that same day’s New York Tribune:
ROBINS TAKE DAY OFF AND GO TO CIRCUS
Jimmy Hickman Wins Several Boxes of Candy but Others Fare Ill.
Daytona, Fla., March 16.—A cold northwest wind blew across the ball park to-day and temporarily halted the training practice of the ambitious and pennant aspiring members of the Brooklyn ball club. All of the players, young and old, reported to Robbie at 9 o’clock, eager for work. Robbie, however, wisely called off both the morning and afternoon sessions, and told the boys they were free to spend the day as they chose.
There is a big three-ring circus in town, and the majority of the players made this their headquarters for the day. Jimmy Hickman, the young outfielder of promising ability, won several boxes of candy at one of the attractions and a set of cuff links at another. The other players drew blanks, despite the fact that Jimmy took only a few chances, while they almost went broke trying to pull out a lucky number. Now the players call Hickman “Lucky Jimmy.”
Watertown Daily Times, March 18:
There’s a hot fight on for the gardening positions. The old reliable Zach Wheat seems sure of being elected, but Jimmy Johnston, the coast phenom of a year ago, and Hickman, the youngster secured from the Baltimore Feds, are giving Myers and Stengel, the last year regulars, a great fight. It wouldn’t be surprising if Hickman nosed out Myers.
Chattanooga Daily Times, April 7:
UNCLE ROBBIE STAKES HIS “REP” THAT HICKMAN IS REAL BALL PLAYER
Former Lookout Touted as Real “Find”—Will Be Sent to Minors for One Season With Belief That He’ll Return Next Year Star of First Magnitude—Prediction Will Be Watched Locally.
Chattanooga fans who did not criticize when Harry McCormick let Dave Hickman go last spring, will watch with a great deal of interest the career of the Johnson City speed boy. Hickman is now touted as one of the coming stars of the game. While he is due to be set adrift, Wilbert Robinson says he’s a great ballplayer and will nose his way in past Stengel, Jimmy Johnston, Meyers and Wheat next year. Witness the following from a Brooklyn correspondent of The Times:
BROOKLYN. N.Y., April 6.—If Ed Appleton ever becomes a big league pitcher, and Jimmy Hickman a great outfielder do not withhold any credit from your Uncle Wilbert Robinson. They told Robby last year that Appleton would not do as a hurler in a league where brains and curves were requisites; of Hickman they are saying he never will be a batter.
So with Hickman. A lot of scouts overlooked this bet when they were ivory hunting. Walter Brodie of glorious memory ran across Robby one fine afternoon chockful of enthusiasm for this lad who did not even get a band in the Federal league where he should have shone with the medley of talent they foisted on the public. Brodie just told Robby a thing or two about the virtues of Hickman.
“Sounds very good to me, Walter,” piped Robby as Brodie finished his spiel. “I smell a ballplayer in the offing and shall attach myself to him. Much obliged.”
So saying Robby got in touch with Hickman and the next thing we know the news is flashed Brooklynward that President Ebbets had been tipped off by Robby to mail Jimmy Hickman a contract. Robby has not regretted the step. Hickman may not be with the Dodgers when May 1 rolls around, but that will be only because of the twenty-one player rule. If he moves out of the swell circle for a year it will be with a string attached to him. Players like Hickman are not netted every day. A year in the minors will do him a world of good and with experience may come batting ability in which respect he is a doubtful quantity. As a fielder he is there. The 21-year-old ex-Fed sure can go some when it comes to chasing flies and he can run bases like a deer. He also knows some inside stuff. For instance, in Jacksonville after he had lashed out a home run did Jimmy like another rookie might have done attempt to murder the ball a second time? Not on your life: he bided his time and got a base on balls. A manager does not like to let one like Hickman get away and while Robby may be compelled to turn him into other pastures it will be only for the time being.
Brooklyn opened the season on April 12 with Jimmy on the
roster, but he had not gotten into any games by the 24th, when it
was announced that he had been sent to New Haven of the Eastern League.
However, he somehow ended up back in Asheville instead, and he debuted with
them on the 27th, batting third and playing center. Sometimes he
played left, and sometimes he batted leadoff. Greensboro Daily News,
July 9:
JIMMY HICKMAN MAY COACH UNIVERSITY BASEBALL TEAM.
Durham, July 8.—Jimmy Hickman, of the Asheville baseball team, before leaving Durham tonight, announced that he had been offered the position of coach of the University of North Carolina baseball team and would probably accept. [I didn’t find anything more about that.]
Memphis Commercial Appeal, August 18:
GETS 8 HITS IN 9 TIMES UP.
ASHEVILLE, N.C., Aug. 17.—James Hickman, left fielder for the Asheville team of the North Carolina League, who is under option of the Brooklyn Nationals, established what is believed to be a record for minor leagues here today by getting eight hits, a home run, a double and six singles out of nine times at bat [in a doubleheader]. He also stole four bases.
This apparently impressed the Robins enough that they called
him up on the 19th. He made his National League debut on the 26th
at Cincinnati; he pinch-ran for Zack Wheat, who had led off the top of the
ninth with a single, Brooklyn down 1-0. After a fly out, Jimmy got forced out
at second.
The next day Jimmy pinch ran again, this time for pitcher
Sherry Smith in the fifth, and he came around to score on a single by Casey
Stengel. After two more pinch running appearances he batted for the first time
on September 4 in Philadelphia, drawing a walk against Eppa Rixey as a
pinch-hitter. His only start was in the next-to-last game of the season,
October 4 at home against the Giants; he played left, batted third, and went
1-for-4 against Slim Sallee.
In his nine games in Brooklyn, Jimmy went 1-for-5 with two
walks, a stolen base, and three runs scored. In Asheville he led the league in
hitting at .350, on-base at .477, and in walks with 85 (second-most was 53),
with 27 doubles, two triples, ten homers, and 36 stolen bases in 91 games.
In 1917 Jimmy had another good spring training with the
Robins. New York Sun, March 14:
Hickman in particular is going great guns. He was purchased from the Baltimore Federals last spring and was sent to Asheville, in the North Carolina League, for more seasoning. He refused to go anywhere else. Right now he is much further advanced than any of the other candidates. For natural speed he is nearly Jim Thorpe’s equal, but he is a better fly chaser than the Indian.
The Sun, March 17:
Jimmy Hickman starred again to-day. The stocky little outfielder made two hits, two runs, two difficult putouts and the most perfect throw of the game from the outfield to the plate. The ball took one long hop and nestled in Chief Meyers’s glove ahead of the runner.
New York American, March 21:
Dark clouds and a raw wind swayed Manager Robinson to a postponement of the scrub game to-day, and instead of going to the ball yard they went hunting for wild cats in the Ozarks. They were accompanied by a guide, a pack of hounds and several guns, but their search for the demented feline proved fruitless.
Jimmy Hickman caught a rabbit and Sherry Smith, protecting himself, slaughtered a squirrel, which broke the monotony of the fourteen-mile hike. When the players returned to the hotel they were so tired that Robbie placed a ban on further activity.
The American, March 24:
Since coming to the [Hot] Springs here Hickman has made six circuit clouts. His first to-day was a terrific rap to center field, the ball rolling into a creek, while his second blow was the most forceful ever delivered in Whittington Park. The ball sailed on a line over the fence in deep right-center.
Jimmy made the team, as a bench player. He was used as a
pinch-hitter and pinch-runner until May 17, when he took over the left field
job, and the third spot in the order, from an injured Zack Wheat. New York
American, May 25:
HOMER BY HICKMAN DECISIVE
Wheat’s Successor Drives Out Telling Blow in Third, Netting Three Runs—Pirates Lose, 6-0
Hammering Burleigh Grimes and Albert Mamaux for ten solid hits, including one home run, two triples and a pair of doubles, the Dodgers had little trouble defeating the Wagnerless Pirates at Ebbets Field yesterday. Wilbur Robinson’s athletes tallied half a dozen runs, whereas the visitors failed to cross the plate on Big Jeff Pfeffer. It was the latter’s first shutout of the season.
Jimmy Hickman, supplanting Zack Wheat in left field, and George Cutshaw led the assault on the two Pittsburgh pitchers. Hickman won the game as early as the third inning with a home run drive to the scoreboard, scoring Johnston and Daubert ahead of him.
On May 26 Jimmy took time to fill out his draft card. It
shows him living at 103 King Place in Johnson City, falsely lists his birth
year as 1894, and gives his appearance as short, medium build, brown eyes,
brown hair.
Sun, May 27:
HICKMAN PROVING STAR FOR DODGERS
Youngster Substituting for Wheat Is Hitting Hard and Fielding Like a Streak.
By Innis Brown.
Accidents which put star players out of commission only to open the way to recognition for youngsters hitherto unknown are nothing new in baseball. Annals of the game rather bristle with cases in which some unknown has stepped up in a crisis to fill the shoes of a top liner and then proceeded to go right along starring from day to day as a regular.
The daily struggles of the Brooklyn club afford a case in point. In left field, where Zach Wheat had held forth for the Flatbush troupe for several seasons, Wilbert Robinson now is using a chubby, swarthy youngster, David James Hickman.
“Jimmy” he is to the Dodger tribe. But back down in his native section he is known to fandom as “Brownie.” Wheat was retired from the game several days ago because of injuries. Several days ago he was inserted as a pinch hitter, and wrenched his side again, so that he probably will be out for ten days more.
Meantime Hickman is very much on the job. Not a game has passed since Jimmy swung into the lineup in which he failed to get a hit. Once he won a game by smashing out a homer with runners on. Most every day he comes through at some critical moment with a safe drive. Afield he is playing equally as well. He is very fast, both in covering territory and running the bases. When Wheat returns some tall and lofty fielding and hitting will have to be done by the other Dodger outfielders to keep Jimmy on the bench.
On June 4 Wheat returned to the lineup and Jimmy moved over
to center in place of Jimmy Johnston. He kept that job until mid-July, spent
some time coming off the bench, and finished the season with another five weeks
or so as the regular center fielder, now batting mostly sixth. New York
American, August 23:
Dodgers Win Record Game
Beat Pirates in 22 Innings
Hickman Dashes Home With Winning Run While Pirate Second Baseman Holds Ball.
Jimmy Hickman, the diminutive outfielder from Johnson City, Tenn., was the hero of a 22-inning struggle—the longest ever played in the National League—at Ebbets Field yesterday afternoon. Jimmy stole home while Jake Pitler, the Pittsburgh Pirates’ second baseman, was holding the ball after a forceout, bringing the game to an unexpected end and giving the Brooklyn team the game by a score of 6 to 5.
Officially he scored from second on a force out, not a
stolen base.
Jimmy hit .219/.253/.330 in 370 at-bats in 114 games, with
15 doubles, four triples, six homers, and 14 stolen bases. On December 11 it
was reported that he had joined the Naval Reserves in New York City. Sporting
News, January 17, 1918:
JIMMY HICKMAN NOT IN NAVY
But He’s Helping Win War by Working in a Ship Yard.
NEWPORT NEWS, Va., Jan. 12.—Dandy James, alias Jimmy, Hickman, of the Brooklyn National League joy club—he admits it—isn’t in the Navy, hasn’t been in the Navy, nor is he going in the Navy, if what he says is true, and Charles Ebbets, owner extraordinary of the aforementioned joy club, is out three perfectly good cents, expended for one stamp with which to offer his consolation to the little outfielder when it was rumored in print that James had imbibed freely of Safety First and enlisted as a yeoman in the Navy.
Hickman has entered the agricultural field by entering the employ of the Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Company as a “plant” draughtsman. The foregoing isn’t meant as a reflection on his patriotism, as he is really doing the government more good where he is than he could shying bombs or grenades at the Huns, and besides, look at all the fun he is missing.
Mr. Ebbets wrote a letter to Jimmy, bidding him goodbye and all that sort of thing. He praised his patriotism and told him God bless him, and now to think those kind words were wasted. Mr. Ebbets should now write Homer L. Ferguson, president of the company, thanking or congratulating him on having the little outfielder drawing plans for ships for him, or whatever Hickman is doing.
This did not settle the question, as former heavyweight
champion Gentleman Jim Corbett was asked about it in his New York American
column of February 8:
Corbett Answers Queries
Dear Mr. Corbett: (1) Who won the Corbett-Sullivan fight? (2) What was the result of the Fulton-Miske fight? (3) Is Hickman in the Navy? E.J.
(1) I won in the twenty-first round. (2) Difference of opinion among sporting experts, but the consensus made it a draw. (3) I presume you mean Hickman, of the Dodgers. The last information I had concerning him was that he had gone into the navy.
The shipbuilding company was in fact the correct story. New
York World, March 6:
Davy Hickman, Robin outfielder and pinch hitter, has ended “hold-outing” and has signed his 1918 contract. The breath of spring was in the air, the sky was blue and clear, the birds were singing in the parks and Davy’s hands itched to take a bat, “get hold” of a fast one and lam it till it rattled the boards on the centre field fence. His feet fairly felt a longing for the firm grip of a set of spikes on a level field and a race after a high fly. What are a few dollars when you have feverish youth and an overwhelming desire to burn one in from deep right to the plate and your arm feels good enough right now to do it? So Davy came into the fold, says he’s pleased, and Wilbert Robinson is happy.
Casey Stengel had been traded to Pittsburgh, and Zack Wheat
was a holdout, so Jimmy had less competition in the outfield than previously. On
March 17 the Memphis Commercial Appeal made a comment that I don’t know
how to interpret but it sounds snide:
‘Tis said that Jimmy Hickman is to become a regular outfielder with the Dodgers. As Jimmy has worn out several uniforms doing bench duty, he was just beginning to think his name carried too many letters, particularly the three last ones.
New York World, March 21:
Jimmy Hickman Reports To Dodgers at Hot Springs.
HOT SPRINGS, Ark., March 21.—Little Jimmy Hickman arrived yesterday from Newport News in time to get in the daily practice game and show Robbie and the Robins that he has not lost any of his speed or his ability to knock ‘em a mile. Hickman is some twenty pounds lighter than when the 1917 season closed, and is as hard as nails.
New York Sun, March 27:
HICKMAN HITS FOR HOMER AND DOUBLE
Leads Attack in Practice Contest at Dodgers’ Camp.
HOT SPRINGS, Ark., March 26…The batting spree came just when Hickman was despairing of ever doing anything that would earn favorable mention. He has attributed his hitting weakness to playing in right field. Covering the position seems to hoodoo his batting.
The World, April 6:
Hi Meyers [Myers] is the class of the outfield. Jimmy Johnston in left will about pass muster, but Jimmy Hickman will have to improve to fill Stengel’s shoes. Hickman’s batting is of the in and out calibre, with no consistency.
On the other hand, the Sun, April 7:
The release of Stengel will not affect seriously the Dodger outfield, as Brooklyn has three good men left in Myers, Johnston and Hickman, but would be better off if Zack Wheat could be induced to sign a contract.
On April 9 it was reported that Jimmy was out with bad
knees, but when the season began on the 16th he was in right field
and hitting sixth. On the 23rd Robinson announced that Jimmy would
be leaving the team on the 27th to work in a Boston shipyard, but by
the 27th he had decided to stay put. Through July 4 he had played in
53 of the team’s 65 games, hitting .234/.281/.359, and was among the league
leaders in triples with seven. New York American, July 7:
Jack Coombs was in right for Brooklyn, because Jimmy Hickman got a tip when the Dodgers arrived this morning that he would soon be called in the draft and returned on the noon train for New York to enlist in the Navy at the Brooklyn or Norfolk Navy Yard.
Jimmy was stationed at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, where he
played on the baseball team with Casey Stengel; the two became buddies. Jimmy
also managed to find time to play some semi-pro ball. From the December 11 New
York Sun:
Jimmy Hickman of the Dodgers and “Casey” Stengel of the Pirates have been discharged from the navy and now are in civilian attire. Stengel had a short confab with Barney Dreyfuss. There is some doubt about Hickman returning to baseball this season, as he has a good position with a steamship company and may not be able to devote any time to baseball.
Same paper, February 1:
HIGH LIGHTS AND SHADOWS IN ALL SPHERES OF SPORT
By Daniel.
Most of the major league baseball players have been tendered their contracts for 1919 and there is a suspicious silence. Practically every player has been asked to accept a reduction in salary and some of the cuts are quite radical, but in spite of all that the players have not emitted the usual howls of anguish and threats to retire from the game. Of course, a good many of these may be expected next week, after the men get over the first effects of the blow, but in the main the players are keeping their counsel and in so far as the public prints are concerned are maintaining a commendable silence. But that does not mean that they have decided to accept their new contracts without a contest. Take the Brooklyn players for example. We were told yesterday that at least six Superbas had banded themselves into a sort of union and agreed to a “united we stand, divided we fall” platform. They will fight against the reductions in salary as a unit. We were informed that the combination includes Jimmy Hickman, Otto Miller, Larry Cheney, Jimmy Johnston, Mack Wheat [brother of Zack, not a typo] and Al Mamaux.
New York Tribune, February 7:
Hickman Startles Ebbets With an Unsigned Contract
Outfielder Announces He Is Through With Baseball; Holke May Be a Brave
By W.J. Macbeth
The first jolt against the peace and equilibrium of greater New York’s prosaic major league life of 1919 was characterized by a wild shriek in the environs of Bedford Avenue and Sullivan Street, Flatbush, yesterday afternoon when Squire Charles H. Ebbets opened a letter in which was returned the unsigned contract of outfielder Jimmy Hickman.
Mr. Hickman informed the boss of the Dodgers that he was through with the national pastime, as he believed it was to his best interests to pursue a business career on which he launched at the close of the last season and which has since steadily improved in profit and opportunity.
The missive accompanying the unsullied contract was not in the nature of the usual hold-out threat. Hickman, a business man, seemed to mean business. And Charles H. Ebbets is consequently in despair. For Hickman was not only one of the pillars of the outfield upon whom Uncle Wilbert Robinson was banking heavily for a successful effort the coming summer, but a versatile player as well, who could fit into any infield position in a pinch.
Hickman is a good hitter and a pretty nifty sort of base runner, who has before him the brightest part of his career. His loss would be a sad blow, indeed, to Brooklyn hopes.
It is expected that Manager Robinson, who is at Dover Hall just now, will have a talk with Hickman before the Dodgers go to Jacksonville, Fla., for spring training, to try to have the young player change his mind about retirement. Hickman, however, has intimated that the salary question does not enter into the calculation at all. If anybody can bring the recalcitrant player into line the same is your Uncle Wilbert Robinson.
The February 12 Watertown Daily Times had a very
different take:
President Ebbets has announced that he will not make any attempt to get Jimmy Hickman, the outfielder, to sign his 1919 contract, which the player recently returned to the Robins’ owner without a signature. Hickman in returning his contract made a demand for an increase in salary which Ebbets branded as ridiculous.
On the 26th, in Brooklyn, Jimmy got married, to
Brooklyn native Marcella Calleran. Their address was given as 275 Halsey Street
in Brooklyn. New York American, March 11:
Jimmy Hickman, one of Robbie’s outfielders in the confines of Flatbush, attached his name to a contract with the Ebbets clan yesterday. Joimes announced his retirement about six weeks ago, and returned his contract unsigned. Jim’s objection was, strange to say, regarding the salary. It looks as if he won out now that he deigns to once again don the spangles.
Jimmy was late in arriving at spring training in
Jacksonville due to the flu. From the New York Journal, April 2:
HICKMAN JOINS DODGERS
JACKSONVILLE, Fla., April 2.—When the Dodgers take the field against the Yankees in the third of the exhibition tilts to-morrow, Jimmy Hickman probably will patrol the left pasture for Uncle Wilbert Robinson. Jimmy arrived in camp late Tuesday night and showed up so well in this morning’s practice that Uncle Wilbert chirped:
“You can’t be kidding me, Jimmy. You’ve been sneaking in some spring training up North. I guess I’ll have to stick you in against the Yankees to-morrow and see what you can do. Somebody’s got to do some hustling besides good old Hy Myers, anyway.”
New York World, April 3:
Jimmy Hickman broke his bat on his first trip to the platter in batting practice yesterday. He blazed a terrific liner over third, much to the joy of his bride, who sat with the better half of the other Brooklyn newlywed, Al Mamaux, in the grand stand. The two brides are most ardent rooters.
World, next day:
Jimmy Hickman had a party in New York’s half of the fifth inning. He took Bodie’s singing drive at his shoe tops, he ran over behind short field for Ward’s looping fly, and a moment later went far back for Hannah’s towering smash. He stretched a muscle, however, and pulled up lame.
Memphis Commercial Appeal, April 13:
SPEED MAKES HITS.
The return of Josh Devore to professional baseball brings back one of the real fast ones, runners who on account of their speed, are making a bid for a base hit any time they start for first on a ground ball. Dave Robertson is such a flyer, and other names past or present which obtrude are Jim Thorpe, Jimmy Hickman, Ty Cobb, Burt Shotton, Bullet Thoney, Danny Hoffman, Jimmy Barrett, Claude Cooper, Jimmy Callahan and Harry Bay.
When the regular season began Jimmy found himself on the
bench. He only got into one game in the first four weeks, and that was as a
pinch-hitter; his first start was on June 13. New York Tribune, July 3:
Hi Myers’s illness proved costly to the Giants yesterday, rather than to the Dodgers, as would naturally be expected. Hi was compelled to lay off, and in his absence little Jimmy Hickman, the chubby speed boy of the Brooklyn outfit, took care of the centre field position at the Polo Grounds. Jimmy not only filled the job in a most acceptable manner but, to show his appreciation to Manager Robinson for permitting him to play, he won the ball game for his employer by a score of 4 to 3.
(He hit a bases-loaded single that scored two runs to tie
the game in the sixth, then the next hitter drove in what would be the winning
run.)
Jimmy got into just 57 games in 1919, starting just 24;
given that he hit just .192/.236/.240, it’s not that surprising. New York
Herald, January 9, 1920:
TWO DODGERS RELEASED.
David James Hickman, outfielder, and Lewis A. Malone, infielder, were released by the Brooklyn club yesterday to Toledo in the American Association. Inconsistent hitting cost both players their positions in the majors. Hickman was regarded as one of the speediest base runners in the league, but his batting average was too anaemic for him to stay…
Columbus Dispatch, March 16:
Toledo Loses Hickman.
TOLEDO, OHIO, MARCH 16.—Jimmy Hickman, who was released by the Robins to the Toledo club, does not intend to play this season. Jimmy has gone into business. He is in Oil City, Pa., selling oil and according to reports he will have a profitable year. It is said he will receive in addition to his salary, about $2500 for playing ball.
Apparently there was a trend in 1919-20 for independent
semi-pro industrial teams, especially in western Pennsylvania, to start loading
up with professional players, and Jimmy had not so much quit baseball to go
into business as opted to look outside organized baseball for a place to play. Cleveland
Plain Dealer, April 11:
SHARON TEAM IS ARRANGING GAMES
Contests Booked With Oil City, Franklin and Grove City.
SHARON, PA., April 10.—J.P. Hosack, business manager of the Carnegie Steel company baseball club of Sharon has arranged a series of baseball games with the Grove City club, the first game to be played August 7 and 8. The Carnegies will open the regular season May 1 with Oil City in Sharon…
The Carnegies will play thirteen games with Franklin and nine with Oil City. Oil City has signed Walter Kimmick, a companion of Heinie Boll, recently turned loose by the Pittsburg Pirates, and Kimmick who suffered the same fate [sic]. Oil City also has Ben Shaw and Bob Steel of Pittsburg, “Red” Bloom of Cleveland, Jake Pitler, Marty Berghamer, Art Riley, and Jimmy Hickman of Brooklyn...
Toledo Blade, May 24:
OUTLAWS WHO HOPE TO RETURN NEXT YEAR MAY BE FOOLED
By George R. Pulford
Wouldst know the very latest, the feed box story about the Steel league and the rubber legged boys who are jumping from organized ball when tempting contracts are waved under their noses by agents of the Outlaw league?
Well, as we get it, there’s any number of players in Franklin and Oil City, Pa., Bethlehem and other teams in the Steel league and its offshoots, who are simply “out for the dough,” and are using those clubs to get it. They are getting more money for their services this summer than ever before and in some cases have been “put in,” soft things, that net them big returns, especially when they have no financial investment.
Several of the players are very candid in saying that they intend to play independent ball, which is merely another name for Outlaw ball, for one season. Next year they plan to return to organized baseball. This is their own little scheme.
Unfortunately for them, organized ball will not enter into the plan. The recent publication of an order issue [sic] by the National association forbids the signing of these players after June 20, 1920.
Flatly this means that the men who have jumped contracts and reservations can not return to organized ball unless they do so within the time limit. The permanent loss of the players is a blow to many teams in organized ball, but it will not be felt so heavily next season as it is at present. If organized ball stands pat upon its edict and bars the jumpers for all time, it will play a strong and a wise hand. If it relents and takes them into the fold in 1921, it will merely open the door for more jumpers and the practice will be repeated next season.
Barring the men who do not respect a contract is the most effectual treatment. Next season the outlaw organization may not be in existence. If they are not and players like Bunny Fabrique, Evans, Joe Harris, Lew Malone, Hickman, Dumont and others have no place to turn, the lesson will be one that will be long remembered by other players who have kangaroo tendencies.
Jimmy played for Oil City all summer. New York Post,
December 29:
Bresnahan to Act Against Brooklyn
Toledo Owner Says Robins Still Owe Him Players He Paid For
TOLEDO, O., December 29.—Roger Bresnahan, president of the Toledo Club of the American Association, announced to-day that he is preparing some sort of action against the Brooklyn National League Club in connection with the purchase last spring of three players who he says were not delivered after a down payment had been made.
Bresnahan declares he purchased Outfielder Hickman, Second Baseman Malone, and Third Baseman Douglas Baird for $7,000, that he paid $2,500 down on the installment plan and received nothing in return.
Malone and Hickman are said to have jumped to the Steel League, and Baird, through some pretext, was kept at Brooklyn and released this winter to Indianapolis, according to Bresnahan.
New York Herald, December 31:
Jumpers Want to Return.
Organized baseball will not be troubled next season by the Steel and Industrial leagues, to which so many players jumped last season and the year before. Most of these leagues and independent shipyard and factory outfits have been left holding the bag. The jumpers are frantic in their pleas for reinstatement, but it is extremely unlikely that their cases will ever be reviewed. It will be remembered that all the jumpers were barred from organized baseball for five years, and O.B. is determined to stand pat on that decision.
The list of those barred includes quite a number of good ball players, among whom are Joe Harris, the Cleveland first baseman; Whitey Witt, the outfielder, and Kinney, pitcher of the Athletics; Jimmy Hickman, the outfielder, who was released by the Dodgers to Toledo and declined the new assignment, and Ollie O’Mara and Crum, who quit the Indianapolis club when it was leading the American Association…
The breaking up of the Steel and other leagues of that character is a great thing for the minors, which find more players available.
Despite that, it was reported in February 1921 that Jimmy
had re-signed with Oil City. New York Herald, May 6:
Desiring no controversy with the Toledo Club over the D.J. Hickman-Lewis Malone deal, Charles H. Ebbets notified Commissioner Landis that the Brooklyn National League Baseball Club would be willing to repay the Toledo Club $2,500 in cash and have the players placed on the Brooklyn club’s ineligible list until such time as Commissioner Landis might deem it proper to reinstate Hickman and Malone for their violation of the laws of organized baseball. Judge Landis has rendered a decision in conformity with this request and the players have been transferred to the ineligible list of the Brooklyn club.
Jimmy didn’t wait around to be reinstated, though; he
continued to play with Oil City. Washington (Pennsylvania) Observer,
May 18:
Oil City will be minus the services of Jimmy Hickman, star outfielder and hitter, for the greater part of the season as the result of an unfortunate accident in the eighth inning. The former Brooklyn star had doubled and then tried to steal third. He was thrown out but in sliding into the bag his foot caught, doubled his leg under him, and snapped a small bone in his left leg at the ankle. The fracture was clean cut as shown by an X-ray picture but the Oiler left Washington with his teammates last night.
On July 30 it was reported that the Oil City team had
disbanded and that Jimmy, among others, had gone home. The Toledo Blade
elaborated on the situation on August 1:
Franklin Quits, Smashing Outlaw League; Jumpers Looking for Jobs
The “Oil League,” composed of but two cities, Franklin and Oil City, has gone to the wall, and the greatest refuge of baseball contract jumpers in the land is now a thing of the past.
Last week backers of the Franklin club announced that they could carry their frenzied finance no further.
Franklin forfeited to Oil City all the remaining games of the season, as well as the $500 posted to insure the playing of the schedule.
Then it turned loose the dozen or more highly paid players, who are now scurrying about looking for jobs—most of them barred for five years from organized ball.
The baseball rivalry between these little cities in the Pennsylvania mountains has lasted almost since the game was invented, and for 50 years smouldered and flared with recurrent bursts of rivalry.
The beginning of the end came in 1919, when Scott Perry, first of the army of contract jumpers, quit organized baseball and joined the outlaws.
Both clubs then began bidding in reckless fashion for big league and class AA players, almost disrupting several clubs. The salaries they began paying made it certain that they couldn’t last long.
The idea spread to other clubs and at present there are many places harboring players who jumped organized baseball. Nevertheless, the Oil league stands as the original and most picturesque of outlaw leagues. Each city had a freaky little ball park, the “Hilltop” park at Franklin, the “Bandbox” at Oil City.
The Oil City club is still in existence, but its demise is considered a certainty, as with Franklin out of business, there will be little interest in the game at the oil town.
Columbus Dispatch, November 16:
Compensation for Injured Player
PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 16.—For the first time since the state workman’s compensation act went into effect, a baseball player has received an award for injuries sustained in a baseball game. The award was made to David J. Hickman against the Oil City Baseball association. His leg was broken at the opening of the 1921 season and he is unable to play baseball, according to his statement. He will receive $12 a week for the period in which he was accustomed to play baseball, from May 17 to November 8.
A December 17 article in the Buffalo Evening News
mentioned that Jimmy, who was serving a five year banishment from organized
baseball, was among several players who had applied to Commissioner Landis for
reinstatement and were waiting for a ruling. The Toledo Blade reported
on December 21:
BRESNAHAN CAN NOW SIGN MALONE, HICKMAN AND DUMONT FOR HENS
By George R. Pulford.
Through rules adopted by the National association at its Buffalo meeting, ball players who have jumped the reserve to play with so-called “Outlaw” leagues or independent teams, are eligible to reinstatement in organized ball. Players who jumped contracts, Ben Dyer for instance, are not eligible to reinstatement. The decision of the minor league magnates to lift the suspension on the reserve clause jumpers, may be the means of solving a couple of problems confronting the Toledo club. Second Baseman Malone, Outfielder Hickman and Pitcher Dumont, whose releases were purchased by Roger Bresnahan, refused to report here and sought employment with outlawed teams. Their action just about wrecked the 1920 Toledo team. Now that the ban on these players has been lifted, that Bresnahan can negotiate for their release with Brooklyn, if he sees fit, and after their experience in independent ball, the chances are that they will be glad to pay the $300 fine demanded by the National association and return to the fold. Dumont may be satisfied where he is, but it is believed that Malone and Hickman will welcome the opportunity to come in out of the wet. If the Hens can round up the outfielder and infielder the outlook will be much brighter. Malone is a splendid second baseman and the chances are he could play short. Hickman would fit into the Toledo outfield nicely. If Dumont is ready to quit fooling with independent baseball he would be a welcome addition to the pitching staff.
However, Landis was not done with Jimmy, and on March 11,
1922, the New York American reported that he was one of six players
ruled by Landis “guilty of outlaw practices while under contract with various
clubs, and who may be absolved only by ‘one full year’s disassociation from
baseball.’” New York World, March 15:
Jimmie Hickman, the outfielder who was suspended by Landis recently and ordered not to play ball with any team for a period of one year, arrived here [Brooklyn spring training in Jacksonville] last night and is awaiting a conference with Landis, who is expected to arrive here this afternoon.
The next day’s Tribune:
After the practice the Brooklyn owner and the Commissioner motored back to the Windsor Hotel and went into secret session. As he was leaving the park Mr. Ebbets introduced his guest to Jimmy Hickman, former Brooklyn outfielder. Hickman is at present an ineligible.
“I would like to have a talk with you some time, judge,” said Hickman. “All right,” replied Landis: “meet me at the hotel at 5:30 o’clock.”
I found a couple later mentions of the fact that Landis was
considering Jimmy’s case, but nothing on a decision. However, the outcome seems
pretty clear given that in July Jimmy was playing left field and leading off
for Beallsville, Pennsylvania, in the independent/outlaw Triple Link League. In
December came a report that Jimmy was at baseball’s winter meetings in New York
to see Landis again about reinstatement, but again, no news on a decision.
In March Jimmy was mentioned as a probable player for the
Mahoney City Blue Birds, an independent team near Philadelphia. Then, on April
13 the Brooklyn Standard Union reported that he had signed with the
semi-pro Bushwicks, with whom he played all season, though I also found
mentions of him playing for Beallsville. Meanwhile, on May 9 Marcella gave
birth to their first child, David James III, in Brooklyn.
In January 1924 Jimmy was reinstated to organized baseball
by Commissioner Landis, and in February the Dodgers optioned him to Springfield
of the Eastern League. However, he opted to stay in Brooklyn and play for the
Bushwicks. Brooklyn Daily Times, March 20:
Dexter Park Opening Sunday an Occasion
Dexter Park, home of the Bushwicks will be opened for the season Sunday afternoon when the Dexter Parkers clash with the Chester, Pa., team in one game. Manager Max Rosner is making preparations for the occasion. Most of the old faces will be in the line-up including Jimmy Hickman who will cover center field. Hickman has a responsible position with a New York firm and will give up the idea of playing league baseball.
The Bushwicks only played on Sundays, a doubleheader each
week. The Brooklyn Times mentioned on April 18 that Jimmy “has just been
released from organized baseball on his own request by Commissioner Landis,”
and on the 28th they called him “rotund Jimmy Hickman.” In October
the Bushwicks split a series with the Doherty Silk Sox that was intended to
determine the “independent white championship of the East,” and in November
snow caused a premature end to “the Brooklyn-Queens championship semi-pro
series” with a team called simply the Farmers.
In 1925 Jimmy began the season with the Bushwicks, but about
a month into the season he was benched and then replaced on the roster by
former major leaguer Bill McCarren. He quickly hooked up with another local
team, Springfield, which played its games at Recreation Park in Long Island
City, and was named manager. However, he was gone from there in less than two
months. On September 21 daughter Mary was born in Brooklyn.
I found no references to Jimmy playing baseball anywhere in
1926, but in 1927 he was playing for the Bronx Giants, and in at least one game
for College Point. As far as I can tell this was the end of his semi-pro
career.
On August 8, 1929, Sports Editor Murray Robinson of the Brooklyn
Standard Union, in his “As You Like It” column, under the headline “WHAT’S
BECOME OF,” wrote: “The best close harmony quartet that ever sent sweet music
from a dugout on a rainy day—Jimmy Hickman, Tommy Griffith, Leon Cadore and Al
Mamaux?”
Watertown (New York) Daily Times, January 9,
1930:
FORMER BROOKLYN OUTFIELDER IS VISITOR AT OGDENSBURG
Ogdensburg, Jan. 9.—“Jimmy” Hickman, former outfielder of the Brooklyn National league club, was a business visitor in the city yesterday and met a number of fans who recalled him as a member of the Robins when they played an exhibition game at the fair here ten years ago. Hickman is a traveling salesman for the National Cash Register company and makes his home in Brooklyn. He said he intended establishing northern headquarters in either Watertown or Ogdensburg. He left yesterday afternoon for Massena.
Apparently Watertown was chosen, and the April 13 census
shows Jimmy and his family at 1409 Academy Street, renting a house for $60 a
month. He was introduced as a new member at a Watertown Kiwanis Club meeting on
April 15. On July 8 he made a speech at the meeting, as reported in that day’s Daily
Times:
KIWANIS HEAR MAJOR LEAGUER
FORMER BROOKLYN NATIONAL ADDRESSES THEM
JAMES HICKMAN IS SPEAKER
Declares Walter Johnson Best Pitcher With Mathewson and Alexander His Second Choices—Compares McGraw and Robinson.
James Hickman, local representative of the National Cash Register company, who played in the outfield with the Brooklyn team of the National Baseball league eight [11 to 14] years ago, addressed the Kiwanis club this noon at the Woodruff hotel during the regular luncheon-meeting.
Starting as a minor league player, he terminated his baseball career eight years ago as a fielder with the Brooklyn Robins, although he is still a member of the team by contract. He played for two days with the Detroit team [?] and was then transferred to the Chicago, Tenn., team [?]. Later he went to the Nashville, Tenn., team. He played for some time in the Federal baseball league after which he was transferred to the Brooklyn team.
Briefly relating his experiences, he said that he was “on the bench” with the Brooklyn team when he answered a call for a good-right hand hitter. It only took three pitched balls, he said, to send him back to the bench. According to the speaker, there are very few major league ball players who are receiving a salary exceeding $15,000 a year.
In Mr. Hickman’s opinion, Walter Johnson was the best pitcher and Mathewson and Grover Alexander the best second class pitchers. Before prohibition, he said, there were only one or two players who ever took a drink [!!] and when they did it was after the game. Today, he said, there are very few players, who, after the game, do not drink intoxicating beverages.
The speaker briefly compared Wilbert Robinson, manager of the Brooklyn team, and John McGraw, manager of the New York Giants. The former praised his players, while the latter was harsh and spoke to his players with profane language, he said.
Mr. Hickman’s baseball career was ended eight years ago when he left the team after being fined $200 for playing in exhibition baseball games. Mr. Hickman played with Brooklyn when that team won the pennant in 1916…
On July 19 Jimmy was a judge of a boys’ baseball throwing
contest sponsored by the boys’ department of the Globe Store. On November 11 he
was named to the election committee of the Kiwanis Club; on December 23
daughter Joan was born. Their stay in Watertown ended in 1933, as reported in
the Daily Times on April 29:
JAMES HICKMAN TRANSFERRED FROM THIS CITY TO BROOKLYN
Mr. and Mrs. James Hickman, jr., 1409 Academy street, will be honored at a farewell dinner at the Black River Valley club this evening by a group of friends. They leave soon for Brooklyn where they plan to reside in the future.
Mr. Hickman is manager of the local branch of the National Cash Register company. He has been transferred to the Brooklyn office. His family will move there after June 1.
Mr. Hickman was formerly a member of the Brooklyn major league baseball team. He has been a resident of this city since 1929 [1930] when he came here to assume his duties as manager of the National Cash Register company’s branch.
Brooklyn Times Union, April 24, 1934:
Old Pal Praises Stengel
Hickman, Former Teammate, Says Casey Will Become Great Manager.
By Irwin N. Rosee
Semi-pro ball has a far greater kinship to the big leagues than most folks realize. For example, there’s Jimmy Hickman, middle-aged cash register company official, who spent part of his baseball career in semi-pro ranks and who today is closer to Casey Stengel than probably anyone in Brooklyn.
Jimmy, uncle of Herman Hickman, burly wrestler and former star football tackle at the University of Tennessee, was a pal of Casey’s for years when the two wore the spangles of the Dodgers about the time of the war, and though separated by exigencies of making a living, their tie has never been broken.
Jimmy thinks Casey will develop into one of the leading managers of baseball and he isn’t backward in giving his reasons. One, Hickman says, Casey is a capable handler of men and knows how to keep them fighting and in good humor in turn; two, Casey is a profound although not self-conscious student of the technical side of baseball; third, his gate magnetism will mean money in the box office for the club.
Jimmy, who is a son of Tennessee, learned to play ball down there and went to the Appalachian League as an outfielder in 1913. The following year he shuffled off to the more important Carolina League.
In 1915 Jimmy was signed by Baltimore in the now defunct Federal League. From there he bounced to the Dodgers playing through 1916 to 1919. He and Casey became fast friends in those days. Both were in the Navy at the same time and roomed together. In the service Casey played on the Navy nine that Jimmy captained.
Casey was a perfect companion, Jimmy recalls, plenty of laughs all the time.
A few years later Jimmy began to find business and baseball crowding one another, so he dropped out of big-time ball and devoted week-ends to baseball. He signed up with the Bushwicks and spent many seasons with them. For a spell while in the Navy, Jimmy played for the Farmers. Jimmy still has a fond spot in his heart for Max Rosner, manager of the Bushwicks, whom Hickman counts as one of the finest men he ever encountered in baseball.
Jimmy is a regular visitor at Casey’s hotel when the Dodgers are in town and Stengel intends to visit Jimmy’s home in Floral Park. They’ll get out the old navy pictures and laugh themselves hysterical. Take it from Jimmy, they are that funny.
On December 22 the Brooklyn Times Union reported that
“If Jimmy Hickman can find the time he’ll help Otto Miller with Buck Freeman’s
battery candidates when they [the Dodgers] go into training next month.” I
found no further mention of this. On August 21 the Watertown Daily Times
said: “James Hickman, who was a member of the Brooklyn outfield, still comes
into this section as a representative of a cash register concern. He resides in
Brooklyn.”
Brooklyn Times Union, November 4, 1935:
Jimmy Hickman, former Brooklyn outfielder and ace salesman of the National Cash Register Co., has won a two-week trip to New Orleans by putting over the most sales in the Greater City.
Brooklyn Eagle, March 9, 1938:
Jimmy Hickman, former Dodger outfielder, has switched his business activities from the borough to Utica.
The 1940 census found the Hickmans living at 402 West German
Street in Herkimer, just southeast of Utica. Jimmy, listed as David J., is a
cash register salesman who worked 40 hours the previous week, and was employed
for 52 weeks in 1939, earning $3000. David Jr. is 17, Mary 14, and Joan nine.
In 1942 Jimmy filled out another draft card. His address is
now 1330 East 36th Street in Brooklyn, and his employer is the
Marine Basin Company, at the foot of 26th Avenue in
Brooklyn—presumably war work. He lists himself as 5-7 ½, 210 pounds, ruddy
complexion, hazel eyes, brown hair, with the “obvious physical characteristic”
of “cut left leg.”
In the 1950 census the Hickmans are still on East 36th
Street. Jimmy’s occupation is given as a checker for steamship lines, though he
is out of work. Joan is the only one of the kids still at home; she is 19 and
worked 40 hours the previous week as a typist for an insurance company.
On April 1, 1956, Marcella passed away at the age of 61 at
Unity Hospital in Brooklyn. Jimmy followed on December 30, 1958, aged 66. I
found no obituaries.
https://www.retrosheet.org/boxesetc/H/Phickj102.htm
https://www.baseball-reference.com/players/h/hickmji01.shtml
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