BALLPLAYERS | TEAMS | CHRONOLOGY | TODAY | BOOKS | NEWSLETTER | ERRATA | FAQ
Jump to:
Recent jumps
» John Clarkson
» whitey ford
» gary carter
» 1897
» 1965 Los Angeles Dodgers

What's New?
Current Totals
Free Newsletter

Report An Error
Fixed Bugs

Browser Button
Jump from anywhere!
Link Your Site

Get Published!
Reader Submissions

Team Pages
All Teams
Greatest Teams

The Ballplayers
Historical Matchups
Negro Leaguers
Hall of Famers
MVPs

Bookshelf
New Excerpts
Photo Collections

The Chronology
Flashbacks
Baseball Eras
Today in BB History
Anyday in BB History
Rules: 1845-1899
Rules: 1900-present

FAQ
Authors

BaseballLibrary.com
Copyright © 2002
by The Idea Logical
Company, Inc.

All rights reserved.

Jack Rowe
1857-1911

SS-C-OF 1879-90 Buffalo , Detroit
Manager in 1890 Buffalo

GamesAverageHRRBI
Career 1044.28628645

Wins-LossesWinning %
Manager 36-96.273

Books and articles about Jack Rowe

The Detroit Wolverines purchased the entire Buffalo club for $7,000 in August 1885 to acquire Rowe, Dan Brouthers, Hardy Richardson, and Deacon White, known as the Big Four. The deal brought the previously weak franchise a pennant in 1887 and Rowe scored a career-high 135 runs. Primarily a catcher for his first six seasons (he led NL catchers in fielding in 1884), Rowe began playing shortstop regularly in 1885. He hardly ever struck out (177 times in 12 seasons and 4,386 at-bats), and went the entire 1882 season without fanning once, playing in 75 of his team's 84 games.
SHOPPING
» Look for Jack Rowe books at BN.com
» Look for Jack Rowe books at Amazon.com
Your purchases keep BaseballLibrary.com online. Thank you!
RELATED LINKS
Submissions
» Ganzel Nearly Knocked Off His Feet: 1887 Detroit Wolverines World Champion Game by Jodi Purdy-Quinlan

Around the Web
» Jack Rowe from baseball-reference.com

Jump directly to Library content from any website!

Rowe and White bought the International League's Buffalo franchise after the 1888 season, planning to co-manage the team and play, but Detroit sold them to Pittsburgh, whose owner threatened to have them blacklisted if they played on their new team. Rowe and White held out well into the 1889 season, but capitulated on the advice of Brotherhood of Ballplayers leader Monte Ward, who filled them in on the upcoming players' revolt. They jumped to the Players' League in 1890, becoming part-owners of the Buffalo franchise. Rowe managed; the club finished in last place, but he led the league's shortstops in fielding. Managing the Buffalo franchise in the Eastern League later on, he was the basis of manager Delaney in Zane Grey's story "The Redheaded Outfield," inspired when Grey's brother R.C. played under Rowe in 1897 in a real redheaded outfield. (JFC)
FROM THE BASEBALL CHRONOLOGY
» December 17, 1888: Former Detroit players Deacon White and Jack Rowe purchase a controlling interest in the minor league Buffalo club. Though their reserve rights have been sold to Pittsburgh, both men announce plans to play in Buffalo next year.