This 6'4" 240-lb lefthanded-hitting catcher was one of black baseball's earliest
superstars, a slugger who slammed tape-measure homers during the deadball era. A
consummate showman who sometimes called home runs before he hit them, Santop was
paid the astounding sum of $500 a month by Hilldale in the early 1920s. He reached
his prime with the New York Lincoln Giants and Lincoln Stars from 1911 through 1916,
catching pitching greats Smokey Joe Williams and Dick Redding. He is credited with
batting as high as .470 against all levels of competition in '11. After serving in
the WWI Navy, he spent 1918 through 1926 with Hilldale. In 1924, the only year for
which complete records are available, Santop hit .389. When Hilldale won its third
straight pennant in 1925, he reportedly batted .415. In 14 exhibition games against
white major leaguers, he hit .296.
(JJM)
FROM THE BASEBALL CHRONOLOGY
»October 15, 1911: In an exhibition game in New York, Honus Wagner, Walter Johnson, Gabby Street and other white major leaguers take on the Lincoln Giants, a star-studded black team featuring Pop Lloyd, Dick McClelland, and Louis Santop. Johnson K's 14 to give the white all-stars a 5–3 win.