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Lu Blue

Luzerne Atwell "Lu" Blue (March 5, 1897 – July 28, 1958) was an American professional baseball first baseman. He played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Detroit Tigers, St. Louis Browns, Chicago White Sox, and Brooklyn Dodgers between 1921 and 1933.[1]

Lu Blue
First baseman
Born: (1897-03-05)March 5, 1897
Washington, D.C., U.S.
Died: July 28, 1958(1958-07-28) (aged 61)
Alexandria, Virginia, U.S.
Batted: Switch
Threw: Left
MLB debut
April 14, 1921, for the Detroit Tigers
Last MLB appearance
April 25, 1933, for the Brooklyn Dodgers
MLB statistics
Batting average.287
Home runs44
Runs batted in695
Teams

A native of Washington, D.C., Blue played professional baseball, principally as a first baseman, for 18 years from 1916 to 1933, including 13 years in Major League Baseball for the Detroit Tigers from 1921 to 1932, the St. Louis Browns from 1928 to 1930, the Chicago White Sox in 1931 and 1932, and the Brooklyn Dodgers for one game in 1933. Blue was a switch-hitter who had a career on-base percentage of .402 and was one of the best fielding first basemen of his era. He interrupted his baseball career for military service in World War I and was later honored with burial at Arlington National Cemetery. In 2001, baseball historian Bill James ranked Blue as the 77th best first baseman of all time.[2]

Early years edit

Blue was born in Washington, D.C., in 1897.[3] He was one of two sons born to Charles H. Blue, a New Jersey native born in 1852, and Ida Mae (Reamer) Blue, a Pennsylvania native born in 1856.[4][5] His parents divorced when he was a child.[6]

Blue grew up a fan of the Washington Senators. Despite discouragement from his family, who thought baseball was a waste of time, Blue was determined to play baseball. He attended Briarly Hall Military School in Poolesville, Maryland, where his play for the school's baseball team drew the attention of professional scouts.[7]

Professional baseball edit

Minor leagues edit

Blue began playing Martinsburg Blue Sox of the Blue Ridge League.[8] He compiled a disappointing .216 batting average in 1916, but his average jumped to .319 with a .517 slugging percentage in 1917.[9] A switch-hitter, Blue reportedly hit grand slams from both sides of the plate in the same game during the 1917 season.[7]

The Detroit Tigers purchased Blue's contract in the fall of 1917. He did not make the team in 1918 and was drafted into the U.S. Army, serving at Camp Lee in Virginia during World War I. After the war, the Tigers assigned Blue to the Portland Beavers in the Pacific Coast League. Blue appeared in 174 games for the Beavers in 1919 and compiled a .281 batting average. The following year, he appeared in 165 games for Portland and compiled a .291 average.[9]

Detroit Tigers edit

In 1921, with Ty Cobb as the Tigers' new player-manager, Blue finally made it to the big leagues at age 24. He immediately became the Tigers' regular first baseman, starting 152 games at the position in 1921, and compiling a .308 batting average and a .416 on-base percentage.[3] Blue later gave credit to Cobb for helping him to improve his performance as a hitter.[7]

Blue remained entrenched as the Tigers' starting first baseman for seven seasons, from 1921 to 1927. Blue was a reliable hitter in his years at Detroit, hitting above .300 four times, including a .311 season in 1924. He finished among the leaders in the voting for the American League Most Valuable Player award three times for the Tigers: 10th in 1922, 19th in 1924, and 12th in 1925. In addition to hitting for average, Blue had a keen eye and a talent for drawing walks. He was among the league leaders in bases on balls ten times in his career (1921–1923, 1925–31). He finished his career with 1,092 walks.[3]

Driven largely by his ability to draw walks, Blue was also among the league leaders in on-base percentage four times, including a career-high .430 on-base percentage in 1931 – second best in the American League. Blue's career on-base percentage was .402 – 115 points above his .287 career batting average.[3]

With his ability to get on base, Blue was also a top run scorer, with 1,151 runs scored in his career, including six seasons with 100 or more runs and a career-high 131 runs as the leadoff hitter for the 1921 Detroit Tigers.[3]

Blue was also an excellent fielding first baseman. In 1,571 games at first base, Blue had 15,644 putouts and a career range factor of 10.60 – almost 3.00 full points above the league average of 7.64 for first basemen in his era. In 1922, his range factor was 11.2 – more than 4.20 points higher than the league average of 6.94. He had 1,506 putouts in 1922 and led American League first basemen in putouts in 1929 (1,491) and 1931 (1,452). He also led American League first basemen in assists in 1928 (107) and double plays (121). Often among the league leaders in fielding percentage, Blue would get to balls other first baseman could not touch. On September 8, 1922, Blue had two unassisted double plays in a single game.

On June 19, 1923, Blue was knocked unconscious after being hit in the head by a ball during fielding practice. Blue nevertheless went to bat in the first inning and hit a single to right field. Blue was woozy from the pre-game blow and barely made it to first base. The Yankees agreed to allow a courtesy runner, and Blue later returned to finish the game.[10]

In 1927, Blue clashed with the Tigers' new manager, George Moriarty. Moriarty moved Blue from the leadoff spot to the seventh spot in the batting order. Blue's relationship with Moriarty deteriorated through the season, with Blue announcing at the end of the season that he would never play another game for the Tigers.

St. Louis Browns edit

On December 13, 1927, the Tigers traded Blue and Heinie Manush to the St. Louis Browns in exchange for Harry Rice, Elam Vangilder and a player to be named later.[11] Blue and Manush both became stars for the Browns. In 1928, Blue appeared in 154 games, all at first base, and compiled a .281 batting average and 80 RBIs.[3] He ranked among the American League's leaders in 1928 with 105 bases on balls (second), 116 runs scored (fourth), 14 home runs (sixth), 263 times on base (sixth), 57 extra base hits (eighth), a 4.7 wins above replacement rating (eighth among position players), and 250 total bases (tenth). He also led the American League's first basemen with 107 assists and 121 double plays turned.[3] With former Tigers Blue and Manush in the lineup, the Browns compiled an 82-72 record and finished third in the American League.[12]

In 1929, Blue appeared in 151 games for the Browns, all at first base, and compiled a .293 batting average. He led the American League with 296 total times on base and ranked second with 126 bases on balls and sixth with a .422 on-base percentage. He also led the American League's first basemen with 1,491 putouts and ranked fourth with 88 assists.[3]

In 1930, Blue appeared in only 117 games, 111 at first base.[3] He suffered from a sore arm in 1930, and his batting average slipped to .231.

Chicago White Sox edit

After a poor performance in 1930, the Browns sent a new contract to Blue reducing his salary of $14,500 to less than half that amount. Blue refused to sign on those terms, and on April 3, 1931, the Browns sold Blue to the Chicago White Sox.[13] Blue returned to the leadoff spot for the White Sox and responded with one of the best seasons of his career. He compiled a .304 batting average and ranked among the American League leaders with 15 triples (second), 127 bases on balls (second), 309 times on base (third), a .430 on-base percentage (fifth), 119 runs scored (sixth) and 13 stolen bases (tenth). He also had an outstanding season defensively, leading the league's first basemen with 1,452 putouts, and ranking among the league leaders with 81 assists (third), 105 double plays turned (fourth), and a 10.14 range factor per nine innings (fourth). His 16 errors also ranked second in the league. He wound up 17th in the voting for the 1931 American League Most Valuable Player award.[3]

In 1932, Blue appeared in 112 games for the White Sox, including 100 as the team's starting first baseman. His batting average dropped to .249–55 points lower than the prior season. However, he ranked among the American League's leaders with 17 stolen bases (fifth) and 88 assists at first base (second), 106 double plays at first base (fourth), and a 10.91 range factor per nine innings at first base (second).[3] He was eventually benched in favor of Billy Sullivan and released on February 2, 1933.[14]

Brooklyn and Toronto edit

On April 19, 1933, Blue was signed as a free agent by the Brooklyn Dodgers.[15] He appeared in only one game for the Dodgers on April 25, 1933, failing to hit in a single plate appearance.[3] He was released by the Dodgers on April 29, 1933.[16]

Blue played 13 seasons in the major leagues and compiled a career batting average of .287 and a career on-base percentage of .402. He totaled 2,365 total bases, 1,696 hits, 1,152 runs scored, 1,092 bases on balls, 319 doubles, 109 triples and 151 stolen bases.[3]

On May 8, 1933, Blue signed with the Toronto Maple Leafs of the International League.[17] He appeared in 113 games for Toronto and compiled a .259 batting average.[9]

Later years edit

Blue was married at least twice. On June 9, 1924, he was married in Detroit to Pauline Chambers, a native of Texas.[18][19] He was later married to Helen Blue.[5]

After retiring from baseball, Blue became a chicken farmer in Colesville, Maryland.[7] He later operated a chinchilla farm.[5] He also operated one of the first "baseball schools" in the country.[20][21]

Blue died at his home in Alexandria, Virginia in 1958 at age 61.[5][22] He was buried in Arlington National Cemetery.[3] Blue's cause of death was acute congestive heart failure due to bronchopneumonia with chronic arthritis as a contributing condition.[5]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Lu Blue Statistics and History". "baseball-reference.com. Retrieved May 20, 2017.
  2. ^ James, Bill (2001). The New Bill James Historical Baseball Abstract. p. 468.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Lu Blue". Baseball-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved April 11, 2016.
  4. ^ Census entry for Anna M. Blue and family. Grandson Luzerne born March 1897 in the District of Columbia. Census Place: Washington, Washington, District of Columbia; Roll: 161; Page: 16B; Enumeration District: 0071; FHL microfilm: 1240161. Ancestry.com. 1900 United States Federal Census [database on-line].
  5. ^ a b c d e Death certificate for Luzerne Atwell Blue, died July 28, 1958. Ancestry.com. Virginia, Death Records, 1912-2014 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2015. Original data: Virginia, Deaths, 1912–2014. Virginia Department of Health, Richmond, Virginia.
  6. ^ Census entry for Ida M. Blue and family. Son Luzerne, age 13, born in Washington, D.C. Census Place: Precinct 6, Washington, District of Columbia; Roll: T624_152; Page: 4A; Enumeration District: 0118; FHL microfilm: 1374165. Ancestry.com. 1910 United States Federal Census [database on-line].
  7. ^ a b c d Cort Vitty. "Lu Blue". Society for American Baseball Research. Retrieved April 12, 2016.
  8. ^ "Frederick baseball showed some hustle in the Blue Ridge League". Time Will Tell. December 18, 2014. Retrieved September 25, 2018.
  9. ^ a b c "Lu Blue Minor League Statistics". Baseball-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved April 12, 2016.
  10. ^ "New York 6; Detroit 5". The Bee (Danville, VA). June 20, 1923. p. 8.
  11. ^ Alan J. Gould (December 14, 1927). "Detroit Tigers Trade Lu Blue and Manush". The Winnipeg Tribune (AP story). p. 14.
  12. ^ "1928 St. Louis Browns". Baseball-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved April 12, 2016.
  13. ^ "Browns Dispose of Lu Blue To The White Sox For Cash Only". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. April 3, 1931. p. 34.
  14. ^ "Lu Blue Is Released By White Sox". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. February 2, 1933. p. 16.
  15. ^ "Signing of Blue Means Three-Cornered Battle for First Base Job: Carey Taking No Chances on First Basemen". The Brooklyn Daily Eagle. April 19, 1933. p. 22.
  16. ^ "Jack Quinn, Veteran Spitball Pitcher, Given Outright Release by Brooklyn: Dodgers Also Drop Lu Blue From Roster". The Des Moines Register. April 30, 1933. p. 17.
  17. ^ "Toronto Leafs Add Lu Blue, Two More". Rochester Democrat and Chronicle. May 9, 1933. p. 20.
  18. ^ Marriage record for Luzerne A. Blue. Ancestry.com. Michigan, Marriage Records, 1867-1952 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2015. Original data: Michigan, Marriage Records, 1867–1952. Michigan Department of Community Health, Division for Vital Records and Health Statistics.
  19. ^ Census entry for Luzerne Blue, baseball player. Census Place: Queens, Queens, New York; Roll: 1594; Page: 1A; Enumeration District: 0276; Image: 564.0; FHL microfilm: 2341329. Ancestry.com. 1930 United States Federal Census [database on-line].
  20. ^ "At Age of 61: Lu Blue, Tiger Star of '20s, Dies". Detroit Free Press. July 29, 1958. p. 21.
  21. ^ Census entry for Luzerne A. Blue, age 43, instructor at baseball school. Census Place: Washington, District of Columbia, District of Columbia; Roll: T627_560; Page: 9B; Enumeration District: 1-230. Ancestry.com. 1940 United States Federal Census [database on-line].
  22. ^ "Lu Blue Dies; Played With 1928-31 Browns". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. July 28, 1958. p. 25.

blue, luzerne, atwell, blue, march, 1897, july, 1958, american, professional, baseball, first, baseman, played, major, league, baseball, detroit, tigers, louis, browns, chicago, white, brooklyn, dodgers, between, 1921, 1933, first, basemanborn, 1897, march, 18. Luzerne Atwell Lu Blue March 5 1897 July 28 1958 was an American professional baseball first baseman He played in Major League Baseball MLB for the Detroit Tigers St Louis Browns Chicago White Sox and Brooklyn Dodgers between 1921 and 1933 1 Lu BlueFirst basemanBorn 1897 03 05 March 5 1897Washington D C U S Died July 28 1958 1958 07 28 aged 61 Alexandria Virginia U S Batted SwitchThrew LeftMLB debutApril 14 1921 for the Detroit TigersLast MLB appearanceApril 25 1933 for the Brooklyn DodgersMLB statisticsBatting average 287Home runs44Runs batted in695TeamsDetroit Tigers 1921 1927 St Louis Browns 1928 1930 Chicago White Sox 1931 1932 Brooklyn Dodgers 1933 A native of Washington D C Blue played professional baseball principally as a first baseman for 18 years from 1916 to 1933 including 13 years in Major League Baseball for the Detroit Tigers from 1921 to 1932 the St Louis Browns from 1928 to 1930 the Chicago White Sox in 1931 and 1932 and the Brooklyn Dodgers for one game in 1933 Blue was a switch hitter who had a career on base percentage of 402 and was one of the best fielding first basemen of his era He interrupted his baseball career for military service in World War I and was later honored with burial at Arlington National Cemetery In 2001 baseball historian Bill James ranked Blue as the 77th best first baseman of all time 2 Contents 1 Early years 2 Professional baseball 2 1 Minor leagues 2 2 Detroit Tigers 2 3 St Louis Browns 2 4 Chicago White Sox 2 5 Brooklyn and Toronto 3 Later years 4 See also 5 ReferencesEarly years editBlue was born in Washington D C in 1897 3 He was one of two sons born to Charles H Blue a New Jersey native born in 1852 and Ida Mae Reamer Blue a Pennsylvania native born in 1856 4 5 His parents divorced when he was a child 6 Blue grew up a fan of the Washington Senators Despite discouragement from his family who thought baseball was a waste of time Blue was determined to play baseball He attended Briarly Hall Military School in Poolesville Maryland where his play for the school s baseball team drew the attention of professional scouts 7 Professional baseball editMinor leagues edit Blue began playing Martinsburg Blue Sox of the Blue Ridge League 8 He compiled a disappointing 216 batting average in 1916 but his average jumped to 319 with a 517 slugging percentage in 1917 9 A switch hitter Blue reportedly hit grand slams from both sides of the plate in the same game during the 1917 season 7 The Detroit Tigers purchased Blue s contract in the fall of 1917 He did not make the team in 1918 and was drafted into the U S Army serving at Camp Lee in Virginia during World War I After the war the Tigers assigned Blue to the Portland Beavers in the Pacific Coast League Blue appeared in 174 games for the Beavers in 1919 and compiled a 281 batting average The following year he appeared in 165 games for Portland and compiled a 291 average 9 Detroit Tigers edit In 1921 with Ty Cobb as the Tigers new player manager Blue finally made it to the big leagues at age 24 He immediately became the Tigers regular first baseman starting 152 games at the position in 1921 and compiling a 308 batting average and a 416 on base percentage 3 Blue later gave credit to Cobb for helping him to improve his performance as a hitter 7 Blue remained entrenched as the Tigers starting first baseman for seven seasons from 1921 to 1927 Blue was a reliable hitter in his years at Detroit hitting above 300 four times including a 311 season in 1924 He finished among the leaders in the voting for the American League Most Valuable Player award three times for the Tigers 10th in 1922 19th in 1924 and 12th in 1925 In addition to hitting for average Blue had a keen eye and a talent for drawing walks He was among the league leaders in bases on balls ten times in his career 1921 1923 1925 31 He finished his career with 1 092 walks 3 Driven largely by his ability to draw walks Blue was also among the league leaders in on base percentage four times including a career high 430 on base percentage in 1931 second best in the American League Blue s career on base percentage was 402 115 points above his 287 career batting average 3 With his ability to get on base Blue was also a top run scorer with 1 151 runs scored in his career including six seasons with 100 or more runs and a career high 131 runs as the leadoff hitter for the 1921 Detroit Tigers 3 Blue was also an excellent fielding first baseman In 1 571 games at first base Blue had 15 644 putouts and a career range factor of 10 60 almost 3 00 full points above the league average of 7 64 for first basemen in his era In 1922 his range factor was 11 2 more than 4 20 points higher than the league average of 6 94 He had 1 506 putouts in 1922 and led American League first basemen in putouts in 1929 1 491 and 1931 1 452 He also led American League first basemen in assists in 1928 107 and double plays 121 Often among the league leaders in fielding percentage Blue would get to balls other first baseman could not touch On September 8 1922 Blue had two unassisted double plays in a single game On June 19 1923 Blue was knocked unconscious after being hit in the head by a ball during fielding practice Blue nevertheless went to bat in the first inning and hit a single to right field Blue was woozy from the pre game blow and barely made it to first base The Yankees agreed to allow a courtesy runner and Blue later returned to finish the game 10 In 1927 Blue clashed with the Tigers new manager George Moriarty Moriarty moved Blue from the leadoff spot to the seventh spot in the batting order Blue s relationship with Moriarty deteriorated through the season with Blue announcing at the end of the season that he would never play another game for the Tigers St Louis Browns edit On December 13 1927 the Tigers traded Blue and Heinie Manush to the St Louis Browns in exchange for Harry Rice Elam Vangilder and a player to be named later 11 Blue and Manush both became stars for the Browns In 1928 Blue appeared in 154 games all at first base and compiled a 281 batting average and 80 RBIs 3 He ranked among the American League s leaders in 1928 with 105 bases on balls second 116 runs scored fourth 14 home runs sixth 263 times on base sixth 57 extra base hits eighth a 4 7 wins above replacement rating eighth among position players and 250 total bases tenth He also led the American League s first basemen with 107 assists and 121 double plays turned 3 With former Tigers Blue and Manush in the lineup the Browns compiled an 82 72 record and finished third in the American League 12 In 1929 Blue appeared in 151 games for the Browns all at first base and compiled a 293 batting average He led the American League with 296 total times on base and ranked second with 126 bases on balls and sixth with a 422 on base percentage He also led the American League s first basemen with 1 491 putouts and ranked fourth with 88 assists 3 In 1930 Blue appeared in only 117 games 111 at first base 3 He suffered from a sore arm in 1930 and his batting average slipped to 231 Chicago White Sox edit After a poor performance in 1930 the Browns sent a new contract to Blue reducing his salary of 14 500 to less than half that amount Blue refused to sign on those terms and on April 3 1931 the Browns sold Blue to the Chicago White Sox 13 Blue returned to the leadoff spot for the White Sox and responded with one of the best seasons of his career He compiled a 304 batting average and ranked among the American League leaders with 15 triples second 127 bases on balls second 309 times on base third a 430 on base percentage fifth 119 runs scored sixth and 13 stolen bases tenth He also had an outstanding season defensively leading the league s first basemen with 1 452 putouts and ranking among the league leaders with 81 assists third 105 double plays turned fourth and a 10 14 range factor per nine innings fourth His 16 errors also ranked second in the league He wound up 17th in the voting for the 1931 American League Most Valuable Player award 3 In 1932 Blue appeared in 112 games for the White Sox including 100 as the team s starting first baseman His batting average dropped to 249 55 points lower than the prior season However he ranked among the American League s leaders with 17 stolen bases fifth and 88 assists at first base second 106 double plays at first base fourth and a 10 91 range factor per nine innings at first base second 3 He was eventually benched in favor of Billy Sullivan and released on February 2 1933 14 Brooklyn and Toronto edit On April 19 1933 Blue was signed as a free agent by the Brooklyn Dodgers 15 He appeared in only one game for the Dodgers on April 25 1933 failing to hit in a single plate appearance 3 He was released by the Dodgers on April 29 1933 16 Blue played 13 seasons in the major leagues and compiled a career batting average of 287 and a career on base percentage of 402 He totaled 2 365 total bases 1 696 hits 1 152 runs scored 1 092 bases on balls 319 doubles 109 triples and 151 stolen bases 3 On May 8 1933 Blue signed with the Toronto Maple Leafs of the International League 17 He appeared in 113 games for Toronto and compiled a 259 batting average 9 Later years editBlue was married at least twice On June 9 1924 he was married in Detroit to Pauline Chambers a native of Texas 18 19 He was later married to Helen Blue 5 After retiring from baseball Blue became a chicken farmer in Colesville Maryland 7 He later operated a chinchilla farm 5 He also operated one of the first baseball schools in the country 20 21 Blue died at his home in Alexandria Virginia in 1958 at age 61 5 22 He was buried in Arlington National Cemetery 3 Blue s cause of death was acute congestive heart failure due to bronchopneumonia with chronic arthritis as a contributing condition 5 See also editList of Major League Baseball career triples leaders List of Major League Baseball career runs scored leadersReferences edit Lu Blue Statistics and History baseball reference com Retrieved May 20 2017 James Bill 2001 The New Bill James Historical Baseball Abstract p 468 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Lu Blue Baseball Reference com Sports Reference LLC Retrieved April 11 2016 Census entry for Anna M Blue and family Grandson Luzerne born March 1897 in the District of Columbia Census Place Washington Washington District of Columbia Roll 161 Page 16B Enumeration District 0071 FHL microfilm 1240161 Ancestry com 1900 United States Federal Census database on line a b c d e Death certificate for Luzerne Atwell Blue died July 28 1958 Ancestry com Virginia Death Records 1912 2014 database on line Provo UT USA Ancestry com Operations Inc 2015 Original data Virginia Deaths 1912 2014 Virginia Department of Health Richmond Virginia Census entry for Ida M Blue and family Son Luzerne age 13 born in Washington D C Census Place Precinct 6 Washington District of Columbia Roll T624 152 Page 4A Enumeration District 0118 FHL microfilm 1374165 Ancestry com 1910 United States Federal Census database on line a b c d Cort Vitty Lu Blue Society for American Baseball Research Retrieved April 12 2016 Frederick baseball showed some hustle in the Blue Ridge League Time Will Tell December 18 2014 Retrieved September 25 2018 a b c Lu Blue Minor League Statistics Baseball Reference com Sports Reference LLC Retrieved April 12 2016 New York 6 Detroit 5 The Bee Danville VA June 20 1923 p 8 Alan J Gould December 14 1927 Detroit Tigers Trade Lu Blue and Manush The Winnipeg Tribune AP story p 14 1928 St Louis Browns Baseball Reference com Sports Reference LLC Retrieved April 12 2016 Browns Dispose of Lu Blue To The White Sox For Cash Only St Louis Post Dispatch April 3 1931 p 34 Lu Blue Is Released By White Sox St Louis Post Dispatch February 2 1933 p 16 Signing of Blue Means Three Cornered Battle for First Base Job Carey Taking No Chances on First Basemen The Brooklyn Daily Eagle April 19 1933 p 22 Jack Quinn Veteran Spitball Pitcher Given Outright Release by Brooklyn Dodgers Also Drop Lu Blue From Roster The Des Moines Register April 30 1933 p 17 Toronto Leafs Add Lu Blue Two More Rochester Democrat and Chronicle May 9 1933 p 20 Marriage record for Luzerne A Blue Ancestry com Michigan Marriage Records 1867 1952 database on line Provo UT USA Ancestry com Operations Inc 2015 Original data Michigan Marriage Records 1867 1952 Michigan Department of Community Health Division for Vital Records and Health Statistics Census entry for Luzerne Blue baseball player Census Place Queens Queens New York Roll 1594 Page 1A Enumeration District 0276 Image 564 0 FHL microfilm 2341329 Ancestry com 1930 United States Federal Census database on line At Age of 61 Lu Blue Tiger Star of 20s Dies Detroit Free Press July 29 1958 p 21 Census entry for Luzerne A Blue age 43 instructor at baseball school Census Place Washington District of Columbia District of Columbia Roll T627 560 Page 9B Enumeration District 1 230 Ancestry com 1940 United States Federal Census database on line Lu Blue Dies Played With 1928 31 Browns St Louis Post Dispatch July 28 1958 p 25 Portals nbsp Biography nbsp Baseball Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lu Blue amp oldid 1182717963, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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