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Pete Gray

Peter James Gray ( Wyshner; March 6, 1915 – June 30, 2002) was an American professional baseball outfielder who played for the St. Louis Browns of Major League Baseball for one season in 1945. He was notable for playing despite having lost his right arm in a childhood accident.[1]

Pete Gray
Left fielder
Born: (1915-03-06)March 6, 1915
Nanticoke, Pennsylvania
Died: June 30, 2002(2002-06-30) (aged 87)
Nanticoke, Pennsylvania
Batted: Left
Threw: Left
MLB debut
April 17, 1945, for the St. Louis Browns
Last MLB appearance
September 30, 1945, for the St. Louis Browns
MLB statistics
Batting average.218
Home runs0
Runs batted in13
Teams
Career highlights and awards

Biography

Early life

Peter Gray (sometimes spelled as Peter Grey) was born as Peter J. Wyshner in the mining town of Nanticoke, Pennsylvania on March 6, 1915. He was one of five children born to Lithuanian immigrants Antoinette and Peter Wyshner. His father worked in the coal mines of northeastern Pennsylvania to support his family.[2]

His older brother became a boxer in the middleweight division and went under the name Whitey Gray (boxed 1921–1928). During his time as a boxer, Whitey Gray won 6 matches by KO, lost 5 (3 of which were KO's), had 3 newspaper decision wins, and 2 newspaper decision draws. In total, Whitey had 16 bouts with a 37.5% KO rate and boxed a total of 45 rounds.[3]

Pete was right-handed but lost his right arm at age seven or eight, as a result of a wagon accident in 1923. His arm had to be amputated above the elbow.[1] He never could remember exactly how the accident happened, and several versions of the story have emerged through the years. In one version, Peter was sitting on a truck with friends and fell off, and his arm got stuck in the spokes of the old-fashioned wheels. After the accident the driver dropped him on his family's porch and ran off.[4] But Wyshner was so enthusiastic about baseball that he learned to bat and field one-handed, catching the ball in his glove and then quickly removing his glove and transferring the ball to his hand in one motion.

Seven years after his accident, Wyshner completed his formal education at age 13 and began working as a water boy at the Truesdale Colliery.[2] Life was not easy for him and he did not take being treated with sympathy or being treated differently than others. One story that was told about his frustration with being treated differently was while a young man playing in sandlot. He ran home and crashed into the catcher, which helped knock the baseball out of the catcher's glove. This resulted in Peter being safe at home plate. The catcher was very upset and told Peter that he would hit him, if only he had two arms. Peter didn't take this well and got into the face of the catcher and told him to go ahead and try.[4]

By 19 years of age Wyshner was playing outfield for the Hanover Lits Baseball Club of the Wyoming Valley Anthracite League. When he began to play semi-professional ball, he changed his last name to "Gray", as his brother had done as a boxer. He wanted to avoid ethnic prejudices, whether of players, coaches, fans, or front office managers. In some areas, some people still resented Eastern European immigrants and their descendants. Now known as Peter Gray, he played with Pine Grove in Pennsylvania and Scranton in Brooklyn, New York. He had tryouts with the St. Louis Browns and Philadelphia Athletics, but was never called up by either team. He continued to play semi-pro and minor league baseball.[2]

In 1941, after the attack of Pearl Harbor, Gray attempted to join the Army, but was denied on the basis that he was an amputee. Gray responded to being rejected by the Army, saying that, "If I could teach myself how to play baseball with one arm, I sure as hell could handle a rifle."[5]

Minor league career

A 1945 newsreel about Pete Gray as it appears in Ken Burns' 1994 documentary series Baseball

Gray's speed and placehitting ability made him a successful minor league outfielder. He attained a batting average of .333 and a stolen-base record of 63; as a result, he was named the 1944 Southern Association's Most Valuable Player.

During his career, Gray played for teams including the Trois-Rivières Renards of the Canadian–American League, the Memphis Chicks of the Southern Association and the Brooklyn Bushwicks.

In 1942, Gray signed with the minor league team called the Three Rivers Club of the Canadian–American League. At his first game, the crowd poured out to see him. Gray's chance to shine came in the bottom of the ninth. There were already two outs and the bases were loaded. As he approached the plate, the crowd went crazy. Gray hit a line drive to the right field, which drove in the tying and winning runs. The fans were so happy and excited that they threw money onto the field, roughly $700 total. While with the team that season, Gray hit .381. After breaking his collarbone and tearing a ligament, he was only able to play in 42 games.

Gray's success and ability to draw a crowd helped attract the notice of the Memphis Chicks, another minor league team, and they signed him. While Gray was climbing the ladder of the minors, sportswriters nicknamed him the "One-Armed Wonder." Gray had about six successful seasons in the minors before joining the majors for one season. He returned to the minors for about another four seasons as a journeyman. In 1944, while still with the Chicks, he batted .333 and had a league leading 68 stolen bases. That same year, he was awarded the Most Valuable Player of the Southern Association and that year the Philadelphia Sports Writers recognized Pete Gray as the "Most Courageous Athlete." Gray quickly responded with, "Boys, I can't fight, and so there is no courage about me. Courage belongs on the battlefield, not on the baseball diamond."[4]

Teams played for:

YEAR AGE TEAM LEAGUE LEV
1942 27 Trois-Rivières Renards Canadian-American C
1943 28 Memphis Chickasaws Southern Association A1
1944 29 Memphis Chickasaws Southern Association A1
1946 31 Toledo Mud Hens American Association AAA
1948 33 Elmira Pioneers Eastern League A
1949 34 Dallas Eagles Texas League AA

Minor League stats:

YEAR Gm AB H 2B 3B HR BA SLG TB
1942 42 160 61 5 0 0 .381 .413 66
1943 126 453 131 7 6 0 .289 .331 150
1944 129 501 167 21 9 5 .333 .441 221
1946 48 96 24 3 0 0 .250 .281 27
1948 82 269 78 7 2 0 .290 .331 89
1949 45 56 12 2 0 0 .214 .250 14
Total 472 1535 473 45 17 5 .308 .369 567

[6]

Major league career

The St. Louis Browns of the American League purchased his contract in 1945 from the Chicks for $20,000 (equivalent to $278,000 in 2021), and Gray signed for $4,000 (equivalent to $56,000 in 2021). Wearing uniform number 14,[7] Gray played left and center field for the Browns. He appeared in 77 games, batting .218 with a .958 fielding percentage in center field. He played competently in the outfield, transferring the ball from glove to hand with remarkable speed.

He collected his first major league hit (a single) against the Detroit Tigers on April 17, 1945. On May 20, he fulfilled his lifelong dream and played a double header in Yankee Stadium,[8] collecting five hits and two RBI as the Browns swept the Yankees. The first game ended 10-1 and the second ended 5–1. Gray also proved himself an accomplished bunter. In order to bunt, he planted the knob of the bat against his side, and then slid his hand about one-third of the way up the shaft of the bat.

As the season progressed, it became apparent that Gray could not hit breaking pitches. Once he started his swing, he could not change his timing because he had no second hand to check the swing. Opposing pitchers discovered that fact and threw curve balls. His last big league appearance was on September 30, 1945.

Gray said in 1945, "I've been turned down by more big-league managers than any other man in history. I've spent more money trying to get into baseball than I've earned on the game."[4]

His relationship with his teammates was not great, and many were disgruntled because they were in the race to repeat as American League champions and they felt Gray slowed down their success. They also felt, and knew, he was really only there for ticket sales and to boost fan attendance. The previous year they had won the pennant but only had about 508,644 fans attend Sportsman's Park all season. Infielder Don Gutteridge later said in 1994, "Some of the guys thought Pete was being used to draw fans late in the season when the club was still in the pennant race and he wasn't hitting well." These complaints do not hold up under statistical scrutiny which show that the team had a win percentage of .600 when he was on the field, and only .425 when he sat on the bench.[citation needed] That season they finished third and the next season without Gray they fell to seventh. That year with Gray was the Browns' last winning season before moving to Baltimore in 1954.[4] Gray later said of his teammates, "If they insulted me, I didn't pay attention. I mostly kept to myself. That's why I got the reputation of being tough to get along with. But, I've mellowed."[9]

Gray's on-field exploits set an inspirational example for disabled servicemen returning from World War II, as was portrayed in newsreels of the period. He visited army hospitals and rehabilitation centers, speaking with amputees and reassuring them that they too could lead a productive life.[10]

Major League stats:[11]

Year Team Gm AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB CS BB SO BA OBP SLG TB FP
1945 St. Louis Browns 77 234 26 51 6 2 0 13 5 6 13 11 .218 .259 .261 61 .959

Techniques used

While playing the field, Pete Gray wore a glove without padding. When the ball was hit in his direction he would place the glove directly in front of himself; roughly about shoulder height. When the ball hit the glove he would roll the ball across his chest from left to right. During this motion he learned to rest the glove under his right stump and the ball would roll into his left hand.

When ground balls were hit his way he would let it bounce off his glove at knee height and drop the glove completely to grab the ball while it was still in the air. He was faster in these motions and techniques than some players who had the use of both hands. When backing up another outfielder during a play, he would drop the glove completely and was ready to take the ball with his bare hand.

While at bat he used a full weight bat. His position and stance at the plate was just like any other player. He placed his hand about six inches up on the handle. In order to bunt, he planted the knob of the bat against his side, and then slid his hand about one-third of the way up the shaft of the bat. He was described by sports writers and players as a pure pull hitter.[12]

Later years and death

Gray's major league career ended that same year when many of baseball's stars returned from the battlefront and assumed their previous positions on the diamond. From 1946 to 1949, he played on as a journeyman minor leaguer with the Toledo Mud Hens, Elmira Pioneers and Dallas Stars. Gray returned home to Nanticoke where, although a local hero/celebrity, he struggled with gambling and alcohol, and lived in near poverty. [10]

He also played in barnstorming games with exhibition teams up until the early 1950s.[13] Having only accomplished one year in the majors, he spent the rest of his life wondering if he was ever really good enough to have been there or if he was just an entertainment attraction for the owners to make money. This personal struggle was one of the possible reasons for his struggle with gambling and alcohol after he left baseball. Before his death, however, he regained a sense of integrity about his accomplishments with the success of both the TV movie and the biography about his life.[14]

The 1986 television-movie A Winner Never Quits, starring Keith Carradine and Mare Winningham, and the publication of Gray's biography, One-Armed Wonder: Pete Gray, Wartime Baseball, and the American Dream written by William C. Kashatus, published in 1995 by McFarland & Company, renewed public interest in Gray.

Gray shunned public attention for most of his life after baseball.[15] He died on June 30, 2002, at the age of 87 and is buried at St. Mary's Cemetery in Hanover Township, Pennsylvania. On Sunday, August 24, 2003, Gray was recognized by the Historical and Museum Commission in Pennsylvania when they placed a roadside marker in his hometown. The location of the marker is Front St., Hanover section, Nanticoke, Luzerne County in the Poconos/Endless Mountains Region. [1]

Legacy

Sources

  • Bill Gilbert, They Also Served: Baseball and the Homefront (New York: Crown, 1992).
  • Richard Goldstein, Spartan Seasons: How Baseball Survived the Second World War (New York: Macmillan, 1980).
  • William C Kashatus, An Interview with the Late Great, Pete Gray Pennsylvania Heritage (Spring 2003).
  • William C. Kashatus, One-Armed Wonder: Pete Gray, Wartime Baseball and the American Dream (Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 1995).
  • John Klima, The Game Must Go On: Hank Greenberg, Pete Gray and the Great Days of Baseball on the Home Front in WW II (New York: St. Martin's Press, 2015).

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Goldstein, Richard (July 2, 2002). "Pete Gray, Major Leaguer With One Arm, Dies at 87". The New York Times. Retrieved August 21, 2007. Pete Gray, who became a major league outfielder despite the loss of his right arm in a childhood accident, appearing with the St. Louis Browns for a single season during World War II, died Sunday at a nursing home in Sheatown, Pennsylvania. He was 87.
  2. ^ a b c "Pete Gray Wyshner Historical Marker". ExplorePAhistory.com. Retrieved March 20, 2015.
  3. ^ "Whitey Gray". BoxRec. Retrieved March 20, 2015.
  4. ^ a b c d e McGuire, Mark (April 1999). Moments in the Sun. ISBN 9780786405497. Retrieved March 20, 2015.
  5. ^ Kilma, John (2015). The Game Must Go On: Hank Greenberg, Pete Gray, and the Great Days of Baseball on the Homefront in WWII. Macmillan. p. 50.
  6. ^ "Pete Gray". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved March 20, 2015.
  7. ^ The editors of the Sporting News (1992). Baseball A Doubleheader Collection of Facts, Feats, & Firsts. St. Louis, Mo.: The Sporting News Publishing Co. ISBN 0-88365-785-6..
  8. ^ Video: Air Forces Come Home Via Bomber, 1945/05/28 (1945). Universal Newsreel. 1945. Retrieved February 20, 2012.
  9. ^ "Pete Gray Stats". Baseball-Almanac. Retrieved March 20, 2015.
  10. ^ a b "Pete Gray Wyshner". explorepahistory.com. Retrieved August 15, 2008.
  11. ^ "Pete Gray". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved March 20, 2015.
  12. ^ "Pete Gray". Historicbaseball.com. Retrieved March 20, 2015.
  13. ^ "Pete Gray". baseballbiography.com.
  14. ^ Kashatus, William. "Pete Gray, Baseball's One-Armed Wonder". HistoryLive.net. Retrieved March 20, 2015.
  15. ^ Goldstein, Richard (July 2, 2002). "Pete Gray, Major Leaguer With One Arm, Dies at 87". The New York Times. Retrieved February 4, 2020.
  16. ^ "Shrine of the Eternals – Inductees". Baseball Reliquary. Retrieved August 14, 2019.

External links

  • Career statistics and player information from Baseball Reference, or Baseball Reference (Minors)
  • A Winner Never Quits at IMDb
  • Pete Gray Pennsylvania Historical Marker
  • Pete Gray at Find a Grave.com
  • Pete Gray cartoon – History Detectives (PBS season 5 (2007), episode 12

pete, gray, other, people, named, peter, gray, peter, gray, disambiguation, peter, james, gray, wyshner, march, 1915, june, 2002, american, professional, baseball, outfielder, played, louis, browns, major, league, baseball, season, 1945, notable, playing, desp. For other people named Peter Gray see Peter Gray disambiguation Peter James Gray ne Wyshner March 6 1915 June 30 2002 was an American professional baseball outfielder who played for the St Louis Browns of Major League Baseball for one season in 1945 He was notable for playing despite having lost his right arm in a childhood accident 1 Pete GrayLeft fielderBorn 1915 03 06 March 6 1915Nanticoke PennsylvaniaDied June 30 2002 2002 06 30 aged 87 Nanticoke PennsylvaniaBatted LeftThrew LeftMLB debutApril 17 1945 for the St Louis BrownsLast MLB appearanceSeptember 30 1945 for the St Louis BrownsMLB statisticsBatting average 218Home runs0Runs batted in13TeamsSt Louis Browns 1945 Career highlights and awardsFirst of three one armed men to play Major League Baseball Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Minor league career 1 3 Major league career 1 4 Techniques used 2 Later years and death 3 Legacy 4 Sources 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksBiography EditEarly life Edit Peter Gray sometimes spelled as Peter Grey was born as Peter J Wyshner in the mining town of Nanticoke Pennsylvania on March 6 1915 He was one of five children born to Lithuanian immigrants Antoinette and Peter Wyshner His father worked in the coal mines of northeastern Pennsylvania to support his family 2 His older brother became a boxer in the middleweight division and went under the name Whitey Gray boxed 1921 1928 During his time as a boxer Whitey Gray won 6 matches by KO lost 5 3 of which were KO s had 3 newspaper decision wins and 2 newspaper decision draws In total Whitey had 16 bouts with a 37 5 KO rate and boxed a total of 45 rounds 3 Pete was right handed but lost his right arm at age seven or eight as a result of a wagon accident in 1923 His arm had to be amputated above the elbow 1 He never could remember exactly how the accident happened and several versions of the story have emerged through the years In one version Peter was sitting on a truck with friends and fell off and his arm got stuck in the spokes of the old fashioned wheels After the accident the driver dropped him on his family s porch and ran off 4 But Wyshner was so enthusiastic about baseball that he learned to bat and field one handed catching the ball in his glove and then quickly removing his glove and transferring the ball to his hand in one motion Seven years after his accident Wyshner completed his formal education at age 13 and began working as a water boy at the Truesdale Colliery 2 Life was not easy for him and he did not take being treated with sympathy or being treated differently than others One story that was told about his frustration with being treated differently was while a young man playing in sandlot He ran home and crashed into the catcher which helped knock the baseball out of the catcher s glove This resulted in Peter being safe at home plate The catcher was very upset and told Peter that he would hit him if only he had two arms Peter didn t take this well and got into the face of the catcher and told him to go ahead and try 4 By 19 years of age Wyshner was playing outfield for the Hanover Lits Baseball Club of the Wyoming Valley Anthracite League When he began to play semi professional ball he changed his last name to Gray as his brother had done as a boxer He wanted to avoid ethnic prejudices whether of players coaches fans or front office managers In some areas some people still resented Eastern European immigrants and their descendants Now known as Peter Gray he played with Pine Grove in Pennsylvania and Scranton in Brooklyn New York He had tryouts with the St Louis Browns and Philadelphia Athletics but was never called up by either team He continued to play semi pro and minor league baseball 2 In 1941 after the attack of Pearl Harbor Gray attempted to join the Army but was denied on the basis that he was an amputee Gray responded to being rejected by the Army saying that If I could teach myself how to play baseball with one arm I sure as hell could handle a rifle 5 Minor league career Edit source source source source source source source source A 1945 newsreel about Pete Gray as it appears in Ken Burns 1994 documentary series Baseball Gray s speed and placehitting ability made him a successful minor league outfielder He attained a batting average of 333 and a stolen base record of 63 as a result he was named the 1944 Southern Association s Most Valuable Player During his career Gray played for teams including the Trois Rivieres Renards of the Canadian American League the Memphis Chicks of the Southern Association and the Brooklyn Bushwicks In 1942 Gray signed with the minor league team called the Three Rivers Club of the Canadian American League At his first game the crowd poured out to see him Gray s chance to shine came in the bottom of the ninth There were already two outs and the bases were loaded As he approached the plate the crowd went crazy Gray hit a line drive to the right field which drove in the tying and winning runs The fans were so happy and excited that they threw money onto the field roughly 700 total While with the team that season Gray hit 381 After breaking his collarbone and tearing a ligament he was only able to play in 42 games Gray s success and ability to draw a crowd helped attract the notice of the Memphis Chicks another minor league team and they signed him While Gray was climbing the ladder of the minors sportswriters nicknamed him the One Armed Wonder Gray had about six successful seasons in the minors before joining the majors for one season He returned to the minors for about another four seasons as a journeyman In 1944 while still with the Chicks he batted 333 and had a league leading 68 stolen bases That same year he was awarded the Most Valuable Player of the Southern Association and that year the Philadelphia Sports Writers recognized Pete Gray as the Most Courageous Athlete Gray quickly responded with Boys I can t fight and so there is no courage about me Courage belongs on the battlefield not on the baseball diamond 4 Teams played for YEAR AGE TEAM LEAGUE LEV1942 27 Trois Rivieres Renards Canadian American C1943 28 Memphis Chickasaws Southern Association A11944 29 Memphis Chickasaws Southern Association A11946 31 Toledo Mud Hens American Association AAA1948 33 Elmira Pioneers Eastern League A1949 34 Dallas Eagles Texas League AAMinor League stats YEAR Gm AB H 2B 3B HR BA SLG TB1942 42 160 61 5 0 0 381 413 661943 126 453 131 7 6 0 289 331 1501944 129 501 167 21 9 5 333 441 2211946 48 96 24 3 0 0 250 281 271948 82 269 78 7 2 0 290 331 891949 45 56 12 2 0 0 214 250 14Total 472 1535 473 45 17 5 308 369 567 6 Major league career Edit The St Louis Browns of the American League purchased his contract in 1945 from the Chicks for 20 000 equivalent to 278 000 in 2021 and Gray signed for 4 000 equivalent to 56 000 in 2021 Wearing uniform number 14 7 Gray played left and center field for the Browns He appeared in 77 games batting 218 with a 958 fielding percentage in center field He played competently in the outfield transferring the ball from glove to hand with remarkable speed He collected his first major league hit a single against the Detroit Tigers on April 17 1945 On May 20 he fulfilled his lifelong dream and played a double header in Yankee Stadium 8 collecting five hits and two RBI as the Browns swept the Yankees The first game ended 10 1 and the second ended 5 1 Gray also proved himself an accomplished bunter In order to bunt he planted the knob of the bat against his side and then slid his hand about one third of the way up the shaft of the bat As the season progressed it became apparent that Gray could not hit breaking pitches Once he started his swing he could not change his timing because he had no second hand to check the swing Opposing pitchers discovered that fact and threw curve balls His last big league appearance was on September 30 1945 Gray said in 1945 I ve been turned down by more big league managers than any other man in history I ve spent more money trying to get into baseball than I ve earned on the game 4 His relationship with his teammates was not great and many were disgruntled because they were in the race to repeat as American League champions and they felt Gray slowed down their success They also felt and knew he was really only there for ticket sales and to boost fan attendance The previous year they had won the pennant but only had about 508 644 fans attend Sportsman s Park all season Infielder Don Gutteridge later said in 1994 Some of the guys thought Pete was being used to draw fans late in the season when the club was still in the pennant race and he wasn t hitting well These complaints do not hold up under statistical scrutiny which show that the team had a win percentage of 600 when he was on the field and only 425 when he sat on the bench citation needed That season they finished third and the next season without Gray they fell to seventh That year with Gray was the Browns last winning season before moving to Baltimore in 1954 4 Gray later said of his teammates If they insulted me I didn t pay attention I mostly kept to myself That s why I got the reputation of being tough to get along with But I ve mellowed 9 Gray s on field exploits set an inspirational example for disabled servicemen returning from World War II as was portrayed in newsreels of the period He visited army hospitals and rehabilitation centers speaking with amputees and reassuring them that they too could lead a productive life 10 Major League stats 11 Year Team Gm AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB CS BB SO BA OBP SLG TB FP1945 St Louis Browns 77 234 26 51 6 2 0 13 5 6 13 11 218 259 261 61 959Techniques used Edit While playing the field Pete Gray wore a glove without padding When the ball was hit in his direction he would place the glove directly in front of himself roughly about shoulder height When the ball hit the glove he would roll the ball across his chest from left to right During this motion he learned to rest the glove under his right stump and the ball would roll into his left hand When ground balls were hit his way he would let it bounce off his glove at knee height and drop the glove completely to grab the ball while it was still in the air He was faster in these motions and techniques than some players who had the use of both hands When backing up another outfielder during a play he would drop the glove completely and was ready to take the ball with his bare hand While at bat he used a full weight bat His position and stance at the plate was just like any other player He placed his hand about six inches up on the handle In order to bunt he planted the knob of the bat against his side and then slid his hand about one third of the way up the shaft of the bat He was described by sports writers and players as a pure pull hitter 12 Later years and death EditGray s major league career ended that same year when many of baseball s stars returned from the battlefront and assumed their previous positions on the diamond From 1946 to 1949 he played on as a journeyman minor leaguer with the Toledo Mud Hens Elmira Pioneers and Dallas Stars Gray returned home to Nanticoke where although a local hero celebrity he struggled with gambling and alcohol and lived in near poverty 10 He also played in barnstorming games with exhibition teams up until the early 1950s 13 Having only accomplished one year in the majors he spent the rest of his life wondering if he was ever really good enough to have been there or if he was just an entertainment attraction for the owners to make money This personal struggle was one of the possible reasons for his struggle with gambling and alcohol after he left baseball Before his death however he regained a sense of integrity about his accomplishments with the success of both the TV movie and the biography about his life 14 The 1986 television movie A Winner Never Quits starring Keith Carradine and Mare Winningham and the publication of Gray s biography One Armed Wonder Pete Gray Wartime Baseball and the American Dream written by William C Kashatus published in 1995 by McFarland amp Company renewed public interest in Gray Gray shunned public attention for most of his life after baseball 15 He died on June 30 2002 at the age of 87 and is buried at St Mary s Cemetery in Hanover Township Pennsylvania On Sunday August 24 2003 Gray was recognized by the Historical and Museum Commission in Pennsylvania when they placed a roadside marker in his hometown The location of the marker is Front St Hanover section Nanticoke Luzerne County in the Poconos Endless Mountains Region 1 Legacy EditPete Gray s glove is in the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in Cooperstown New York Gray was inducted into the Baseball Reliquary s Shrine of the Eternals in 2011 16 Sources EditBill Gilbert They Also Served Baseball and the Homefront New York Crown 1992 Richard Goldstein Spartan Seasons How Baseball Survived the Second World War New York Macmillan 1980 William C Kashatus An Interview with the Late Great Pete Gray Pennsylvania Heritage Spring 2003 William C Kashatus One Armed Wonder Pete Gray Wartime Baseball and the American Dream Jefferson NC McFarland 1995 John Klima The Game Must Go On Hank Greenberg Pete Gray and the Great Days of Baseball on the Home Front in WW II New York St Martin s Press 2015 See also Edit Baseball portalJim Abbott Chad Bentz Hugh Daily Bert Shepard Eddie Gaedel Mordecai Brown Ed Dundon Dummy Hoy Curtis Pride Monty Stratton Bob Wickman Tom Sunkel Antonio Alfonseca Lou BrissieReferences Edit a b c Goldstein Richard July 2 2002 Pete Gray Major Leaguer With One Arm Dies at 87 The New York Times Retrieved August 21 2007 Pete Gray who became a major league outfielder despite the loss of his right arm in a childhood accident appearing with the St Louis Browns for a single season during World War II died Sunday at a nursing home in Sheatown Pennsylvania He was 87 a b c Pete Gray Wyshner Historical Marker ExplorePAhistory com Retrieved March 20 2015 Whitey Gray BoxRec Retrieved March 20 2015 a b c d e McGuire Mark April 1999 Moments in the Sun ISBN 9780786405497 Retrieved March 20 2015 Kilma John 2015 The Game Must Go On Hank Greenberg Pete Gray and the Great Days of Baseball on the Homefront in WWII Macmillan p 50 Pete Gray Baseball Reference com Retrieved March 20 2015 The editors of the Sporting News 1992 Baseball A Doubleheader Collection of Facts Feats amp Firsts St Louis Mo The Sporting News Publishing Co ISBN 0 88365 785 6 Video Air Forces Come Home Via Bomber 1945 05 28 1945 Universal Newsreel 1945 Retrieved February 20 2012 Pete Gray Stats Baseball Almanac Retrieved March 20 2015 a b Pete Gray Wyshner explorepahistory com Retrieved August 15 2008 Pete Gray Baseball Reference com Retrieved March 20 2015 Pete Gray Historicbaseball com Retrieved March 20 2015 Pete Gray baseballbiography com Kashatus William Pete Gray Baseball s One Armed Wonder HistoryLive net Retrieved March 20 2015 Goldstein Richard July 2 2002 Pete Gray Major Leaguer With One Arm Dies at 87 The New York Times Retrieved February 4 2020 Shrine of the Eternals Inductees Baseball Reliquary Retrieved August 14 2019 External links EditCareer statistics and player information from Baseball Reference or Baseball Reference Minors A Winner Never Quits at IMDb Pete Gray Pennsylvania Historical Marker Pete Gray at Find a Grave com Pete Gray cartoon History Detectives PBS season 5 2007 episode 12 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pete Gray amp oldid 1134460999, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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