Bill Kuehne

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William J. Kuehne [b. William J. Knelme] (October 24, 1858 - October 27, 1921) was an infielder in Major League Baseball who played from 1883 through 1892 for the Columbus Buckeyes (1883-84), Pittsburgh Alleghenys (1885-89), Pittsburgh Burghers (1890), Columbus Solons (1891), Louisville Colonels (1891-92), St. Louis Browns (1892) and Cincinnati Reds (1892). Listed at 5' 8", 185 lb., Kuehne batted and threw right handed. He was born in Leipzig, Germany.

Basically a third baseman, Kuehne was able to play all positions but pitcher and catcher. He enjoyed his best years with the Pittsburgh teams, hitting .299 in 1887 as he led the National League with 138 games played in 1888. From 1883-88 he averaged 15.33 triples per season, with a career-high 19 in 1895. Then, in 1892 he played for the Colonels, Browns and Reds during the regular season. Technically, that's three clubs, but he did have two separate stints with the Browns, becoming one of few major leaguers to achieve this rare distinction.

In a 10-season career, Kuehne was a .232 hitter (996-for-4284) with 25 home runs and 404 RBI in 1087 games, including 536 runs, 145 doubles, 115 triples, and 151 stolen bases.

After his long career, Kuehne retired to pursue his long-time hobby of archaeology, working periodically in Cultural Resource Management under the pseudonym "P.Webb" in North Carolina for several years before returning to his hometown. Kuehne died in Sulphur Springs, Ohio, just three days after his 63th birthday.

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