Paddy Quinn (baseball)

For the Hunger striker, see Paddy Quinn (Irish republican).
Paddy Quinn
Catcher/Outfielder
Born: August 1849
Chicago
Died: January 2, 1909(1909-01-02) (aged 59)
Chicago
Batted: Switch Threw: Right
MLB debut
July 26, 1871, for the Fort Wayne Kekiongas
Last appearance
1877, for the Chicago White Stockings
MLB statistics
Games played 42
Runs scored 26
Hits 36
Teams
  National Association of Base Ball Players
Aetna of Chicago (1870)
  League player
Fort Wayne Kekiongas (1871)
Keokuk Westerns (1875)
Hartford Dark Blues (1875)
Chicago White Stockings (1875, 1877)

Patrick "Paddy" Quinn (August 1849 January 2, 1909) was an American baseball player in the first professional league. He played catcher in five games for the 1871 Fort Wayne Kekiongas and he appeared in two other more major league seasons in the 1870s.

Quinn was a regular league player during only one season, with three teams in 1875, primarily as a catcher. He led the Keokuk Westerns in batting average (.326) with 14 hits, working 11 of 13 games before that club went out of business. He moved on to Hartford and Chicago, 33 games in all. In the National League two seasons later, he returned to the Chicago White Stockings for four games in the outfield.

Quinn was a Chicago native and he played there as an amateur at the dawn of the professional era. The National Association of Base Ball Players first permitted professional clubs in 1869 and the White Stockings were established as Chicago's first pro club one year later. Quinn played for Aetna of Chicago, a respectable member of the amateur class.[1]

Jimmy Hallinan also played for the Aetnas of Chicago in 1870, when both Hallinan and Quinn turned 21 years old during the baseball season. In 1871 they both played a few games for the Kekiongas of Fort Wayne, Indiana, and the next league experience for both was at age 26 with the Westerns of Keokuk, Iowa in 1875. Little is known about baseball in the 1870s, outside the leagues, but it seems that many clubs such as the Aetnas and their amateur or semipro rivals continued to operate, and thus adult players outside the leagues, such as Hallinan and Quinn before 1875, continued to play competitively. According to one obituary, Hallinan played four season for Aetna beginning 1870.[2]

Quinn died, aged 59, from unknown causes in his native Chicago in 1909.

References

  1. Wright, Marshall D. The National Association of Base Ball Players, 18571870. Jefferson NC: McFarland & Co. 2000. Page ???.
    Coverage of NABBP play, even the list of a player's teams, is generally limited to the record that Wright has published, which is compiled from various sources and commonly limited to regular and important substitute players.
  2. "Obit for Jimmy Hallinan". Reprint from The New York Clipper, November 11, 1879. Retrieved 2010-07-11.
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