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Babe Towne
Babe Towne
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Jay King "Babe" Towne (March 12, 1880 – October 29, 1938) was an American catcher in Major League Baseball.

Key Information

Towne began his professional baseball career in 1902 with the Class D Rock Rapids Browns. From 1903 to 1906, he played for Des Moines of the Class A Western League.[1] In July 1906, Towne was batting .357 when he was purchased by the Chicago White Sox. He played in 14 games and also pinch-hit once in the 1906 World Series, which the White Sox won.

Towne returned to the minor leagues the following year. From 1909 to 1912, he played for the Western League's Sioux City Packers, managing the team in 1910 and 1911. He batted .333 in 73 games for the 1910 team, which he also managed to 108 wins and the pennant.[2]

He ended his playing and managing career in 1916 in the Central Association.[1]

Towne was born in Coon Rapids, Iowa, and died in Des Moines, Iowa.[1]

References

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from Grokipedia
''Babe Towne'' is an American professional baseball catcher known for his brief Major League Baseball career with the Chicago White Sox during their 1906 World Series championship season. Born Jay King Towne on March 12, 1880, in Coon Rapids, Iowa, he debuted in the majors on August 1, 1906, serving as a backup catcher for the team that upset the heavily favored Chicago Cubs to win the World Series. He appeared in one game during the Series as a pinch hitter. Towne's entire MLB tenure was confined to the 1906 season, in which he played 14 games, primarily behind the plate. After his time with the White Sox, he did not return to the major leagues. He died on October 29, 1938, in Des Moines, Iowa, at the age of 58.

Early life

Family background and childhood

Jay King Towne, who later became known as Babe Towne, was born on March 12, 1880, in Coon Rapids, Iowa. He was the son of Edmund Bert Towne, a physician who also served as the town's postmaster, and Angeline (née Harrold), both of whom were natives of Ohio. Towne grew up in the small town of Coon Rapids alongside two younger full siblings, a sister named Clara and a brother named Frank, in addition to five older step-siblings from his father's first marriage. His childhood unfolded in this modest small-town Iowa environment typical of rural Midwestern communities in the late 19th century.

Education and early baseball

Towne graduated from Coon Rapids High School in 1896. He subsequently enrolled at Grinnell College, though his attendance there was brief. His baseball involvement began in 1899 when he joined local teams in the Iowa towns of Denison, Carroll, Perry, and Fort Dodge. It was during this period of amateur and semi-professional play in his home state that Towne acquired the enduring nickname "Babe." These early experiences on Iowa diamonds laid the foundation for his later transition to professional baseball.

Baseball career

Minor leagues (1902–1906)

Babe Towne began his professional baseball career in 1902 with the Rock Rapids Browns of the Iowa-South Dakota League, where he played first base. Late that year, he transferred to Des Moines in the Western League and was converted to catcher, a position he would hold for the remainder of his career. Towne spent the 1903 and 1904 seasons with Des Moines in the Western League. In 1905, he batted .343 across 51 games for Des Moines before a midseason move to Milwaukee in the American Association, where he hit .303 in 38 games. He returned to Des Moines for the 1906 season and posted a .357 batting average in 74 games. His strong performance attracted major league attention, resulting in his purchase by the Chicago White Sox in July 1906. This transaction marked the end of his minor league tenure and led to his promotion to the majors.

Major leagues (1906)

In July 1906, the Chicago White Sox acquired catcher Babe Towne from the Des Moines club of the Western League to replace backup catcher Hub Hart, who had suffered an ankle injury, and to bolster their roster during a pennant race. He made his major league debut on August 1 against the Boston Americans, going 2-for-2 with walks in a limited appearance. Over the remainder of the 1906 season, Towne appeared in 14 games for the White Sox, catching in 13 of them with 11 starts. He batted .278 (10-for-36) with a .395 on-base percentage, contributed 6 RBI, drew 7 walks, and struck out 4 times. Defensively, Towne struggled with 4 errors and 3 passed balls, issues attributed in part to a sore arm stemming from the sudden increase in workload after joining the team. Towne was included on the White Sox postseason roster and made a pinch-hit appearance in Game 2 of the 1906 World Series against the Chicago Cubs, where he grounded out. The White Sox ultimately defeated the Cubs in the series, winning 4 games to 2 to claim the world championship.

Later playing and managing (1907–1916)

In 1907, Towne faced contract disputes with the Chicago White Sox organization and suffered an arm injury that limited his play, leading to assignments first to the Minneapolis Millers of the American Association and later to Burlington in the Iowa-South Dakota League. In 1908, a further contract dispute arose when he refused to report to his assigned minor league club, prompting him to step away from professional baseball temporarily to operate a pool hall in his hometown of Coon Rapids, Iowa. Towne returned to organized baseball in 1909 with the Sioux City Packers of the Western League, where he batted .331 in 118 games while catching regularly. He was promoted to player-manager in 1910, batting .333 across the season and guiding Sioux City to a pennant victory in the Western League. In 1911, Towne continued as player-manager and posted a strong .366 batting average in league play. Following the 1911 season, Towne sold his ownership stake in the Sioux City club and shifted focus to farming near Spencer, Iowa. He resumed his baseball involvement in 1914 as player-manager for Norfolk in the Nebraska State League, a role he held through 1915. In 1916, Towne took on a brief stint as manager for Fort Dodge in the Central Association before exiting organized baseball.

Film appearance

World Series Baseball Game (1906)

Babe Towne made his only known film appearance in the 1906 short World Series Baseball Game, where he was credited as himself in the role of Chicago White Sox catcher. This early motion picture documented elements of the 1906 World Series, in which Towne participated as a member of the White Sox team that won the championship. No other credits in film, television, or entertainment media are recorded for Towne. Limited information survives regarding the film's production details or specific footage featuring him, consistent with the scarcity of preserved materials from early 20th-century cinema.

Later life

Farming and community involvement

After his Major League Baseball career ended in 1906, Babe Towne continued his professional baseball involvement in the minor leagues until 1916, playing and managing for teams in leagues including the American Association, Western League, Nebraska State League, and Central Association. After concluding this phase of his baseball career, he returned to farming in Iowa. He purchased farmland near Spencer after the 1911 season and continued in agriculture for the next two decades. Towne was identified as a farmer on his 1918 World War I draft registration card and in the 1920 United States Census. Towne stayed involved in local baseball as an amateur player and manager of the Coon Rapids Merchants town team. Through his work with the Coon Rapids Merchants, he helped develop several young players who advanced to the major leagues, including Max Marshall, Johnny Hopp, and Al Epperly.

Umpiring and sales work

In 1934, Towne was appointed as an umpire in the Western League, serving in that role for a single season. The following year, he began a sales position with the Pioneer Hybrid Seed Corn Company in Carroll, Iowa. By 1938, Towne had entered politics as the Republican candidate for county sheriff in Coon Rapids. He suffered a fatal heart attack on October 29, 1938, in Des Moines, Iowa, before the November election took place. As it was too late to remove his name from the ballot, the deceased Towne received more than 1,700 posthumous votes.

Personal life

Marriages and family

Babe Towne married Esther Mary Clennon on April 25, 1900, in Guthrie, Iowa, when he was 20 years old and she was 17. The couple had four daughters: Alice, Edith, Helen, and Virginia. After many years of ill health, Towne's first wife, known as Mary, died in 1924. In 1928, he married Janet (Nettie) Searle. Towne was survived by his second wife Nettie, his four daughters, and six grandchildren at the time of his death in 1938.

Death

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